HUSSITES

hŭsˈīts, followers of John Huss. After the burning of Huss (1415) and Jerome of Prague (1416), the Hussites continued as a powerful group in Bohemia and Moravia. They drew up (1420) the Four Articles of Prague, demanding freedom of preaching, communion in both kinds (i.e., both wine and bread) for the laity as well as priests, the limitation of property holding by the church, and civil punishment of mortal sin, including simony.

Although it ultimately failed, the Hussite movement is of permanent historical significance. It was the first substantial attack upon the two bulwarks of medieval society, feudalism and the Roman Catholic Church. As such it helped pave the way for both the Protestant Reformation and the rise of modern nationalism.

The Utraquists and the Taborites

In 1419 the Hussite Wars began, and in their course the Hussite movement splintered into several groups. The moderate group, called Utraquists [Lat. sub utraque specie=in both kinds] or Calixtines [Lat.,=chalice], consisted chiefly of the lesser nobility and the bourgeoisie. The Univ. of Prague was their center and Master Jan Rokycana their principal leader. Except for the demands made in the Four Articles, they agreed substantially with the Roman Catholic Church.

The more radical Hussites, the Taborites, named after their religious center and stronghold at Tabor, went further than the Utraquists in accepting the doctrines of John Wyclif. Consisting largely of peasants, this group expressed the messianic hopes of the oppressed. They regarded the Four Articles as minimal concessions. Their real goal was the total abolition of the feudal system and the establishment of a classless society without private property. From among their number came such leaders as John Zizka and Procopius the Great. Puritanical and iconoclastic, the Taborites reduced the sacraments to communion and baptism, denied the Real Presence, and abolished the veneration of saints and holy images.

The Hussite Wars necessitated a temporary alliance between the two groups. However, when the Utraquists were reconciled (1436) with the church through the agreement known as the Compactata, the Taborites refused to acquiesce. Of the demands of the original Four Articles, the Catholic Church conceded only on communion in both kinds. The obstinacy of the Taborites led to the alliance between the Utraquists and the Catholics and to the military defeat of the Taborites at Lipany (1534). After this, Taborite influence vanished from Bohemia. The Bohemian and Moravian Brethren are, however, probably descended from this group (see Moravian Church).

Further Division and Suppression

The Utraquists obtained (1436) royal recognition of the Compactata, which remained the fundamental religious law of Bohemia until 1567. By that time Protestantism had made great progress in Bohemia, and the Utraquists themselves were divided. The Old Utraquists remained Catholic; the New Utraquists joined with the Lutherans and drew up (1575) the Confessio Bohemia, which achieved official status (1609) in the Letter of Majesty of Emperor Rudolph II (see Bohemia). The violation of this letter was the prelude to the Thirty Years War. Bohemia, which was overwhelmingly Protestant in the mid-16th cent., was returned to Catholicism by both force and persuasion. Nevertheless, the Evangelicals, as the Lutheran Utraquists were called, did not entirely disappear, and neither did the other major communion, the Moravian Church.

Bibliography

See H. Kaminsky, A History of the Hussite Revolution (1967); F. M. Bartos, The Hussite Revolution, 1424–1437 (1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Hussites  - 597 results

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...movements like the Taborites among the Hussites, Munzer and his adherents among the...attention must be first directed to the Hussites. How was it that the Reformation movement...the Hussite movement. They supplied the Hussites with arguments of the greatest utility...
...formative influence on the way the Hussites conducted their war.3 Describing...organizing a new crusade against the Hussites, that he had not worked hard to reunite the church only to let the Hussites tear it apart again; and that there...
...IV 151 CHAPTER XVII: THE COUNCIL OF BASEL: II. THE HUSSITES. 156 118. THE NECESSITY OF...INTERNAL DISSENTIONS 158 121. HUSSITES INVITED TO BASEL 161 122...
...CHAPTER VIII.--THE HUSSITES. Inquisitorial...Failure of Repeated Crusades.--The Hussites Retaliate 525...Council of Basle.--Negotiation with the Hussites a Necessity 530...
...them previous to the Reformation, others posterior. To mention only the Catharist movement, that of the Passagii, of the Hussites, and the revolts led by Zwingli and Michael Servetus, is to give a faint idea of the wealth of the material which Dr. Newman...
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journal articles on: Hussites  - 26 results

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...organization was very loose, and the Hussites split into several factions, each of...a larger role in contacts among the Hussites and Waldensians, but such contacts were...messages the Waldensians received from the Hussites regarding political behavior were very...
...after his death. Even the foundational program of the early Hussites in 1420, the so-called "Four Prague Articles," contains no...After several years of negotiations with the main body of Hussites, the Utraquists--those who insisted on reception of the Eucharist...
...layety, but only the bread, . . . the Hussites giue both kyndes, not only to lay men...dominance in the Bohemian capital: "The Hussites inhabit over two thirds of the city...distribute Communion in both kinds. . . . The Hussites have no other images of saints than...
...symbolic centrality in the struggles against the heretical Hussites in Bohemia and the Turks in the east, struggles that were elevated...infidels, poised to destroy Christendom. Together with the Hussites and the Turks, the "mythical Jew" posed an existential peril...
...Germany to preach a crusade against the Hussites in 1431. 5 Paul Becker, whose biography...the proper arena in which to hear the Hussites. The last, dated 5 June 1432, contains...of Basels invitation to the heretical Hussites. 34 When Cusa alludes to Distinctio...
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magazine articles on: Hussites  - 11 results

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...distinguishing friend from foe. Both Hussites and their opponents acted with savagery...Kutna Hora, German Catholics hurled Czech Hussites to their deaths in the mine shafts. A chronicler numbers the victims at 1,600. The Hussites, for their part, expelled many Germans...
...own time, wouldnt we do well to remember that these pains applied very much, at varying times, to our forebears such as the Hussites, Huguenots, English Puritans and Scotch-Irish? What about Presbyterians today in Mexico, South America and elsewhere who encounter...
...of John Wyclif, became an active force from the 1380s and, in the following century, the Hussites took over the state in Bohemia. Both Lollards and Hussites were highly critical of crusading. Hus denounced it as testimony to the Churchs internal...
...Constance in 1414, celebrating the Catholic victory over the Hussites at a large church convocation. The Jewish jeweler Eleazar...falls in love with Leopold, the general who has defeated the Hussites. Unknown to Rachel, Leopold is married (in this production...
...at the stake set off a series of religious wars, which lasted for decades and left Catholics in the minority in Bohemia. The Hussites helped to pave the way for the Protestant Reformation. "Today, on the eve of the Great Jubilee, I feel the need to express...
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...The 1390s witnessed the massacre of 40,000 Jews in Seville and 130,000 Muslims in Bulgaria and at Nicopolis. The Lollards and Hussites were cruelly put down and after 1480 the Spanish Inquisition was responsible for up to another 350,000 deaths. After 1492 the...
...is arrested as a spy, because of his strange 19th century speech, but is released only to be caught up in fighting for the Hussites. His boasts of bravery are disbelieved and he is condemned to death in a burning barrel. He awakes to find that he is still...
...in the 1320s. But new heretical sects continued to offer themselves as targets for the Inquisition. Bogomils, Waldensians, Hussites - they all had in common a belief that the Church should return to the poverty and simplicity of its beginnings, and they all...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Hussites  - 26 results

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HUSSITES hus its, followers of John Huss. After the burning of Huss (1415) and Jerome of Prague (1416), the Hussites continued as a powerful group in Bohemia and Moravia...substantially with the Roman Catholic Church. The more radical Hussites, the Taborites, named after their religious center and...
...cent., caused by the rise of the Hussites in Bohemia and Moravia. It was a religious struggle between Hussites and the Roman Catholic Church, a national...Bohemia (see Wenceslaus , emperor), the Hussites in Bohemia and Moravia took up arms...
...he joined the Hussite movement (see Hussites ) and distinguished himself as a captain...succeeded Zizka as head of the radical Hussites or Taborites after Zizkas death (1424...negotiations (1432) at Eger (Cheb) between the Hussites and representatives of the Council of...
...became leader of the Utraquists, or the moderate Hussites, in the wars between Hussites and Catholics. He seized Prague (1448) during...Moravian Brethren, descendants of the more radical Hussites. See studies by F. G. Heymann (1965) and O...
COMPACTATA see Hussites . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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