Page:Letters of John Huss Written During His Exile and Imprisonment.djvu/17

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INTRODUCTION.


Towards the end of the fourteenth century there was born in Bohemia, a man whose name is inseparably connected with one of the most important revolutions of modern Europe. His history I have narrated in a preceding work.[1] I there placed before my readers the great events of that memorable epoch, and exhibited on the stormy stage of the world this Christian, whose death, even more than his life, agitated his country and all Germany. My object, in the present work, is to complete the first,—to finish the portrait of the illustrious reformer of Bohemia, by making him also known in his domestic life—the effusions of his private intercourse.

  1. The Reformers before the Reformation. Fifteenth Century. John Huss and the Council of Constance. 2 vols.