Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/431

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INDEX
395

and Bohemians in, 77, 78; popular demonstrations in, 115, 116; hatred of the clergy among the people, 125, 126; placed under an interdict, 139; disturbance in, on account of sale of indulgences, 149 seq.; grotesque procession through the streets of, 153, 154; execution of three youths for protesting against simony, 156, 157; interdict against, put into execution, 160, 161; anxiety in concerning Hus’s fate, 232; introduction of utraquism at, 232; struggle between priests and heretics at St. Stephen, 347; attack on the town hall led by Zizka, 347; expulsion from of non-utraquist priests, 348; German inhabitants leave the town, 348; march of Taborites upon, 348; fury of people at introduction of German mercenaries, 348; citizens seize the Vysehrad, 348; large part of city destroyed, 349; peace restored, 349; citizens endeavour to come to agreement with Sigismund, 352; send to the Taborites to come to their aid, 353; city surrounded by the “crusaders,” 353; the enemy is repulsed, 354; arrival and death of Sigismund in, 368; Roman archbishopric re-established, 371

Prague, Articles of, 343, 344; approved by the utraquist nobles, 355; meeting between Romanists and Bohemians for discussion of, 355; accepted by Archbishop of Prague, 357; re-affirmed by meeting at Caslav, 363
Prague, University of, its foundation, 66, 67, 111, 112; diversity of “nations” at, 67, 68; its fame, 68; sends envoys to Pisa, 99; division between Germans and Bohemians in as regarded the question of neutrality during the church schism, 101, 102, 103; some of its members accuse the “Wycliffites” to King Venceslas, 102, 103; the king’s famous decree conferring increased privileges on the Bohemian members, 105, 106; departure of German students from, 109, 110; becomes a national university, 113; appeals against the burning of Wycliffe’s works, 122; document forwarded by to the Bohemian synod, 171, 172; begs Hus to remain in Bohemia, 185; helps to defray expense of Hus’s journey to Constance, 185; sends representative to Council, 208; Hus’s farewell letter to, 273, 274; meeting of chief theologians of to formulate Hussite doctrine, 343; sends representative to meeting of contending Hussites, 363
Praguers, see Calixtines
Predestination, Hus’s opinion on, 200, 201, 253
Pribislav, Castle, attacked by Zizka, 365
Prokop the Great, and Prokop the Less, successors of Zizka, 365; the former at Council of Basle, 366; leader of Taborites at Lipany, 367
Protiva, informer against Hus, 114, 115, 119, 120, 140
“Provisions,” papal, 13, 28
Ranco, Adalbert, reformer, 32, 42, 43, 44; becomes rector of the University of Paris, 44; reports on Milic’s orthodoxy, as Canon of Prague, 44; pronounces funeral oration on the Emperor Charles, 45; his fame as a preacher, 45; his letter concerning frequent communions, 45, 46; protests against the new festival in honour of the Virgin, 46; his death, 47; at Prague when Hus was a student, 71
Replica Contra Prædicatorem Plznensem, by Hus, 204
Rome, autocratic tendencies of, first checked by Hussite movement, 3
Rudolph II., King of Bohemia, struggle with his brother, 371; signs the “Letter of Majesty,” 371
Rupert, Elector Palatine, elected King of the Romans, 73, 101; his successor, 137
Ruthenians, Jerome of Prague’s connection with, 326, 331
Sacrament, in both kinds, 1, 2; customary in Bohemia, 10 (see utraquism); administration of by unworthy priests, 3; views of Hus upon, 119, 120, 179; question of frequent communion, 37, 41; Ranco’s letter upon, 45, 46; Matthew of Janov’s views on, 50, 56, 57, 61, 62; Hus’s adoption of the doctrine of transubstantiation, 205; 218, 222
Sermones de Sanctis, by Hus, 316
Sigismund, King of the Romans, afterwards Emperor, 137; ready to employ any means to injure his brother, King Venceslas, 179; his negotiations with Pope John XXIII. concerning a general council, 181; decides that it shall be held at Constance, 183; promises Hus a safe-conduct to Constance and back, 184; his part in Hus’s arrest, 219; his feigned displeasure, 220; remonstrances sent to, by the Bohemian lords, 220; neglects their warning letter, 221; his arrival in Constance, 224, 225; his neglect of Hus, 226; refuses the pope’s offered