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  1. Hussites - Wikipedia

    Battle between Hussites (left) and Catholic crusaders in the 15th century The Lands of the Bohemian Crown during the Hussite Wars. The movement began during the Renaissance in Prague and quickly spread south and then through the rest of the Kingdom of Bohemia.Eventually, it expanded into the remaining domains of the Bohemian Crown as well.

  2. Hussite Wars - Wikipedia

    Belligerents; Bohemia & Moravia: Hussite movement [a] (1419–20) Hussite Bohemia [b] (1420–23). Taborites; Praguers [c]; Orebites [d]; Union of Žatec and Louny [e]; Bohemian Hussite nobility and cities; Moravian Hussites. Moravian Hussite nobility; New Tábor [] (1420–21); Radical Hussite faction (1423–34). Taborites

  3. Hussite | Bohemian Reformation, Religious Movement | Britannica

    Hussite, any of the followers of the Bohemian religious reformer Jan Hus, who was condemned by the Council of Constance (1414–18) and burned at the stake. After his death in 1415 many Bohemian knights and nobles published a formal protest and …

  4. Hussite Wars - World History Encyclopedia

    Nov 18, 2021 · The Hussite Wars (1419 to c. 1434) were a series of conflicts fought in Bohemia (modern-day Czech Republic) between followers of the reformer Jan Hus and Catholic loyalists toward the end of the Bohemian Reformation (c. 1380 to c. 1436). Although the Catholics won, the Hussites were granted the freedom of religion they had fought for.. The wars were a direct response to the execution of Jan ...

  5. The Hussites and the Hussite Wars: Religion, Heresy and …

    May 7, 2021 · The Hussites were members of a pre-Reformation Christian movement that originated in Bohemia, in the modern-day Czech Republic. Named after Jan Hus, whose teachings were followed by the Hussite movement, they opposed many of the tenets of the Roman Catholic Church in the hope of reformation.Denounced as heretics, relations between Hussites and Catholics became increasingly tense, and ...

  6. Hussite summary - Britannica

    Hussite , Member of a group of 15th-century Bohemian religious reformers, followers of Jan Hus.After Hus’s death in 1415, the Hussites broke with Rome. In addition to giving communion in both bread and wine, they supported freedom of preaching, poverty of the clergy, civil punishment of notorious sinners, and expropriation of church property.

  7. Czechoslovak history - Hussite Wars, Bohemia, Moravia | Britannica

    Czechoslovak history - Hussite Wars, Bohemia, Moravia: By killing Hus, the church authorities provided the Czech reformers with a martyr. From then on, the movement, hitherto known as Wycliffite, took the name Hussite, and it grew rapidly. The Hussites reacted emotionally against the Council of Constance, the German king Sigismund, and the conservative clergy.

  8. Hussites - Jewish Virtual Library

    HUSSITES, Christian reform movement, closely interwoven with the national and social conflicts prevailing in Bohemia in the 15 th century, named after John Huss (Jan Hus; c. 1369–1415). They influenced European history through their reform ideology and their victories in the five crusades launched to subdue them (1420–34).

  9. Hussite - New World Encyclopedia

    During the Protestant Reformation, many remaining Hussites adopted the Confessio Bohemica, which united the Lutherans, Reformed, and Hussite Bohemian Brethren. Among present-day Christians, Hussite traditions are represented in denominations which call themselves Moravian or Unity of the Brethren churches, and in the more recently founded Czechoslovak Hussite Church.

  10. The Hussite Wars: what happened and how were they resolved?

    Oct 26, 2022 · What did Jan Hus believe in? A preacher at the Bethlehem Chapel in Prague, where he delivered sermons in Czech rather than Latin, Hus was outspoken about the indulgences of the Catholic Church, which at that time was experiencing the Western Schism, a split within the Church where rival bishops claimed to be the true pope.Hus spoke out against Pope Alexander V and his successor, the antipope ...

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