Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/423



Bohemia, its connection with the Eastern Church,, ; persecution in 1620, ; becomes part of the domain of the Western Church, ; its state of semi-independence, , ; sides with the German Emperors, ; increasing power of Rome in, , ; ill conduct of the clergy of, , ; connection of reform movement with national movement in, ; efforts of the Emperor Charles IV. to reform the clergy in, ; Hus’s sermon on condition of, ; Germans in,, ; intellectual advance of in the beginning of the fifteenth century, ; its attitude towards the Schism, , ; liberty granted to the Bohemians in the university by King Venceslas, , ; reform movement in, an indigenous one, ; synod of Bohemian clergy in, , –; fails to restore peace, ; further religious warfare in, , ; its evil fame as a heretical country, ; the religious upheaval in, horror of simony a chief factor in, ; nobles of, send remonstrances about Hus’s imprisonment, , ; anxiety concerning Hus in, ; efforts of the nobles at intervention, , –; succeed in obtaining the promise of a public hearing for Hus, ; further remonstrances from, to Sigismund, ; Hus’s letter to the nation, –; his further letters to the Bohemians, –; last messages to his friends in, ; national language of, Hus’s desire to preserve, , , ; racial antipathy between Bohemians and Germans in, ; question of language still prominent in, ; Hus’s effort to introduce church-song in the vernacular, ; women of, staunch adherents of Hus, ; relations of with England, ; rejoicings of national party at King Vladislav’s victory at Tannenberg, ; indignation in at Hus’s death, ; national movement in becomes more revolutionary, ; protest of the nobles forwarded to the Council, , ; confederation of nobles for the defence of liberty, ; hostile confederation of nobles in, , ; council appoints John the “iron” to suppress heresy in, ; Taborite movement in, ; death of the king, ; short-lived Romanist reaction in, ; Pope proclaims crusade against, ; anger of people at this and Sigismund’s cruelty, ; national uprising in, {{namespace link|352; iconoclasm and cruelty of people, {{namespace link|352|Chapter 12#352|..}}; in possession of the Hussites, {{namespace link|356|Chapter 12#356|..}}; development of Hus’s doctrines in, {{namespace link|356|Chapter 12#356|..}}; fall of democracy in after the battle of Lipan, {{namespace link|359|Chapter 12#359|..}}; communism and anarchy encouraged in by the Taborites, {{namespace link|361|Chapter 12#361|..}}; almost entirely subdued by {{hanging indent/e}} {{fine block/e}} {{c|387}}