Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/426

 views spreading in Bohemia,, , ; at the Council of Constance, , , ; on the recantation of heretics,

Hus, John, and the Eastern Church, ; an ardent Bohemian patriot, ; his indebtedness to Wycliffe exaggerated, –, ; his extensive learning,, ; his great qualities, ; his birth, home, and parentage, , ; anecdote of, ; at Prague University, ; his student days, , ; admitted to college in the fruit market, ; anecdote of, ; his early adherence to the Catholic Church, ; his fellow students, ; his academic honours, ; becomes rector of the University, ; ordained priest, ; his talents as a preacher, ; preaches against German oppression, ; appointed preacher at the Bethlehem Chapel, ; attracts numerous disciples, ; incurs hostility of the German inhabitants of Prague, ; his study of Wycliffe, ; his first theological controversy, –; appointed preacher to the Synod, ; attacks conduct of Bohemian priests, ; appointed court chaplain and confessor to the Queen, ; sent to investigate into the miracles performed at Wilsnack, –; hatred of the priests towards, ; accusations brought against, , ; his letter to the archbishop, , ; close of the academic period of his life, ; his numerous writings, ; his translation of Wycliffe’s Trialogus, ; his ''Super IV. Sententiarum,, , ; other Latin works, , ; interferes on behalf of the imprisoned Bohemian envoys, ; supports the Bohemian members of the university in favour of neutrality in regard to the schism, ; decree against signed by the archbishop, ; King Venceslas threatens him, ; receives the good news of the king’s decree of Kutna Hora, ; accused of wishing to expel the German students from Prague, , , ; elected rector of the university, ; increased animosity of the parish priests towards, ; fresh accusations brought against by Zbynek, , ; summoned to appear before the court of the archbishop, ; his sermon in response to the papal bull, ; appeals to the pope, , ; is excommunicated by Zbynek, ; protests against the burning of Wycliffe’s books, ; is summoned to appear before the papal tribunal, ; support of by the court, , ; decides not to take the Italian journey, ; his letter to Richard Wiche, , ; his dispute with the archbishop is settled by arbitration, , , ; renewed bitterness between, ; his letter to the pope, ; his dispute with the English envoy Stokes, , , ; invites to a disputation concerning the sale of indulgences, ; his speech, ; condemnatory judgment passed against him by the papal courts, ; meets the leaders of the Roman party at the Castle of Zebrak, , ; pleads on behalf of the three youths condemned for raising a disturbance, , ; his moderation prevents a catastrophe, , ; is further excommunicated, ; after some indecision he leaves Prague for a while, , , ; writings dating from this period, , ; his letter explaining his reasons for leaving Prague, ; his treatise on simony, ; and the Bohemian Synod, ; denounced by the Bishop of Litomysl, , ; retires to Kozi Hradek, ; his popularity among the Bohemians, ; Bohemian letter of June 10, 1415, ; pays short visit to Prague, his position there becomes more difficult, ; accepts invitation to Krakovec, ; negotiations concerning his journey to Constance, ; Sigismund’s promise of safe conduct to, ; is warned not to go, ; his farewell letters, ; the court and nobles provide means for his journey, ; he leaves Prague, ; works written by during the previous two years, – (see'' under );