Menu
Chapter 5 of 20

05 - Hus Again Rector

1 min read · Chapter 5 of 20

Chapter V - Hus Again Rector

Since 1378, there were two sets of rival popes most lustily pelting one another with papal curses. The Council of Pisa in 1409 deposed popes Benedict XIII and Gregory XII as heretics and schismatics and then elected Alexander V, who died on May 11, 1410, most probably poisoned by “Diavolo Cardinale” Cossa, who then became Pope John XXIII. Now there were three popes and a three-cornered fight. To make the good old times still more interesting, three rivals struggled for the crown of the Holy Roman Empire.

Though King Wenzel demanded strict neutrality, Archbishop Sbynko sided with Gregory XII, and at the University the Bohemian “nation” under the lead of Hus was the only one to remain neutral. Wenzel was bitter and on Ja, 1409, decreed the Bohemian “nation” three votes and the three German “nations” one vote in all University affairs.

Aeneas Sylvius, later Pope Pius II, estimates that 200 German professors and students on May 16, 1409, left Prag and founded the University of Leipzig and spread the news of the Bohemian heresies and hatred of Hus. At Prag Hus was now at the height of his influence, enjoying the favor of the Court; he was again elected Rector of the University.

Everything we make is available for free because of a generous community of supporters.

Donate