Page:The Hussite wars, by the Count Lützow.djvu/38

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
16
THE HUSSITE WARS

Koranda, parish priest of Plzeň, afterwards one of the most famous Hussite divines, and many received the Sacrament in the two kinds. No one was allowed to carry arms, and private property was rigidly respected. When a poor peasant complained that his field had been injured by the crowd which had crossed it, one of the leaders immediately collected sufficient money to repair the damage done. The numerous priests who were present engaged in theological discussions, and it is probable that the theological affirmations afterwards known as the “articles of Prague” were drawn up on this occasion,[1] though negotiations on these points had taken place previously, and the articles were only officially published in 1420. There is no doubt that the military leaders, who were well acquainted with King Sigismund’s intentions, also met in council. They probably thought that, in view of the inevitable war, it would be well to obtain possession of the capital as soon as possible. Prague was then, as it is now, the only large city in Bohemia, and it holds in that country a predominant position, which can be compared only to that of Paris in France. It was therefore decided that the next meeting of the nationalists should be held at Prague on November 10.

Even before that day great excitement prevailed in the capital. It was known that several of the nobles who sided with King Sigismund were determined to attack the Utraquists on their march. The preacher, Koranda, entreated the people not to desist from their intent; in the then customary language he declared that the vineyard of the Lord was beginning to blossom, but that the goats wished to gnaw at it; therefore should the faithful carry with them for its defence not sticks but arms.[2] Several skirmishes, in which the Hussites

  1. This now appears to me most probable, though Dr. Dvorský places the date of the “articles” as far back as 1417. See my Master John Hus, p. 343, n. 1, also my Bohemia, a Historical Sketch, p. 128, n. 1.
  2. As already noted, the Hussites at their earlier meetings assembled unarmed, carrying only cudgels.