Huss, John (
c.1372–1415), in Czech
Jan Hus, Bohemian Reformer. Having been ordained priest in 1400, he soon became a well-known preacher at the ‘Bethlehem Chapel’ in Prague. When the writings of J.
Wycliffe became known in Bohemia, Huss was attracted to his political doctrines and was sympathetic to his teaching on
predestination and the Church of the elect. At first he was encouraged by the Abp. of Prague, Sbinko von Hasenburg, but soon his violent sermons on the morals of the clergy provoked hostility and he was forbidden to preach. In the course of the dispute between rival candidates for the Papacy, the king in 1409 gave control of the University of Prague to the ‘Czech’ nation, which became a stronghold of Wycliffite doctrines, with Huss as Rector. Isolated, Abp. Sbinko soon transferred his allegiance to
Alexander V, who ordered the destruction of Wycliffite books and, to curb Huss's influence, the cessation of preaching in private chapels; in 1411
John XXIII excommunicated Huss. Opinion moved against Huss and the king removed him from Prague; he took refuge with the Czech nobility and devoted himself to writing his main work,
De Ecclesia (1413), part of which was taken directly from Wycliffe. Having appealed from the decision of the Papal curia to a General Council, he went to the Council of
Constance with a safe-conduct from the Emp. Sigismund. He was imprisoned and burnt.
By his death Huss became a national hero. Various grievances among the Czechs of Bohemia overflowed into a movement of protest which assumed Huss's name. By the Four Articles of Prague (1420) the Hussites laid down a programme of secularization,
Utraquism, vernacular liturgy, and ecclesiastical reform which in important ways anticipated the
Reformation. During the Hussite Wars (1420–34) they were able to implement much of this in Bohemia; it left a lasting legacy in the sect of the
Bohemian Brethren.