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JOHN HUSS AND THE HUSSITE WARS Jame
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harvest. We have witnessed the grea
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Such is the link that binds togethe
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great harvest of converts; families
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Poland included; they made their he
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in the Church," and departed. The P
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Politically, too, the country of Bo
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unprepared for the tremendous strug
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theological treatises he had not se
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pastoral duties, Huss grew rapidly
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Chapter 2 Huss Begins his Warfare A
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minds of the citizens. Among those
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the virtue of the blood; but, on be
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who read the writings or taught the
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Tumult was beginning to disturb the
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solve; this was the doubt that tort
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consisting of the doctors of the un
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of his character, and all the brill
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Gregory XII., is at Rimini; Peter d
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arms," said he, as the Goths approa
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invisible Head, the Lord Jesus Chri
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to the contrast, so perfect and str
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the Roman Church as lacking foundat
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the sentence so long as John Huss s
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for Huss to do - the greatest and m
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were waging a war which raged only
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XXIII. To the Pope the idea of a Co
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delegates, some of whom were of the
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confections of Paris and London. Th
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"I see how it is," he said, "that i
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the other. He did not conceal from
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as well as his own, and heartily di
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to almost all the princes of his ag
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the ranks of the heavenly deities a
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grievous and heinous crimes," says
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victors with their acclamations. Th
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the emperor, excusing his flight by
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already been permitted to see the l
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Consider, I pray you, that they hav
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necessary to speed and assure his j
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he was conducted to the prison of t
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which he had been smitten. This req
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Huss to his trial. His two great op
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Baron de Chlum, the steady and most
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place, side by side, ineffaceably,
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vast temporal revenues of the clerg
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had broken the great bond of submis
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much to this point: would he submit
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form in which he foresaw it would c
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Chapter 7 Condemnation and Martyrdo
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Sigismund: 'Destroy heresies and er
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pieces of attire - in which in mock
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walked between four town sergeants.
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Bavaria and the Marshal of the Empi
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When the martyr bowed his head at t
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Chapter 8 Wicliffe and Huss Compare
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"Both Wicliffe and Huss held that '
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neither speculatively inclined nor
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affections of his cotemporaries, an
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Chapter 9 Trial and Temptation of J
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etter to induce him to recant. To t
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and ambition of the clergy, and the
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Christ after." One would think that
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the doubts that now darkened his so
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Chapter 10 The Trial of Jerome WHEN
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mind he sifted every accusation pre
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"When ye are brought before rulers
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I approved of the iniquitous senten
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him. He extolled the choice gifts w
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Chapter 11 Condemnation and Burning
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put the miter upon his head, accomp
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the world. A little country and a l
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the foe, where he contended for awh
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One is compelled to ask what would
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guarantee! The Bohemians could hard
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Pope refused to look at it, and ult
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eceived from Sigismund, when he asc
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cold of winter, they read the Word
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They then put twelve schedules or v