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THE PERSECUTIONS IN BOHEMIA
The Roman pontiffs having usurped a power over several churches
were particularly severe on the Bohemians, which occasioned them
to send two ministers and four lay-brothers to Rome, in the year
977, to obtain redress of the pope. After some delay, their request was
granted, and their grievances redressed. Two things in particular they were
permitted to do, viz., to have divine service performed in their own
language, and to give the cup to the laity in the Sacrament. The disputes,
however, soon broke out again, the succeeding popes exerting their whole
power to impose on the minds of the Bohemians; and the latter, with great
spirit, aiming to preserve their religious liberties. In AD 1375, some
zealous friends of the Gospel applied to Charles, king of Bohemia, to call
an ecumenical Council, for an inquiry into the abuses that had crept into
the Church, and to make a full and thorough reformation. The king, not
knowing how to proceed, sent to the pope for directions how to act; but
the pontiff was so incensed at this affair that his only reply was,
“Severely punish those rash and profane heretics.” The monarch,
accordingly banished every one who had been concerned in the application,
and, to oblige the pope, laid a great number of additional restraints upon
the religious liberties of the people. The victims of persecution, however,
were not so numerous in Bohemia, until after the burning of John Huss and
Jerome of Prague. These two eminent reformers were condemned and
executed at the instigation of the pope and his emissaries, as the reader will
perceive by the following short sketches of their lives.
PERSECUTION OF JOHN HUSS
John Huss was born at Hussenitz, a village in Bohemia, about the year
1380. His parents gave him the best education their circumstances would
admit; and having acquired a tolerable knowledge of the classics at a private
school, he was removed to the university of Prague, where he soon gave
strong proofs of his mental powers, and was remarkable for his diligence
and application to study. In 1398, Huss commenced bachelor of divinity,
and was after successively chosen pastor of the Church of Bethlehem, in
Prague, and dean and rector of the university. In these stations he
discharged his duties with great fidelity; and became, at length, so
conspicuous for his preaching, which was in conformity with the doctrines
of Wickliffe, that it was not likely he could long escape the notice of the
pope and his adherents, against whom he inveighed with no small degree of
asperity. The English reformist, Wickliffe, had so kindled the light of
reformation, that it began to illumine the darkest corners of popery and
ignorance. His doctrines spread into Bohemia, and were well received by
great numbers of people, but by none so particularly as John Huss, and his
zealous friend and fellow martyr, Jerome of Prague. The archbishop of
Prague, finding the reformists daily increasing, issued a decree to suppress
the further spreading of Wickliffe’s writings: but this had an effect quite
different to what he expected, for it stimulated the friends of those
doctrines to greater zeal, and almost the whole university united to
propagate them. Being strongly attached to the doctrines of Wickliffe,
Huss opposed the decree of the archbishop, who, however, at length,
obtained a bull from the pope, giving him commission to prevent the
publishing of Wickliffe’s doctrines in his province. By virtue of this bull,
the archbishop condemned the writings of Wickliffe: he also proceeded
against four doctors, who had not delivered up the copies of that divine,
and prohibited them, notwithstanding their privileges, to preach to any
congregation. Dr. Huss, with some other members of the university,
protested against these proceedings, and entered an appeal from the
sentence of the archbishop. The affair being made known to the pope, he
granted a commission to Cardinal Colonna, to cite John Huss to appear
personally at the court of Rome, to answer the accusations laid against
him, of preaching both errors and heresies. Dr. Huss desired to be excused
from a personal appearance, and was so greatly favored in Bohemia, that
King Winceslaus, the queen, the nobility, and the university, desired the
pope to dispense with such an appearance; as also that he would not
suffer the kingdom of Bohemia to lie under the accusation of heresy, but
permit them to preach the Gospel with freedom in their places of worship.
Three proctors appeared for Dr. Huss before Cardinal Colonna. They
endeavored to excuse his absence, and said they were ready to answer in
his behalf. But the cardinal declared Huss contumacious, and
excommunicated him accordingly. The proctors appealed to the pope, and
appointed four cardinals to examine the process: these commissioners
confirmed the former sentence, and extended the excommunication not
only to Huss but to all his friends and followers. From this unjust sentence
Huss appealed to a future Council, but without success; and,
notwithstanding so severe a decree, and an expulsion in consequence from
his church in Prague, he retired to Hussenitz, his native place, where he
continued to promulgate his new doctrine, both from the pulpit and with
the pen. The letters which he wrote at this time were very numerous; and
he compiled a treatise in which he maintained, that reading the books of
Protestants could not be absolutely forbidden. He wrote in defense of
Wickliffe’s book on the Trinity; and boldly declared against the vices of
the pope, the cardinals, and clergy, of those corrupt times. He wrote also
many other books, all of which were penned with a strength of argument
that greatly facilitated the spreading of his doctrines. In the month of
November, 1414, a general Council was assembled at Constance, in
Germany, in order, as was pretended, for the sole purpose of determining a
dispute then pending between three persons who contended for the
papacy; but the real motive was to crush the progress of the Reformation.
John Huss was summoned to appear at this Council; and, to encourage
him, the emperor sent him a safe-conduct: the civilities, and even
reverence, which Huss met with on his journey were beyond imagination.
The streets, and sometimes the very roads, were lined with people, whom
respect, rather than curiosity, had brought together. He was ushered into
the town with great acclamations, and it may be said that he passed
through Germany in a kind of triumph. He could not help expressing his
surprise at the treatment he received: “I thought (said he) I had been an
outcast. I now see my worst friends are in Bohemia.” As soon as Huss
arrived at Constance, he immediately took lodgings in a remote part of the
city. A short time after his arrival, came one Stephen Paletz, who was
employed by the clergy at Prague to manage the intended prosecution
against him. Paletz was afterwards joined by Michael de Cassis, on the
part of the court of Rome. These two declared themselves his accusers,
and drew up a set of articles against him, which they presented to the
pope and the prelates of the Council. When it was known that he was in
the city he was immediately arrested, and committed prisoner to a chamber
in the palace. This violation of common law and justice was particularly
noticed by one of Huss’s friends, who urged the imperial safe-conduct; but
the pope replied he never granted any safe-conduct, nor was he bound by
that of the emperor. While Huss was in confinement, the Council acted the
part of inquisitors. They condemned the doctrines of Wickliffe, and even
ordered his remains to be dug up and burned to ashes; which orders were
strictly complied with. In the meantime, the nobility of Bohemia and
Poland strongly interceded for Huss; and so far prevailed as to prevent his
being condemned unheard, which had been resolved on by the
commissioners appointed to try him. When he was brought before the
Council, the articles exhibited against him were read: they were upwards of
forty in number, and chiefly extracted from his writings. John Huss’s
answer was this: “I did appeal unto the pope; who being dead, and the
cause of my matter remaining undetermined, I appealed likewise unto his
successor John XXIII: before whom when, by the space of two years, I
could not be admitted by my advocates to defend my cause, I appealed
unto the high judge Christ.” When John Huss had spoken these words, it
was demanded of him whether he had received absolution of the pope or
no? He answered, “No.” Then again, whether it was lawful for him to
appeal unto Christ or no? Whereunto John Huss answered: “Verily I do
affirm here before you all, that there is no more just or effectual appeal,
than that appeal which is made unto Christ, forasmuch as the law doth
determine, that to appeal is no other thing than in a cause of grief or wrong
done by an inferior judge, to implore and require aid at a higher Judge’s
hand. Who is then a higher Judge than Christ? Who, I say, can know or
judge the matter more justly, or with more equity? when in Him there is
found no deceit, neither can He be deceived; or, who can better help the
miserable and oppressed than He?” While John Huss, with a devout and
sober countenance, was speaking and pronouncing those words, he was
derided and mocked by all the whole Council. These excellent sentences
were esteemed as so many expressions of treason, and tended to inflame
his adversaries. Accordingly, the bishops appointed by the Council
stripped him of his priestly garments, degraded him, put a paper miter on
his head, on which was painted devils, with this inscription, “A ringleader
of heretics.” Which when he saw, he said: “My Lord Jesus Christ, for my
sake, did wear a crown of thorns; why should not I then, for His sake,
again wear this light crown, be it ever so ignominious? Truly I will do it,
and that willingly.” When it was set upon his head, the bishop said: “Now
we commit thy soul unto the devil.” “But I,” said John Huss, lifting his
eyes towards the heaven, “do commend into Thy hands, O Lord Jesus
Christ! my spirit which Thou has redeemed.” When the chain was put
about him at the stake, he said, with a smiling countenance, “My Lord
Jesus Christ was bound with a harder chain than this for my sake, and
why then should I be ashamed of this rusty one?” When the fagots were
piled up to his very neck, the duke of Bavaria was so officious as to desire
him to abjure. “No, (said Huss;) I never preached any doctrine of an evil
tendency; and what I taught with my lips I now seal with my blood.” He
then said to the executioner, “You are now going to burn a goose, (Huss
signifying goose in the Bohemian language:) but in a century you will have
a swan which you can neither roast nor boil.” If he were prophetic, he
must have meant Martin Luther, who shone about a hundred years after,
and who had a swan for his arms. The flames were now applied to the
fagots, when our martyr sung a hymn with so loud and cheerful a voice
that he was heard through all the cracklings of the combustibles, and the
noise of the multitude. At length his voice was interrupted by the severity
of the flames, which soon closed his existence. Then, with great diligence,
gathering the ashes together, they cast them into the river Rhine, that the
least remnant of that man should not be left upon the earth, whose
memory, notwithstanding, cannot be abolished out of the minds of the
godly, neither by fire, neither by water, neither by any kind of torment.
PERSECUTION OF JEROME OF PRAGUE
This reformer, who was the companion of Dr. Huss, and may be said to be
a co-martyr with him, was born at Prague, and educated in that university,
where he particularly distinguished himself for his great abilities and
learning. He likewise visited several other learned seminaries in Europe,
particularly the universities of Paris, Heidelburg, Cologne and Oxford. At
the latter place he became acquainted with the works of Wickliffe, and
being a person of uncommon application, he translated many of them into
his native language, having, with great pains, made himself master of the
English tongue. On his return to Prague, he professed himself an open
favorer of Wickliffe, and finding that his doctrines had made considerable
progress in Bohemia, and that Huss was the principal promoter of them,
he became an assistant to him in the great work of reformation. On the
fourth of April, 1415, Jerome arrived at Constance, about three months
before the death of Huss. He entered the town privately, and consulting
with some of the leaders of his party, whom he found there, was easily
convinced he could not be of any service to his friends. Finding that his
arrival in Constance was publicly known, and that the Council intended to
seize him, he thought it most prudent to retire. Accordingly, the next day
he went to Iberling, an imperial town, about a mile from Constance. From
this place he wrote to the emperor, and proposed his readiness to appear
before the Council, if he would give him a safe-conduct; but this was
refused. He then applied to the Council, but met with an answer no less
unfavorable than that from the emperor. After this, he set out on his return
to Bohemia. He had the precaution to take with him a certificate, signed by
several of the Bohemian nobility, then at Constance, testifying that he had
used all prudent means in his power to procure a hearing. Jerome,
however, did not thus escape. He was seized at Hirsaw by an officer
belonging to the duke of Sultsbach, who, though unauthorized so to act,
made little doubt of obtaining thanks from the Council for so acceptable a
service. The duke of Sultsbach, having Jerome now in his power, wrote to
the Council for directions how to proceed. The Council, after expressing
their obligations to the duke, desired him to send the prisoner immediately
to Constance. The elector palatine met him on the way, and conducted him
into the city, himself riding on horseback, with a numerous retinue, who
led Jerome in fetters by a long chain; and immediately on his arrival he was
committed to a loathsome dungeon. Jerome was treated nearly in the same
manner as Huss had been, only that he was much longer confined, and
shifted from one prison to another. At length, being brought before the
Council, he desired that he might plead his own cause, and exculpate
himself: which being refused him, he broke out into the following
exclamation: “What barbarity is this! For three hundred and forty days
have I been confined in a variety of prisons. There is not a misery, there is
not a want, that I have not experienced. To my enemies you have allowed
the fullest scope of accusation: to me you deny the least opportunity of
defense. Not an hour will you now indulge me in preparing for my trial.
You have swallowed the blackest calumnies against me. You have
represented me as a heretic, without knowing my doctrine; as an enemy of
the faith, before you knew what faith I professed: as a persecutor of
priests before you could have an opportunity of understanding my
sentiments on that head. You are a General Council: in you center all this
world can communicate of gravity, wisdom, and sanctity: but still you are
men, and men are seducible by appearances. The higher your character is
for wisdom, the greater ought your care to be not to deviate into folly. The
cause I now plead is not my own cause: it is the cause of men, it is the
cause of Christians; it is a cause which is to affect the rights of posterity,
however the experiment is to be made in my person.” This speech had not
the least effect; Jerome was obliged to hear the charge read, which was
reduced under the following heads:
1. That he was a derider of the papal dignity.
2. An opposer of the pope.
3. An enemy to the cardinals.
4. A persecutor of the prelates.
5. A hater of the Christian religion.
The trial of Jerome was brought on the third day after his accusation and
witnesses were examined in support of the charge. The prisoner was
prepared for his defense, which appears almost incredible, when we
consider he had been three hundred and forty days shut up in loathsome
prisons, deprived of daylight, and almost starved for want of common
necessaries. But his spirit soared above these disadvantages, under which a
man less animated would have sunk; nor was he more at a loss of
quotations from the fathers and ancient authors than if he had been
furnished with the finest library. The most bigoted of the assembly were
unwilling he should be heard, knowing what effect eloquence is apt to have
on the minds of the most prejudiced. At length, however, it was carried by
the majority that he should have liberty to proceed in his defense, which
he began in such an exalted strain of moving elocution that the heart of
obdurate zeal was seen to melt, and the mind of superstition seemed to
admit a ray of conviction. He made an admirable distinction between
evidence as resting upon facts, and as supported by malice and calumny.
He laid before the assembly the whole tenor of his life and conduct. He
observed that the greatest and most holy men had been known to differ in
points of speculation, with a view to distinguish truth, not to keep it
concealed. He expressed a noble contempt of all his enemies, who would
have induced him to retract the cause of virtue and truth. He entered upon
a high encomium of Huss; and declared he was ready to follow him in the
glorious task of martyrdom. He then touched upon the most defensible
doctrines of Wickliffe; and concluded with observing that it was far from
his intention to advance anything against the state of the Church of God;
that it was only against the abuse of the clergy he complained; and that he
could not help saying, it was certainly impious that the patrimony of the
Church, which was originally intended for the purpose of charity and
universal benevolence, should be prostituted to the pride of the eye, in
feasts, foppish vestments, and other reproaches to the name and
profession of Christianity. The trial being over, Jerome received the same
sentence that had been passed upon his martyred countryman. In
consequence of this, he was, in the usual style of popish affectation,
delivered over to the civil power: but as he was a layman, he had not to
undergo the ceremony of degradation. They had prepared a cap of paper
painted with red devils, which being put upon his head, he said, “Our Lord
Jesus Christ, when He suffered death for me a most miserable sinner, did
wear a crown of thorns upon His head, and for His sake will I wear this
cap.” Two days were allowed him in hopes that he would recant; in which
time the cardinal of Florence used his utmost endeavors to bring him over.
But they all proved ineffectual. Jerome was resolved to seal the doctrine
with his blood; and he suffered death with the most distinguished
magnanimity. In going to the place of execution he sang several hymns, and
when he came to the spot, which was the same where Huss had been
burnt, he knelt down, and prayed fervently. He embraced the stake with
great cheerfulness, and when they went behind him to set fire to the fagots,
he said, “Come here, and kindle it before my eyes; for if I had been afraid
of it, I had not come to this place.” The fire being kindled, he sang a hymn,
but was soon interrupted by the flames; and the last words he was heard
to say these, “This soul in flames I offer Christ, to Thee.” The elegant
Pogge, a learned gentleman of Florence, secretary to two popes, and a
zealous but liberal Catholic, in a letter to Leonard Arotin, bore ample
testimony of the extraordinary powers and virtues of Jerome whom he
emphatically styles, A prodigious man!
PERSECUTION OF ZISCA
The real name of this zealous servant of Christ was John de Trocznow,
that of Zisca is a Bohemian word, signifying one-eyed, as he had lost an
eye. He was a native of Bohemia, of a good family and left the court of
Winceslaus, to enter into the service of the king of Poland against the
Teutonic knights. Having obtained a badge of honor and a purse of ducats
for his gallantry, at the close of the war, he returned to the court of
Winceslaus, to whom he boldly avowed the deep interest he took in the
bloody affront offered to his majesty’s subjects at Constance in the affair
of Huss. Winceslaus lamented it was not in his power to revenge it; and
from this moment Zisca is said to have formed the idea of asserting the
religious liberties of his country. In the year 1418, the Council was
dissolved, having done more mischief than good, and in the summer of that
year a general meeting was held of the friends of religious reformation, at
the castle of Wisgrade, who, conducted by Zisca, repaired to the emperor
with arms in their hands, and offered to defend him against his enemies.
The king bid them use their arms properly, and this stroke of policy first
insured to Zisca the confidence of his party. Winceslaus was succeeded by
Sigismond, his brother, who rendered himself odious to the reformers; and
removed all such as were obnoxious to his government. Zisca and his
friends, upon this, immediately flew to arms, declared war against the
emperor and the pope, and laid siege to Pilsen with 40,000 men. They
soon became masters of the fortress, and in a short time all the southwest
part of Bohemia submitted, which greatly increased the army of the
reformers. The latter having taken the pass of Muldaw, after a severe
conflict of five days and nights, the emperor became alarmed, and
withdrew his troops from the confines of Turkey, to march them into
Bohemia. At Berne in Moravia, he halted, and sent dispatches to treat of
peace, as a preliminary to which Zisca gave up Pilsen and all the fortresses
he had taken. Sigismond proceeding in a manner that clearly manifested he
acted on the Roman doctrine, that no faith was to be kept with heretics,
and treating some of the authors of the late disturbances with severity, the
alarm-bell of revolt was sounded from one end of Bohemia to the other.
Zisca took the castle of Prague by the power of money, and on August 19,
1420, defeated the small army the emperor had hastily got together to
oppose him. He next took Ausea by assault, and destroyed the town with
a barbarity that disgraced the cause in which he fought. Winter
approaching, Zisca fortified his camp on a strong hill about forty miles
from Prague, which he called Mount Tabor, whence he surprised a body of
horse at midnight, and made a thousand men prisoners. Shortly after, the
emperor obtained possession of the strong fortress of Prague, by the same
means Zisca had before done: it was blockaded by the latter, and want
began to threaten the emperor, who saw the necessity of a retreat.
Determined to make a desperate effort, Sigismond attacked the fortified
camp of Zisca on Mount Tabor, and carried it with great slaughter. Many
other fortresses also fell, and Zisca withdrew to a craggy hill, which he
strongly fortified, and whence he so annoyed the emperor in his
approaches against the town of Prague, that he found he must either
abandon the siege or defeat his enemy. The marquis of Misnia was
deputed to effect this with a large body of troops, but the event was fatal
to the imperialists; they were defeated, and the emperor having lost nearly
one third of his army, retreated from the siege of Prague, harassed in his
rear by the enemy. In the spring of 1421, Zisca commenced the campaign,
as before, by destroying all the monasteries in his way. He laid siege to the
castle of Wisgrade, and the emperor coming to relieve it, fell into a snare,
was defeated with dreadful slaughter, and this important fortress was
taken. Our general had now leisure to attend to the work of reformation,
but he was much disgusted with the gross ignorance and superstition of the
Bohemian clergy, who rendered themselves contemptible in the eyes of the
whole army. When he saw any symptoms of uneasiness in the camp, he
would spread alarm in order to divert them, and draw his men into action.
In one of these expeditions, he encamped before the town of Rubi, and
while pointing out the place for an assault, an arrow shot from the wall
struck him in the eye. At Prague it was extracted, but, being barbed, it tore
the eye out with it. A fever succeeded, and his life was with difficulty
preserved. He was now totally blind, but still desirous of attending the
army. The emperor, having summoned the states of the empire to assist
him, resolved, with their assistance, to attack Zisca in the winter, when
many of his troops departed until the return of spring. The confederate
princes undertook the siege of Soisin, but at the approach merely of the
Bohemian general, they retreated. Sigismond nevertheless advanced with
his formidable army, consisting of 15,000 Hungarian horse and 25,000
infantry, well equipped for a winter campaign. This army spread terror
through all the east of Bohemia. Wherever Sigismond marched, the
magistrates laid their keys at his feet, and were treated with severity or
favor, according to their merits in his cause. Zisca, however, with speedy
marches, approached, and the emperor resolved to try his fortune once
more with that invincible chief. On the thirteenth of January, 1422, the
two armies met on a spacious plain near Kremnitz. Zisca appeared in the
center of his front line, guarded, or rather conducted, by a horseman on
each side, armed with a pole-ax. His troops having sung a hymn, with a
determined coolness drew their swords, and waited for a signal. When his
officers had informed him that the ranks were all well closed, he waved his
sabre round his head, which was the sign of battle. This battle is described
as a most awful sight. The extent of the plain was one continued scene of
disorder. The imperial army fled towards the confines of Moravia, the
Taborites, without intermission, galling their rear. The river Igla, then
frozen opposed their flight. The enemy pressing furiously, many of the
infantry and in a manner the whole body of the cavalry, attempted the
river. The ice gave way, and not fewer than two thousand were swallowed
up in the water. Zisca now returned to Tabor, laden with all the spoils and
trophies which the most complete victory could give. Zisca now began
again to pay attention to the Reformation; he forbid all the prayers for the
dead, images, sacerdotal vestments, fasts, and festivals. Priests were to be
preferred according to their merits, and no one to be persecuted for
religious opinions. In everything Zisca consulted the liberal minded, and
did nothing without general concurrence. An alarming disagreement now
arose at Prague between the magistrates who were Calixtans, or receivers
of the Sacraments in both kinds, and the Taborites, nine of the chiefs of
whom were privately arraigned, and put to death. The populace, enraged,
sacrificed the magistrates, and the affair terminated without any particular
consequence. The Calixtans having sunk into contempt, Zisca was solicited
to assume the crown of Bohemia; but this he nobly refused, and prepared
for the next campaign, in which Sigismond resolved to make his last effort.
While the marquis of Misnia penetrated into Upper Saxony, the emperor
proposed to enter Moravia, on the side of Hungary. Before the marquis
had taken the field, Zisca sat down before the strong town of Aussig,
situated on the Elbe. The marquis flew to its relief with a superior army,
and, after an obstinate engagement, was totally defeated and Aussig
capitulated. Zisca then went to the assistance of Procop, a young general
whom he had appointed to keep Sigismond in check, and whom he
compelled to abandon the siege of Pernitz, after laying eight weeks before
it. Zisca, willing to give his troops some respite from fatigue, now entered
Prague, hoping his presence would quell any uneasiness that might remain
after the late disturbance: but he was suddenly attacked by the people; and
he and his troop having beaten off the citizens, effected a retreat to his
army, whom he acquainted with the treacherous conduct of the Calixtans.
Every effort of address was necessary to appease their vengeful animosity,
and at night, in a private interview between Roquesan, an ecclesiastic of
great eminence in Prague, and Zisca, the latter became reconciled, and the
intended hostilities were done away. Mutually tired of the war, Sigismond
sent to Zisca, requesting him to sheath his sword, and name his conditions.
A place of congress being appointed, Zisca, with his chief officers, set out
to meet the emperor. Compelled to pass through a part of the country
where the plague raged, he was seized with it at the castle of Briscaw, and
departed this life, October 6, 1424. Like Moses, he died in view of the
completion of his labors, and was buried in the great Church of Czaslow,
in Bohemia, where a monument is erected to his memory, with this
inscription on it — “Here lies John Zisca, who, having defended his
country against the encroachments of papal tyranny, rests in this hallowed
place, in despite of the pope.” After the death of Zisca, Procop was
defeated, and fell with the liberties of his country. After the death of Huss
and Jerome, the pope, in conjunction with the Council of Constance,
ordered the Roman clergy everywhere to excommunicate such as adopted
their opinions, or commiserated their fate. These orders occasioned great
contentions between the papists and reformed Bohemians, which was the
cause of a violent persecution against the latter. At Prague, the persecution
was extremely severe, until, at length, the reformed being driven to
desperation, armed themselves, attacked the senate-house, and threw
twelve senators, with the speaker, out of the senate-house windows,
whose bodies fell upon spears, which were held up by others of the
reformed in the street, to receive them. Being informed of these
proceedings, the pope came to Florence, and publicly excommunicated the
reformed Bohemians, exciting the emperor of Germany, and all kings,
princes, dukes, etc., to take up arms, in order to extirpate the whole race;
and promising, by way of encouragement, full remission of all sins
whatever, to the most wicked person, if he did but kill one Bohemian
Protestant. This occasioned a bloody war; for several popish princes
undertook the extirpation, or at least expulsion, of the proscribed people;
and the Bohemians, arming themselves, prepared to repel force by force, in
the most vigorous and effectual manner. The popish army prevailing
against the Protestant forces at the battle of Cuttenburgh, the prisoners of
the reformed were taken to three deep mines near that town, and several
hundreds were cruelly thrown into each, where they miserably perished. A
merchant of Prague, going to Breslau, in Silesia, happened to lodge in the
same inn with several priests. Entering into conversation upon the subject
of religious controversy, he passed many encomiums upon the martyred
John Huss, and his doctrines. The priests taking umbrage at this, laid an
information against him the next morning, and he was committed to prison
as a heretic. Many endeavors were used to persuade him to embrace the
Roman Catholic faith, but he remained steadfast to the pure doctrines of
the reformed Church. Soon after his imprisonment, a student of the
university was committed to the same jail; when, being permitted to
converse with the merchant, they mutually comforted each other. On the
day appointed for execution, when the jailer began to fasten ropes to their
feet, by which they were to be dragged through the streets, the student
appeared quite terrified, and offered to abjure his faith, and turn Roman
Catholic if he might be saved. The offer was accepted, his abjuration was
taken by a priest, and he was set at liberty. A priest applying to the
merchant to follow the example of the student, he nobly said, “Lose no
time in hopes of my recantation, your expectations will be vain; I sincerely
pity that poor wretch, who has miserably sacrificed his soul for a few
more uncertain years of a troublesome life; and, so far from having the least
idea of following his example, I glory in the very thoughts of dying for the
sake of Christ.” On hearing these words, the priest ordered the executioner
to proceed, and the merchant being drawn through the city was brought to
the place of execution, and there burnt. Pichel, a bigoted popish magistrate,
apprehended twenty-four Protestants, among whom was his daughter’s
husband. As they all owned they were of the reformed religion, he
indiscriminately condemned them to be drowned in the river Abbis. On the
day appointed for the execution, a great concourse of people attended,
among whom was Pichel’s daughter. This worthy wife threw herself at her
father’s feet, bedewed them with tears, and in the most pathetic manner,
implored him to commisserate her sorrow, and pardon her husband. The
obdurate magistrate sternly replied, “Intercede not for him, child, he is a
heretic, a vile heretic.” To which she nobly answered, “Whatever his faults
may be, or however his opinions may differ from yours, he is still my
husband, a name which, at a time like this, should alone employ my whole
consideration.” Pichel flew into a violent passion and said, “You are mad!
cannot you, after the death of this, have a much worthier husband?” “No,
sir, (replied she) my affections are fixed upon this, and death itself shall
not dissolve my marriage vow.” Pichel, however, continued inflexible, and
ordered the prisoners to be tied with their hands and feet behind them, and
in that manner be thrown into the river. As soon as this was put into
execution, the young lady watched her opportunity, leaped into the waves,
and embracing the body of her husband, both sank together into one
watery grave. An uncommon instance of conjugal love in a wife, and of an
inviolable attachment to, and personal affection for, her husband. The
emperor Ferdinand, whose hatred to the Bohemian Protestants was
without bounds, not thinking he had sufficiently oppressed them,
instituted a high court of reformers, upon the plan of the Inquisition, with
this difference, that the reformers were to remove from place to place, and
always to be attended by a body of troops. These reformers consisted
chiefly of Jesuits, and from their decision, there was no appeal, by which
it may be easily conjectured, that it was a dreadful tribunal indeed. This
bloody court, attended by a body of troops, made the tour of Bohemia, in
which they seldom examined or saw a prisoner, suffering the soldiers to
murder the Protestants as they pleased, and then to make a report of the
matter to them afterward. The first victim of their cruelty was an aged
minister, whom they killed as he lay sick in his bed; the next day they
robbed and murdered another, and soon after shot a third, as he was
preaching in his pulpit. A nobleman and clergyman, who resided in a
Protestant village, hearing of the approach of the high court of reformers
and the troops, fled from the place, and secreted themselves. The soldiers,
however, on their arrival, seized upon a schoolmaster, asked him where the
Lord of that place and the minister were concealed, and where they had
hidden their treasures. The schoolmaster replied that he could not answer
either of the questions. They then stripped him naked, bound him with
cords, and beat him most unmercifully with cudgels. This cruelty not
extorting any confession from him, they scorched him in various parts of
his body; when, to gain a respite from his torments, he promised to show
them where the treasures were hid. The soldiers gave ear to this with
pleasure, and the schoolmaster led them to a ditch full of stones, saying,
“Beneath these stones are the treasures ye seek for.” Eager after money,
they went to work, and soon removed those stones, but not finding what
they sought after, they beat the schoolmaster to death, buried him in the
ditch, and covered him with the very stones he had made them remove.
Some of the soldiers ravished the daughters of a worthy Protestant before
his face, and then tortured him to death. A minister and his wife they tied
back to back and burnt. Another minister they hung upon a cross beam,
and making a fire under him, broiled him to death. A gentleman they
hacked into small pieces, and they filled a young man’s mouth with
gunpowder, and setting fire to it, blew his head to pieces. As their
principal rage was directed against the clergy, they took a pious Protestant
minister, and tormenting him daily for a month together, in the following
manner, making their cruelty regular, systematic, and progressive. They
placed him amidst them, and made him the subject of their derision and
mockery, during a whole day’s entertainment, trying to exhaust his
patience, but in vain, for he bore the whole with true Christian fortitude.
They spit in his face, pulled his nose, and pinched him in most parts of his
body. He was hunted like a wild beast, until ready to expire with fatigue.
They made him run the gauntlet between two ranks of them, each striking
him with a twig. He was beat with their fists. He was beat with ropes.
They scourged him with wires. He was beat with cudgels. They tied him
up by the heels with his head downwards, until the blood started out of
his nose, mouth, etc. They hung him by the right arm until it was
dislocated, and then had it set again. The same was repeated with his left
arm. Burning papers dipped in oil were placed between his fingers and
toes. His flesh was torn with red-hot pincers. He was put to the rack.
They pulled off the nails of his right hand. The same repeated with his left
hand. He was bastinadoed on his feet. A slit was made in his right ear. The
same repeated on his left ear. His nose was slit. They whipped him
through the town upon an ass. They made several incisions in his flesh.
They pulled off the toe nails of his right foot. The same they repeated
with his left foot. He was tied up by the loins, and suspended for a
considerable time. The teeth of his upper jaw were pulled out. The same
was repeated with his lower jaw. Boiling lead was poured upon his fingers.
The same was repeated with his toes. A knotted cord was twisted about
his forehead in such a manner as to force out his eyes. During the whole of
these horrid cruelties, particular care was taken that his wounds should not
mortify, and not to injure him mortally until the last day, when the forcing
out of his eyes proved his death. Innumerable were the other murders and
depredations committed by those unfeeling brutes, and shocking to
humanity were the cruelties which they inflicted on the poor Bohemian
Protestants. The winter being far advanced, however, the high court of
reformers, with their infernal band of military ruffians, thought proper to
return to Prague; but on their way, meeting with a Protestant pastor, they
could not resist the temptation of feasting their barbarous eyes with a new
kind of cruelty, which had just suggested itself to the diabolical imagination
of one of the soldiers. This was to strip the minister naked, and alternately
to cover him with ice and burning coals. This novel mode of tormenting a
fellow creature was immediately put into practice, and the unhappy victim
expired beneath the torments, which seemed to delight his inhuman
persecutors. A secret order was soon after issued by the emperor, for
apprehending all noblemen and gentlemen, who had been principally
concerned in supporting the Protestant cause, and in nominating Frederic
elector Palatine of the Rhine, to be king of Bohemia. These, to the number
of fifty, were apprehended in one night, and at one hour, and brought from
the places where they were taken, to the castle of Prague, and the estates
of those who were absent from the kingdom were confiscated, themselves
were made outlaws, and their names fixed upon a gallows, as marks of
public ignominy. The high court of reformers then proceeded to try the
fifty, who had been apprehended, and two apostate Protestants were
appointed to examine them. These examinants asked a great number of
unnecessary and impertinent questions, which so exasperated one of the
noblemen, who was naturally of a warm temper, that he exclaimed,
opening his breast at the same time, “Cut here, search my heart, you shall
find nothing but the love of religion and liberty; those were the motives for
which I drew my sword, and for those I am willing to suffer death.” As
none of the prisoners would change their religion, or acknowledge they had
been in error, they were all pronounced guilty; but the sentence was
referred to the emperor. When that monarch had read their names, and an
account of the respective accusations against them, he passed judgment on
all, but in a different manner, as his sentences were of four kinds, viz.
death, banishment, imprisonment for life, and imprisonment during
pleasure. Twenty being ordered for execution, were informed they might
send for Jesuits, monks, or friars, to prepare for the awful change they
were to undergo; but that no Protestants should be permitted to come near
them. This proposal they rejected, and strove all they could to comfort
and cheer each other upon the solemn occasion. On the morning of the day
appointed for the execution, a cannon was fired as a signal to bring the
prisoners from the castle to the principal market place, in which scaffolds
were erected, and a body of troops were drawn up to attend the tragic
scene. The prisoners left the castle with as much cheerfulness as if they
had been going to an agreeable entertainment, instead of a violent death.
Exclusive of soldiers, Jesuits, priests, executioners, attendants, etc., a
prodigious concourse of people attended, to see the exit of these devoted
martyrs, who were executed in the following order. Lord Schilik was about
fifty years of age, and was possessed of great natural and acquired abilities.
When he was told he was to be quartered, and his parts scattered in
different places, he smiled with great serenity, saying, “The loss of a
sepulcher is but a trifling consideration.” A gentleman who stood by,
crying, “Courage, my Lord!” he replied, “I have God’s favor, which is
sufficient to inspire any one with courage: the fear of death does not
trouble me; formerly I have faced him in fields of battle to oppose
Antichrist; and now dare face him on a scaffold, for the sake of Christ.”
Having said a short prayer, he told the executioner he was ready. He cut
off his right hand and his head, and then quartered him. His hand and his
head were placed upon the high tower of Prague, and his quarters
distributed in different parts of the city. Lord Viscount Winceslaus, who
had attained the age of seventy years, was equally respectable for learning,
piety, and hospitality. His temper was so remarkably patient that when
his house was broken open, his property seized, and his estates
confiscated, he only said, with great composure, “The Lord hath given, and
the Lord hath taken away.” Being asked why he could engage in so
dangerous a cause as that of attempting to support the elector Palatine
Frederic against the power of the emperor, he replied, “I acted strictly
according to the dictates of my conscience, and, to this day, deem him my
king. I am now full of years, and wish to lay down life, that I may not be a
witness of the further evils which are to attend my country. You have long
thirsted for my blood, take it, for God will be my avenger.” Then
approaching the block, he stroked his long, grey beard, and said,
“Venerable hairs, the greater honor now attends ye, a crown of martyrdom
is your portion.” Then laying down his head, it was severed from his body
at one stroke, and placed upon a pole in a conspicuous part of the city.
Lord Harant was a man of good sense, great piety, and much experience
gained by travel, as he had visited the principal places in Europe, Asia, and
Africa. Hence he was free from national prejudices and had collected much
knowledge. The accusations against this nobleman, were, his being a
Protestant, and having taken an oath of allegiance to Frederic, elector
Palatine of the Rhine, as king of Bohemia. When he came upon the scaffold
he said, “I have traveled through many countries, and traversed various
barbarous nations, yet never found so much cruelty as at home. I have
escaped innumerable perils both by sea and land, and surmounted
inconceivable difficulties, to suffer innocently in my native place. My
blood is likewise sought by those for whom I, and my forefathers, have
hazarded our estates; but, Almighty God! forgive them, for they know not
what they do.” He then went to the block, kneeled down, and exclaimed
with great energy, “Into Thy hands, O Lord! I commend my spirit; in
Thee have I always trusted; receive me, therefore, my blessed Redeemer.”
The fatal stroke was then given, and a period put to the temporary pains
of this life. Lord Frederic de Bile suffered as a Protestant, and a promoter
of the late war; he met his fate with serenity, and only said he wished well
to the friends whom he left behind, forgave the enemies who caused his
death, denied the authority of the emperor in that country, acknowledged
Frederic to be the only true king of Bohemia, and hoped for salvation in
the merits of his blessed Redeemer. Lord Henry Otto, when he first came
upon the scaffold, seemed greatly confounded, and said, with some
asperity, as if addressing himself to the emperor, “Thou tyrant Ferdinand,
your throne is established in blood; but if you will kill my body, and
disperse my members, they shall still rise up in judgment against you.” He
then was silent, and having walked about for some time, seemed to recover
his fortitude, and growing calm, said to a gentleman who stood near, “I
was, a few minutes since, greatly discomposed, but now I feel my spirits
revive; God be praised for affording me such comfort; death no longer
appears as the king of terrors, but seems to invite me to participate of
some unknown joys.” Kneeling before the block, he said, “Almighty God!
to Thee I commend my soul, receive it for the sake of Christ, and admit it
to the glory of Thy presence.” The executioner put this nobleman to
considerable pain, by making several strokes before he severed the head
from the body. The earl of Rugenia was distinguished for his superior
abilities, and unaffected piety. On the scaffold he said, “We who drew our
swords fought only to preserve the liberties of the people, and to keep our
consciences sacred: as we were overcome, I am better pleased at the
sentence of death, than if the emperor had given me life; for I find that it
pleases God to have his truth defended, not by our swords, but by our
blood.” He then went boldly to the block, saying, “I shall now be speedily
with Christ,” and received the crown of martyrdom with great courage. Sir
Gaspar Kaplitz was eighty-six years of age. When he came to the place of
execution, he addressed the principal officer thus: “Behold a miserable
ancient man, who hath often entreated God to take him out of this wicked
world, but could not until now obtain his desire, for God reserved me until
these years to be a spectacle to the world, and a sacrifice to himself;
therefore God’s will be done.” One of the officers told him, in
consideration of his great age, that if he would only ask pardon, he would
immediately receive it. “Ask pardon, (exclaimed he) I will ask pardon of
God, whom I have frequently offended; but not of the emperor, to whom I
never gave any offense; should I sue for pardon, it might be justly
suspected I had committed some crime for which I deserved this
condemnation. No, no, as I die innocent, and with a clear conscience, I
would not be separated from this noble company of martyrs:” so saying,
he cheerfully resigned his neck to the block. Procopius Dorzecki on the
scaffold said, “We are now under the emperor’s judgment; but in time he
shall be judged, and we shall appear as witnesses against him.” Then taking
a gold medal from his neck, which was struck when the elector Frederic
was crowned king of Bohemia, he presented it to one of the officers, at the
same time uttering these words, “As a dying man, I request, if ever King
Frederic is restored to the throne of Bohemia, that you will give him this
medal. Tell him, for his sake, I wore it until death, and that now I willingly
lay down my life for God and my king.” He then cheerfully laid down his
head and submitted to the fatal blow. Dionysius Servius was brought up a
Roman Catholic, but had embraced the reformed religion for some years.
When upon the scaffold the Jesuits used their utmost endeavors to make
him recant, and return to his former faith, but he paid not the least
attention to their exhortations. Kneeling down he said, “They may destroy
my body, but cannot injure my soul, that I commend to my Redeemer”;
and then patiently submitted to martyrdom, being at that time fifty-six
years of age. Valentine Cockan, was a person of considerable fortune and
eminence, perfectly pious and honest, but of trifling abilities; yet his
imagination seemed to grow bright, and his faculties to improve on death’s
approach, as if the impending danger refined the understanding. Just before
he was beheaded, he expressed himself with such eloquence, energy, and
precision as greatly amazed those who knew his former deficiency in point
of capacity. Tobias Steffick was remarkable for his affability and serenity
of temper. He was perfectly resigned to his fate, and a few minutes before
his death spoke in this singular manner, “I have received, during the whole
course of my life, many favors from God; ought I not therefore cheerfully
to take one bitter cup, when He thinks proper to present it? Or rather,
ought I not to rejoice that it is his will I should give up a corrupted life for
that of immortality!” Dr. Jessenius, an able student of physic, was accused
of having spoken disrespectful words of the emperor, of treason in
swearing allegiance to the elector Frederic, and of heresy in being a
Protestant. For the first accusation he had his tongue cut out; for the
second he was beheaded; and for the third, and last, he was quartered, and
the respective parts exposed on poles. Christopher Chober, as soon as he
stepped upon the scaffold said, “I come in the name of God, to die for His
glory; I have fought the good fight, and finished my course; so, executioner,
do your office.” The executioner obeyed, and he instantly received the
crown of martyrdom. No person ever lived more respected or died more
lamented than John Shultis. The only words he spoke, before receiving the
fatal stroke, were, “The righteous seem to die in the eyes of fools, but they
only go to rest. Lord Jesus! Thou hast promised that those who come to
Thee shall not be cast off. Behold, I am come; look on me, pity me, pardon
my sins, and receive my soul.” Maximilian Hostialick was famed for his
learning, piety, and humanity. When he first came on the scaffold, he
seemed exceedingly terrified at the approach of death. The officer taking
notice of his agitation, Hostialick said, “Ah! sir, now the sins of my youth
crowd upon my mind, but I hope God will enlighten me, lest I sleep the
sleep of death and lest mine enemies say we have prevailed.” Soon after he
said, “I hope my repentance is sincere, and will be accepted, in which case
the blood of Christ will wash me from my crimes.” He then told the officer
he should repeat the Song of Simeon; at the conclusion of which the
executioner might do his duty. He accordingly, said, “Lord, now lettest
Thou Thy servant depart in peace, according to Thy word: For mine eyes
have seen Thy salvation;” at which words his head was struck off at one
blow. When John Kutnaur came to the place of execution, a Jesuit said to
him, “Embrace the Roman Catholic faith, which alone can save and arm
you against the terrors of death.” To which he replied, “Your superstitious
faith I abhor, it leads to perdition, and I wish for no other arms against the
terrors of death than a good conscience.” The Jesuit turned away, saying,
sarcastically, “The Protestants are impenetrable rocks.” “You are
mistaken,” said Kutnaur, “it is Christ that is the Rock, and we are firmly
fixed upon Him.” This person not being born independent, but having
acquired a fortune by a mechanical employment, was ordered to be hanged.
Just before he was turned off, he said, “I die, not for having committed any
crime, but for following the dictates of my own conscience, and defending
my country and religion.” Simeon Sussickey was father-in-law to Kutnaur,
and like him, was ordered to be executed on a gallows. He went cheerfully
to death, and appeared impatient to be executed, saying, “Every moment
delays me from entering into the Kingdom of Christ.” Nathaniel
Wodnianskey was hanged for having supported the Protestant cause, and
the election of Frederic to the crown of Bohemia. At the gallows, the
Jesuits did all in their power to induce him to renounce his faith. Finding
their endeavors ineffectual, one of them said, “If you will not adjure your
heresy, at least repent of your rebellion?” To which Wodnianskey replied,
“You take away our lives under a pretended charge of rebellion; and, not
content with that, seek to destroy our souls; glut yourselves with blood,
and be satisfied; but tamper not with our consciences.” Wodnianskey’s
own son then approached the gallows, and said to his father, “Sir, if life
should be offered to you on condition of apostasy, I entreat you to
remember Christ, and reject such pernicious overtures.” To this the father
replied, “It is very acceptable, my son, to be exhorted to constancy by
you; but suspect me not; rather endeavor to confirm in their faith your
brothers, sisters, and children, and teach them to imitate that constancy of
which I shall leave them an example.” He had so sooner concluded these
words than he was turned off, receiving the crown of martyrdom with
great fortitude. Winceslaus Gisbitzkey, during his whole confinement, had
great hopes of life given him, which made his friends fear for the safety of
his soul. He, however, continued steadfast in his faith, prayed fervently at
the gallows, and met his fate with singular resignation. Martin Foster was
an ancient cripple; the accusations against whom were, being charitable to
heretics, and lending money to the elector Frederic. His great wealth,
however, seemed to have been his principal crime; and that he might be
plundered of his treasures was the occasion of his being ranked in this
illustrious list of martyrs.
THIS WAS CLIPPED FROM JOHN FOXE'S BOOK OF MARTYRS.
FOXE'S BOOK OF MARTYRS IS A PUBLIC DOMAIN DOCUMENT.
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