Episode 174 – The Trial of Jan Hus

The Council of Constance – part 4 “They will roast a goose now, but after one hundred years they will hear a swan sing, and him they will have to endure.” These were allegedly the last words of a certain Jan Hus whose surname meant goose and who was burned at the stake on July […]
Episode 173 – Ending the Schism

The Council of Constance – part 3 We have talked about church reform for almost four years, the council of Constance talked about church reform for about the same amount of time and Luther will talk and write about church reform until he did no longer believe that the church could be reformed. But what […]
Episode 172 – A World Event

In November 1414 30,000 academics and aristocrats, bishops, blacksmiths and bakers, cardinals, counts and chefs, doctors, dancers and diplomats, princes, prelates and public girls descended on a town in Southern Germany built to house 6 to 8,000 people. They planned to stay a few weeks, 2-3 months max. But 3 and a half years later most of them were still there.
What did they get up to? The great tentpole events, the trial of John XXIII, the burning of Jan Hus and the election of Martin V is what the council of Constance is remembered for, but what about all that time in between?
When I began working on this episode, I had planned to move straight to the showstoppers. I think I said something to that effect at the end of the last episode. But when I dug deeper, I realised that this world event was so much more than a papal election and the trial of a dissenter. For 3 years Constance was at the same time a never-ending G20 summit, the greatest academic conference of the Middle Ages, a permanent imperial diet and the centre of the catholic church. Everybody who was anybody was there either in the flesh or had at least sent a delegation.
Issues and concerns were brought before the council that still plague people today. Is it ever right to kill a tyrant, and if so, when can it be justified? What rights should be guaranteed for indigenous groups, in this case Pagans, and how should their dignity be protected? Other attendees sought justice for crimes committed against them in a world where political murder had become commonplace. Others still demanded their reward for years of service or simply wanted their rights recognised.
Living cheek by jowl in tiny Constance the leading minds from across Europe, from the ancient universities of Paris, Oxford and Bologna as well as from the newly founded seats of learning in Krakow, Prague, Heidelberg and Vienna shared their ideas, opinions, books and discoveries, paving the way for the intellectual shift we call the Renaissance.
Enough, me thinks to provide 30 minutes of great historical entertainment….
Episode 171 – Cleaning House

The Council of Constance get srid of surplus popes making it a pivotal moment in the history of the Catholic Church and of Europe in general.
Episode 170 – Jan Hus, Reformer and Rebel?

Master Jan Hus emerges as a pivotal figure in the evolution of religious reform and national identity in Bohemia during the late 14th and early 15th centuries. This episode delves into Hus’s life, emphasizing his humble beginnings as a preacher in Prague and his rise to prominence as a critic of the Catholic Church’s corruption. The narrative unfolds against the backdrop of a society rife with clerical hypocrisy and a populace yearning for spiritual authenticity. Hus’s calling for a return to the teachings of the Gospel resonates with many, leading to a burgeoning movement that challenges the authority of the Church and its lavish practices. As tensions rise, Hus finds himself entwined in a struggle not just against ecclesiastical authority, but also against a socio-political system that marginalizes the Czech-speaking populace in favor of the dominant German-speaking elite. The episode draws connections between Hus’s teachings and the broader currents of thought influenced by figures like John Wycliffe, setting the stage for a significant religious conflict that would reverberate through Europe for centuries to come.
Episode 166/167 – The Great Western Schism – Parts 1 and 2

“And since these especially ruinous harms to all of Christendom are not to be tolerated or suffered any longer, so we have completely agreed – with a well-considered disposition, by means of much and various discussion and counsel, which we have earnestly undertaken concerning this among ourselves and with many other princes and lords of the Holy Empire, for the assistance of the Holy Church, the comfort of Christendom and the honour and profit of the Holy Empire – that we want fully and specifically to remove and depose the above-written Lord Wenceslas as a neglectful procrastinator, dismemberer and one unworthy of the Holy Empire from the same Holy Roman Empire and all the dignities pertaining to it with immediate effect.” End quote
So concluded the Prince Electors of Cologne, Mainz, Trier and the Palatinate on August 20th 1400. King Wenceslaus IV, son of the great emperor Karl IV, king of Bohemia and duke of Luxemburg was to be deposed for his “evil deeds and afflictions [that are] are so clearly manifest and well known throughout the land that they can neither be justified nor concealed” end quote
How could that happen. Last time we looked at the house of Luxemburg, they directly held almost a quarter of the German lands, controlled two of the seven electoral votes, had manoeuvred themselves into pole position to gain the Hungarian and the Polish crown, with even a long-term option on Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Tyrol . But now, a mere 22 years later, the great second Carolingian empire lies in tatters. How is that possible? That is what we will look at today.