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'George of Kunštát and Podebrady' (
April 23,
1420 -
March 22,
1471), also known as 'Podebrad' or 'Podiebrad' (
Czech: ''Jiří z Poděbrad''), King of
Bohemia (
1458-
1471), was the first King of a
Catholic country to attempt to reform the Catholic faith when he adopted the preachings of
Jan Hus. He became the leader of the Hussites, but attempted to rule in a moderate manner thus getting the loyalty of some Catholics. The Hussites were also known as Utraquists and they subscribed to the Articles of Prague and later to the Basel Compacts.
George was the son of Victor of Kunštát and Podebrady, a Bohemian nobleman, who was one of the leaders of the ''Orphans'' or who were more moderate than the
Taborites during the
Hussite Wars. George himself as a boy of fourteen took part in the
Battle of Lipany, which marked the downfall of the more radical Taborites. Early in life, as one of the leaders of the
Hussite party, he defeated the
Austrian troops of the German King
Albert II, son-in-law and successor of King
Sigismund. He soon became a prominent member of the national or Hussite party, and - after the death of
Ptacek of Pirkstein - its leader. During the minority of
Ladislaus, son of Albert, who was born after his father's death, Bohemia was divided into two parties: the Catholic or Austrian one, led by
Ulrich von Rosenberg (1403-1462), and the national one, led by Podebrad.
After various attempts at reconciliation, Podebrad decided to appeal to the force of arms. He gradually raised an armed force in north-eastern Bohemia, where the Hussite cause had most adherents and where his ancestral castle
Litice was situated. With this army, consisting of about 9000 men, he marched in 1448 from
Kutná Hora (''Kuttenberg'') to
Prague, and obtained possession of the capital almost without resistance. Civil war, however, broke out, but Podebrad succeeded in defeating the Catholic nobles. In 1451 the emperor
Frederick III, as guardian of the young king Ladislas, entrusted Podebrad with the administration of Bohemia. In the same year a diet assembled at Prague also conferred on Podebrad the regency.
The struggle of the Bohemians against Rome continued uninterruptedly, and the position of Podebrad became a very difficult one when the young king Ladislaus, who was crowned in
1453, expressed his sympathies for the Roman Church, though he had recognized the compacts and the ancient privileges of Bohemia. In 1457 King Ladislas died suddenly and some public opinion accused Podebrad of having poisoned him. (However, in
1985 it was proved that Ladislas died from
acute leukemia.)
One of the later branches of the hussitism was also
Unity of the Brethren. The roots of this radical and pacifistic stream within the early reformation movement go back to
1457 in a small village called
Kunvald near
Žamberk, on
Litice barony, in the East part of Bohemia.
On
February 27,
1458 the estates of Bohemia unanimously chose Podebrad as king; even the adherents of the Austrian party voted for him, some due to his moderate policies and other for not wishing at that moment to oppose the popular feeling, which demanded the election of a national sovereign.
A year after the accession of Podebrad,
Pius II (Aeneas Sylvius) became Pope, and his incessant hostility proved one of the most serious obstacles to Podebrad's rule. Though he rejected the demand of the Pope, who wished him to consent to the abolition of the compacts, he endeavoured to curry favour with the Roman see by punishing severely all the more advanced opponents of papacy in Bohemia. All Podebrad's endeavours to establish peace with Rome proved ineffectual, and though the death of Pius II prevented him from carrying out his planned crusade against Bohemia, his successor in short time became an equally determined opponent.
The Hussite king had many enemies among the Catholic members of the powerful Bohemian nobility. The malcontent nobles met at Zelena Hora (Grueneberg) on
November 28,
1465, and concluded an alliance against the king, bringing forward many accusations against him. The confederacy was from its beginning supported by the Pope, though Podebrad, after the death of Pius II, attempted to negotiate with the new Pope,
Paul II. These negotiations ended when Paul apparently insulted the envoys of the king of Bohemia.
On
December 23,
1466 Paul II excommunicated Podebrad and pronounced his deposition as king of Bohemia, forbidding all Catholics to continue in his allegiance. The emperor Frederick III, and
King Matthias of Hungary, Podebrad's former ally, joined the insurgent Bohemian nobles. King Matthias conquered a large part of
Moravia, and was crowned King by the Catholics in the Moravian ecclesiastical (and – at that time – also political) metropolis
Olomouc, as king of Bohemia on
May 3,
1469. In the following year Podebrad was on the verge of routing Matthias, but contrary to his supporter's wishes, decided to come to an agreement with the Hungarian King. Geroge was successful in his resistance to his many enemies, but his death on
March 22,
1471 put a stop to the war.
In reaction to the threat of the Turks in the east, one of George's ideas was to set up a pan-European '"Christian League"', which would bring together all the states of Europe. He sent
Leo of Rozmital (''Lev z Rožmitálu'') on a tour of European courts to promote this idea. He is thus considered as one of the earliest proponents of the European Union.