'John of Nepomuk' or 'John Nepomucene' (
Czech: ''Jan Nepomucký'',
German: ''Johann von Nepomuk'') (
1340 –
March 20,
1393) is a national
saint of
Bohemia. In his fully developed legend he was the confessor of the Queen of Bohemia and refused to divulge the secrets of the confessional. He has been made into the first
martyr of the
Seal of the Confessional, a patron against calumnies and, because of the manner of his death, a protector from
floods.
The historical starting-point of the Nepomuk legend is the person of John of Pomuk (Jan z Pomuk), a small market town of Bohemia later renamed
Nepomuk, which belonged to the nearby
Cistercian abbey. He was born around 1340, and he first studied at the new
University of Prague, then followed a course in
Canon law at the
University of Padua. In 1393 he was made the vicar-general of John of Jenštejn (1348-1400), Archbishop of Prague from 1378 to 1396. Among his contemporaries, the new vicar-general enjoyed no special reputation; he was rich, possessed houses, and lent money to noblemen and priests. In the same year,
March 20 he was thrown into the river
Vltava from
Charles Bridge in
Prague at the behest of
Wenceslaus, King of the Romans and King of Bohemia.
The issue was an old one, and its peremptory solution was traditional (compare the
Defenestrations of Prague). At issue was the appointment of a new
abbot for the rich and powerful
Benedictine Abbey of Kladruby; its abbot was a territorial magnate whose resources would be crucial to Wenceslaus in his struggles with nobles. Wenceslaus at the same time was backing the
Avignon papacy, whereas the Archbishop of Prague followed its rival, the pope at Rome. As the
Hussite reform movement, denounced as "
heresy", divided Bohemia, Archbishop John of Jenštejn ably represented the conservative or even reactionary faction of ecclesiastical universalism, which was not favourably inclined to any radical social changes. Contrary to the wishes of Wenceslaus, John confirmed the Archbishop's candidate for Abbot of Kladrau, and was thrown off the Charles Bridge at Prague on the Emperor's orders, March 20, 1393.
John of Nepomuk is seen by Catholics as a martyr to the cause of
clerical immunity, by
Romantic nationalists as a Czech martyr to Imperial interference, and by historians as a victim of a late version of the inveterate
investiture controversy between secular rulers and the Catholic hierarchy. He is portrayed with a
halo of seven stars, commemorating the stars that hovered over the
Vltava River on the night of his murder. His tomb, a
Baroque monument cast in silver and silver-gilt that was designed by
Fischer von Erlach, stands in
St Vitus Cathedral, Prague.
The connection of John of Nepomuk with the
inviolability of the confessional is part of the development and transformation of the legend, which can be traced through successive stages. The
archbishop, who hastened to Rome soon after the crime, in his charge against Wenceslaus, called the victim a martyr; in the ''
vita'' written a few years later miracles are already recorded, by which the drowned man was discovered. The uncritical Bohemian annalists from the fourteenth to the sixteenth century fostered the fable. About the middle of the fifteenth century the statement appears for the first time that the refusal to violate the seal of confession was the cause of John's death. Two decades later (1471), the dean of Prague, Paul Zidek, makes Johanek the queen's confessor. The unscrupulous chronicler Wenceslaus Hayek, the "Bohemian Livy," speaks in 1541 (probably owing to carelessness in the use of his sources) of ''two'' Johns of Nepomuk being drowned; the first as confessor, the second for his confirmation of the abbot.

The place on the bridge parapet where John of Nepomuk was thrown into the
Vltava.
The legend is especially indebted for its growth to the Jesuit historiographer
Boleslaus Balbinus the "Bohemian Pliny,", whose ''Vita beatae Joannis Nepomuceni martyris'' was published in Prague, 1670.
[1] He was, however, as credulous as he was patriotic, and even became a forger to honor his saint. Although the
Prague metropolitan chapter did not accept the biography dedicated to it, "as being frequently destitute of historical foundation and erroneous, a bungling work of mythological rhetoric," Balbinus stuck to it. In 1683 the
Charles Bridge was adorned with a statue of the saint, which has had numerous successors; in 1708 the first church was dedicated to him at
Hradec Králové; a more famous
Pilgrimage Church of Saint John of Nepomuk was founded in 1719.
Meanwhile, in spite of the objection of the Jesuits, the process was inaugurated which ended with his
canonization. On
May 31,
1721, he was beatified, and on
March 19,
1729, he was canonized under
Pope Benedict XIII. The acts of the process, comprising 500 pages, which cost more than 180,000 crowns, distinguish two Johns of Nepomuk and sanction the ''
cultus'' of the one who was drowned in 1393 as a martyr of the sacrament of penance.
The ingenious suggestion has been made that the historical kernel of St. John Nepomuk is really
Jan Hus, who was metamorphosed from a Bohemian Reformer into a Roman Catholic saint; and that the Nepomuk legend is based on Wenceslaus Hayek's blending of the Jan who was drowned in 1393 and the
Jan who was burned in 1415. The resemblances are certainly striking, extending to the manner of celebrating their commemorations. But when the
Jesuits came to
Prague, the Nepomuk worship had long been widespread; and the idea of canonization originated in opposition not to the
Hussites, but to
Protestantism, as a weapon of the
Counter-Reformation - though his ''cultus'' was also intended to supplant Hus in the hearts of the Bohemian people. In the image of the saint which gradually arose, the religious history of Bohemia is reflected. This much is historically certain, that the vicar-general John of Pomuk was drowned in 1393 because of the choice of the abbot, and that Rome, making use of a forged biography, has canonized a man whose cultural role has become shifted.
''Nepomuk'' is the name of a figure of Saint John of Nepomuk, to be often encountered in Central and Eastern Europe, including Czech Republic, Italy, Germany, Poland and Lithuania.
Notes
1. It was reprinted in the Bollandists' ''Acta sanctorum'' III, May, pp 668-80.
External links
★
The "official" page of John of Nepomuk
★
''Catholic Encyclopedia'' (1910): "St. John Nepomucene" This text served as the original basis for this article.