Konrad Waldhauser and the Birth of the Czech Reformation (1363-1369)
Konrad Waldhauser and the Birth of the Czech Reformation (1363-1369)
is a comprehensive historical examination of Konrad Waldhauser, the Austrian Augustinian canon whose six years of preaching in Prague catalyzed the Bohemian Reformation. Invited by Emperor Charles IV to provide moral leadership for his "New Rome," Waldhauser unleashed a devastating critique of merchant luxury, clerical corruption, and mendicant simony that transformed the spiritual landscape of fourteenth-century Prague. Through meticulous analysis of manuscript evidence, the failed heresy trial of 1364, and the extraordinary circulation of his Postilla studentium, this study reveals how Waldhauser created a "reform consciousness" that made fundamental change seem possible rather than inevitable. His most consequential achievement was converting Jan Milíč of Kroměříž, who vernacularized the reform message into Czech and expanded it to marginalized populations. Rather than simply a "precursor" to Jan Hus, Waldhauser emerges as a sophisticated conservative reformer whose emphasis on moral performance fundamentally challenged medieval understandings of clerical authority while remaining within orthodox boundaries, establishing patterns of reform that would shape Central European Christianity for generations.
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