Bohemian church reformer Jerome of Prague, a…
1407 CE
Bohemian church reformer Jerome of Prague, a thirty-year-old wandering scholar educated at Prague, Oxford, Paris, Heidelberg, and Cologne who has become an advocate of John Wycliffe’s views, acquaints Czech religious reformer Jan Huss with these metaphysical and theological perspectives in 1401.
The following year, Huss, who had studying theology at the University of Prague and been ordained a priest, is appointed preacher at Prague’s Bethlehem chapel and begins organizing the Czech reform movement, criticizing the church's wealth and corruption and opposing the condemnation of Wycliffe's doctrine.
In 1403 Jerome had gone to Jerusalem, in 1405 to Paris, where he took his Master's degree, but Jean Gerson had driven him out.
In 1406 he took the same degree at the University of Cologne, and a little later at the University of Heidelberg.
A brilliant debater, Jerome becomes a spokesman for the Bohemian reform party in the university at Prague after his return here in 1407.