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Folia historica Bohemica
|
2015
|
vol. 30
|
issue 1
33-46
EN
The internment of Jan Augusta (1548–1564) is one of the best-known examples of confessional violence against the historical Bohemian Brethren. Although the goal of the detention was Augusta‘s conversion to one of the legal religious parties in the country, it did not proceed until he became excluded from participation in management of the Bohemian Brethren as a result of a conflict with leaders of this minority confessional community. However, interpretation of Augusta‘s case is more complicated by the fact that according to representatives of the royal power, but also testimony of several representatives of the non-Catholic representatives, he was persecuted for his political engagement. The existing research has not paid sufficient attention to this aspect so far.
EN
The ecclesiastical order of 1575 emerged in connection with the Bohemian confession and was to become a normative document for reform of the non-Catholic ecclesiastical administration, which was proposed by the estate opposition during a session of the Bohemian provincial diet. However, Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Bohemia, rejected the reform and the order became valid in a reviewed form in 1609, after issuance of the Rudolphine Letter of Majesty on religious freedom, when it was issued for the Utraquist lower consistory.
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