[165] See Count Lützow, The Life and Times of Master John Hus (1909), pp. 17-62; J. Loserth, Wyclif and Hus (trans. M. J. Evans, 1884); A. H. Wratislaw, Native Literature of Bohemia in the Fourteenth Century (1878), esp. book ii, pp. 181-291.
[166] See Lützow, op. cit., pp. 47-62.
[167] Documenta Mag. Joannis Hus (ed. F. Palacky, Prague, 1869), pp. 347-9, 355-63. See Lützow, op. cit., pp. 106-9. Wenzel’s reasoned answer to the objections made by the Germans may have been Hus’s work. For the contest at the University, see also H. Rashdall, Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages, vol. ii, pp. 212-32.
[168] Lützow, op. cit., pp. 130-3, 159-60; Palacky, Documenta, pp. 464-6; The Letters of John Hus (ed. Workman and Pope, 1904), pp. 422-5.
[169] Due to the marriage of Wenzel’s sister, Anne, to Richard II.
[170] Palacky, Documenta, pp. 289, 292.
[171] Ibid., p. 293.
[172] Ibid., p. 287; Letters of Hus, p. 217. Hus does not seem to have regarded the Utraquist question as of great consequence. See Creighton, Papacy, vol. ii, p. 86.
[173] See J. B. Schwab, J. Gerson (Würzburg, 1858), pp. 482-9; also Creighton, vol. i, appendix 2, pp. 365-8.
[174] D’Ailly in Gerson’s Works, vol. ii, pp. 949 et seq.