Courage and Consequence – The Letters Written Toward the Stake
A written promise of safe conduct, sealed by an emperor. A cell beside a sewer. Eight months of chains. A clean offer to walk free, repeated every single time: take back your words and live. That was the bargain the Council of Constance set in front of Jan Hus in 1415. He would not take it. He told them he would recant gladly the moment they showed him from Scripture that he was wrong — but he would not swear to lies he had never preached, not for a chapel full of gold. So they burned him, scraped up his ashes, and poured them in the Rhine so no one could kneel where he fell. They erased the man and missed the letters. A century later, a monk in Germany read them and called himself a Hussite. Jan Hus needs to be remembered.
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