Battle of Vítkov Hill

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Battle of Vítkov Hill
Part of the First anti-Hussite crusade, Hussite Wars
Adolf Liebscher - Bitva na hoře Vítkově dne 14. července roku 1420.jpg
Adolf Liebscher – Battle of Vítkov Hill
Date12 June – 14 July 1420
Location
Result Decisive Hussite victory
Belligerents

Crusade

Hussite coalition

Commanders and leaders
Armoiries Sigismond de Luxembourg.svg King Sigismund
Arms of Flanders.svg Heinrich of Isenburg 
Pippo Spano
Znak města Boskovice.svg
Žižka Jan-Coat of Arms.png Jan Žižka
Strength
7,000–8,000 knights 80 soldiers[2]

Reinforcements:
50 shooters
Unknown number of militia with flails[2]
Casualties and losses
400 –500 killed 2–3 killed

The Battle of Vítkov Hill was a part of the Hussite Wars. The battle pitted the forces of Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor, against Hussite forces under command of Jan Žižka (in English, John Zizka). Vítkov Hill was located on the edge of the city of Prague and the battle occurred in a vineyard established by Sigismund's father, Charles IV. It ended with a decisive Hussite victory.

Preliminaries to the battle[]

On 1 March 1420 Pope Martin V published a papal bull in which he ordered that Sigismund and all Eastern princes had to organize a crusade against the Hussite followers of Jan Hus, John Wycliffe and other heretics. On 15 March in Wrocław, Emperor Sigismund ordered the execution of , a Hussite and leader of the in 1418. On 17 March papal legate published the bull in Wrocław. After that the Utraquist faction of Hussites understood that they would not reach agreement with him. They united with Taborite Hussites and decided to defend against the emperor.

The crusaders assembled their army in Świdnica. On 4 April Taborite forces destroyed Catholic forces in Mladá Vožice. On 7 April Taborites under command of captured Sedlice, after which they captured Písek, the castle Rábí, Strakonice and Prachatice. At the end of April the crusading army crossed the Bohemian border. At the beginning of May they captured Hradec Králové. On 7 May Čeněk of Wartenberg surrounded Hradčany.

Battles in Benešov and near Kutná Hora[]

The Crusader force of 400 infantry and knights under the command of attempted to defend Benešov against the Taborites. After the battle, the crusader forces were destroyed and the town was burned. Near Kutná Hora the crusader forces under the command of and Pippo Spano (Filippo Scolari) attacked the formations of the Taborites, without success.

On 22 May Taborite forces entered Prague. Jan Žižka destroyed the crusaders' relief column, which had to secure supplies that were sent to Hradčany and Vyšehrad. Meanwhile, the crusading army captured Slaný, Louny and Mělník.

Defence of Prague[]

Jan Žižka with a priest looking over Prague at the Vítkov Hill.
After the Battle of Vítkov Hill (1923), by Alphonse Mucha, The Slav Epic

The siege began on 12 June. The crusaders' forces, in the opinions of the chroniclers, consisted of 100,000-200,000 soldiers (according to Victor Verney, a modern historian, they probably had 80,000 soldiers).[3] One of the most important points in the fortifications of Prague was Vítkov Hill. The fortifications on this hill secured roads on the crusaders' supply lines and were made from timber but were consolidated with a stone-and-clay wall and moats. On the southern part of the hill there was a standing tower and the northern part was secured by a steep cliff. The fortifications were said to be defended by 26 men and three women, though in the opinion of J. Durdik it was probably about 60 soldiers. On 13 July the crusaders' cavalry crossed the River Vltava and began their attack. The next day Hussite relief troops surprise-attacked the knights through the vineyards on the southern side of the hill on which the battle was fought.[4] The attack forced the crusaders down the steep northern cliff. Panic spread among them, which resulted in their rout from the field. During the retreat many knights drowned in the Vltava. Most of Žižka's forces were soldiers armed with flails and guns.

The battle was a clear victory for the Hussites. Crusaders lost between 400-500 knights. In honor of this battle, Vítkov Hill was renamed Žižkov after Jan Žižka. As a consequence of the Hussite victory on Vítkov, the crusaders lost any hope of starving the city into submission and their army disintegrated. The National Monument exists today on the hill and in 2003 local officials were attempting to replant the vineyard.

Sigismund and his troops then held the castles of Vyšehrad and Hradčany. However, they soon capitulated and Sigismund had to withdraw from Prague. Afterward the crusaders withdrew to Kutná Hora and began local warfare.

References[]

  1. ^ Attila and Balázs Weiszhár: Lexicon of Wars (Háborúk lexikona) Atheneaum Budapest, 2004. ISBN 978-963-9471-25-2
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Vavřinec z Březové (1979). Husitská kronika; Píseň o vítězství u Domažlic (in Czech). Praha: Svoboda. p. 89.
  3. ^ Verney, Victor (2009). Warrior of God: Jan Zizka and the Hussite Revolution. Frontline Books.
  4. ^ Robert Bideleux; Ian Jeffries (10 April 2006). A History of Eastern Europe: Crisis and Change. Routledge. p. 234. ISBN 978-1-134-71984-6.
  • Piotr Marczak "Wojny Husyckie" (English, "Hussites Wars") pages 61–67 published 2003 by "Egros" Warsaw

External links[]

Coordinates: 50°05′21″N 14°25′29″E / 50.08917°N 14.42472°E / 50.08917; 14.42472

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