Prokop Veliký / Prokop the Great - Husovo námestí (Ceský Brod, Central Bohemia)
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
N 50° 04.437 E 014° 51.516
33U E 489881 N 5546862
Depicted monumental Art-Nouveau memorial, sculpted from Horice sandstone, is devoted to one of the most prominent persons of the Hussite movement - Prokop Veliký (Prokop the Great; or also Prokop Holý).
Waymark Code: WMKN5Z
Location: Středočeský kraj, Czechia
Date Posted: 05/05/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Metro2
Views: 40

Depicted monumental Art-Nouveau memorial, sculpted from Horice sandstone, is devoted to one of the most prominent persons of the Hussite movement - Prokop Veliký (Prokop the Great; or also Prokop Holý).

The Art-Nouveau memorial to Prokop the Great is work of sculptor Karel Opatrný from 1910. The memorial, which was erected on the site of the former city fountain, represents the radical Hussite general at a critical moment of the Battle at Lipany on 30 May 1434, and, after more than 100 years, still symbolises the disastrous national defeat at Lipany. Prokop the Great stands on a stylised hillock with his back to City Hall, wielding a Hussite mace, and gazing in the direction of Lipany. Behind him are symbols of military regalia of the time...


Prokop the Great (Czech: Prokop Veliký; * ca 1380 at Hýlov near Tábor – † 30 May 1434 at Lipany) was one of the most prominent Hussite generals of the Hussite Wars. His name has also been given as Prokop Holý or Procopius Rasus - Latin translation ("the Shaven," in allusion to his having received the tonsure in early life.

Initially Prokop was a member of the Utraquists (the moderate wing of the Hussites) and was a married priest who belonged to an eminent family from Prague. He studied in Prague, and then traveled for several years in foreign countries. On his return to Bohemia, though a priest and continuing to officiate as such, he became the most prominent leader of the advanced Hussite or Taborite forces during the latter part of the Hussite wars. He was not the immediate successor of Jan Žižka as leader of the Taborites, as has been frequently stated, but he commanded the forces of Tabor when they obtained their great victories over the Germans and Catholics at Ústí nad Labem in 1426 and Domažlice in 1431. The crushing defeat that he inflicted on the crusaders of the Holy Roman Empire at Domažlice led to peace negotiations (1432) at Cheb between the Hussites and representatives of the Council of Basel.

He also acted as leader of the Taborites during their frequent incursions into Hungary and Germany, particularly when in 1429 a vast Bohemian army invaded Saxony and the territory of Nuremberg. The Hussites, however, made no attempt permanently to conquer German territory, and on 6 February 1430 Prokop concluded a treaty at Kulmbach with Frederick I, burgrave of Nuremberg, by which the Hussites engaged themselves to leave Germany. When the Bohemians entered into negotiations with Sigismund and the Council of Basel and, after prolonged discussions, resolved to send an embassy to the council, Prokop the Great was its most prominent member, reaching Basel on 4 January 1433. When the negotiations there for a time proved fruitless, Prokop with the other envoys returned to Bohemia, where new internal troubles broke out.

A Taborite army led by Prokop the Great besieged Plzen, which was then in the hands of the Catholics. The discipline in the Hussite camp had, however, slackened in the course of prolonged warfare, and the Taborites encamped before Plzen revolted against Prokop, who therefore returned to Prague.

Probably encouraged by these dissensions among the men of Tabor, the Bohemian nobility, both Catholic and Utraquist, formed a league for the purpose of opposing radicalism, which through the victories of Tabor had acquired great strength in the Bohemian towns. The struggle began at Prague. Aided by the nobles, the citizens of the Old Town took possession of the more radical New Town, Prague, which Prokop unsuccessfully attempted to defend. Prokop now called to his aid Prokop the Lesser, who had succeeded him in the command of the Taborite army before Plzen. They jointly retreated eastward from Prague, and their forces, known as the army of the towns, met the army of the nobles between Kourim and Kolín in the Battle of Lipany (30 May 1434). The Taborites were decisively defeated, and both Prokops, Great and Lesser, perished in the battle...

[The article about Prokop the Great was excerpted from Wikipedia]

URL of the statue: [Web Link]

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