Bohemia

11 Apr, 2002 940 History of Europe

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the medieval kingdom of Bohemia which was at the crossroads of Europe and, during the 15th century, at the heart of the Holy Roman Empire. Under Charles IV, its cosmopolitan capital Prague became a cultural and intellectual centre, attracting scholars and artists from all over Europe. But Prague was awash with religious and political dissent. At its core stood the anarchist philosopher Jan Hus, whose ideas anticipated the Lutheran Reformation by a full century. He was burnt at the stake, but his followers, the Hussites, embarked on a series of wars that continue to mark the Czech and German characters even today. Why was Bohemia such a crucible of dissent and how were its ideas exported to the rest of Europe? What did it mean to be Bohemian then and how was the ancient kingdom of Bohemia, with its ferment of religious, national and ethnic ideologies, divided up to form the states of modern Central Europe?

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Guests

  • Norman Davies 3 episodes
    Professor Emeritus, University of London
  • Karin Friedrich No other episodes
    Lecturer in History, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London
  • Robert Pynsent No other episodes
    Professor of Czech and Slovak Literature, University College London

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Programme ID: p00548cz

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00548cz

Auto-category: 943.7 (Central Europe)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. The medieval kingdom of Bohemia was at the crossroads of Europe and during the 15th century at the heart of the Holy Roman Empire.