The Hussite crowds first attacked the fortified dwellings on both sides of the bridge tower, the palace of the archbishop and the so-called Saxon House, and forced the royalists to withdraw to the castle, leaving their horses and weapons behind. Church bells rang all night; the queen decided to leave and handed over power, for all practical purposes, to burgrave
en
k. The next day, a Sunday morning, the Hussites attended mass but in the afternoon marched against Minor Town royalists who, after setting fire again to many buildings, retreated once more while the Hussites savaged the archbishop’s palace. On November 6, about four thousand more Hussites from the south who had survived the ambush crossed the river Sázava, near Prague, and were enthusiastically welcomed in the Old and the New Town; the royalists massed new troops at the castle and in regions outside Prague. The warring factions, now aware of a stalemate of forces, agreed to an armistice to extend to the spring of the following year; the burgrave and his party, pledged to respect Hussite religious practices and “the community of Prague,” was to refrain from further attacks on churches and monasteries and, voluntarily, return the Vyšehrad to the royal troops. The provincial radicals, feeling
de trop,
angrily left town but not before burning the rest of the Minor Town; they marched off to Plze
, which now became the center of radical resistance. Increasingly, violence was answered by violence; in Catholic Kutná Hora, the mostly German miners were eager to take Hussite prisoners, not only clergy but also artisans and peasants. They tortured and
decapitated them or flung them alive into the deep mine shafts; if a Catholic baron wanted to get rid of Hussite prisoners, he could sell them to Kutná Hora to be taken care of. More than 1,600 people perished in that way.
Holding court in the capital of Moravia, Brno (Brünn), Sigismund first refrained from revealing the full intensity of his feelings about the “Wyclifites,” but, moving to Breslau, in Silesia, he made his views perfectly clear. Upon his wish, Pope Martin V had issued a bull against the Bohemian heretics and had invited all Christians to join a crusade against the Hussites; even before the bull had been read from the pulpits of the Breslau churches, Jan Krása, a patrician Prague merchant visiting the Breslau fair who did not hide his Hussite ideas, was denounced to the church authorities and, after he had refused to recant, by Sigismund’s order was dragged through the streets by four horses and burned. The Bohemians had little to hope for, as far as Sigismund was concerned, and even less to negotiate about. In Prague, Jan Želivský preached belligerent sermons, and in the countryside, fired by visionary priests who spoke of the coming of the revenging Lord, the peasants sought protection in towns dominated by Hussites.
In the south, the radical Hussites left Ústí, at the Lužnice River, when it became militarily untenable, and established a new, fortified settlement not far away. They laid siege to the castle of Hradišt
, returned it to its rightful lord,
sub utraque specie,
and founded, on the fundaments of an older village, a new community called Tábor again. It attracted peasants, artisans, and radical gentry from all over the region and quickly gained in strength and respect when the radical Hussites and Jan Žižka, leaving Plze
to the royalists, marched south and joined the brethren and sisters at the new place. Being the New Jerusalem of radical and militant Hussites, Tábor was run by priests eager to denounce and persecute deviationists on the right and left, and by military commanders in charge of several thousand soldiers; even though the early communism of “common chests” did not survive for long, Táborite religious fervor lived on in many shapes and forms for centuries—even though the Tábor armies were defeated by moderate Hussites in 1434 and never reasserted their might in the field again.