Jan of Jenštejn
Template:Short description Template:Expand Czech Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Jan z JenštejnaTemplate:Refn (1348 – 17 June 1400) was a Bohemian archbishop, composer and poet.Template:Sfn From 1379 to 1396 he was the Archbishop of Prague. He studied in Bologna, Padova, Montpellier and Paris.
Life and career
Born in 1348 in Prague,Template:Sfn to Paul of Jenštejn, a Bohemian esquire who was chief notary for Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV.[1]
he became the owner of the castle Hrádek in 1379. The same year he succeeded to the archbishopric of his uncle Jan Očko z Vlašimi who had stepped down. Soon he became Chancellor to Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia. The next year the capital was struck by a Plague epidemic, which struck him as well. He recovered, but this episode left deep scars on his character and he began to examine theological and philosophical problems at his castle Helfenburk u Úštěka. He had abandoned public life because of a quarrel with Wenceslav IV, which was mainly over the matter of the Popes of Avignon. Jan was still loyal to Pope Urban VI, to whom the king was not. In 1384 he left his chancellor post. The quarrel with the king removed him completely from political life, and he retired to his castle and abandoned the post of archbishop on 2 July 1396. He was succeeded as archbishop by Olbram ze Škvorce.[2]
While on his castle, he fell from a newly built tower and miraculously managed to grab hold of something before falling to the ground.
He died in Rome on 17 June 1400,Template:Sfn and all his possessions, including his castle, passed to the Archbishops of Prague.
Artistic works
It can be said that his artistic action is as extensive as his political and religious activities. He organized the costly rebuilding of several castles, especially Jenštejn..
His musical works were compiled in the book Die Hymnen Johanns von Jenstein, Erzbischofs von Prag of Q. M. Dreves.Template:Sfn The book was published in German in 1886.Template:Sfn His literary activity was very rich and includes not only religious and philosophical works, but also poems.
He influenced literature and music with his own work. His musical activity was not systematic, but rather random. Before 1380 it was often dance music, then religious music.
References
Notes
Citations
Sources
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Further reading
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- Weltsch, Ruben Ernest (1968) Archbishop John of Jenstein (1348–1400): papalism, humanism and reform in pre-Hussite Prague Mouton, The Hague, OCLC 963607
- Template:Illm (1999) Jan Milíč z Kroměříže a Jan z Jenštejna Cisterciana Sarensis, Žďár nad Sázavou, OCLC 44149277 Template:Webarchive, in Czech
- Template:Ill (1938) Jan z Jenštejna: Mariánský a eucharistický horlitel české gotiky Vítězové, profesoři bohosloveckého učiliště řádu dominikánského, Olomouc, OCLC 85601162 in Czech
- Holinka, Rudolf (1933) Církevní politika arcibiskupa Jana z Jenštejna za pontifikátu Urbana VI: Studie z dĕjin velikého schismatu zapadního University Komenskeho, Bratislava, OCLC 19047598 in Czech
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- 1348 births
- 1400 deaths
- Roman Catholic archbishops of Prague
- 14th-century Roman Catholic archbishops in the Holy Roman Empire
- 14th-century composers
- 14th-century poets from Bohemia
- Czech male poets
- Czech male classical composers
- Czech classical composers
- Czech philosophers
- Czech expatriates in Italy
- Medieval male composers