"Recommended."--CHOICE "Jerome of Prague has long been mentioned as one of Jan Hus's theological colleagues, both as a powerful preacher and a martyr for the Hussite cause, but until Thomas Fudge's study, there has been little about him available in English. This biographical study remedies this, introducing the reader to someone who was, in many ways, as responsible for the Bohemian reformation as was Hus. Fudge incorporates both contemporary Czech research and his own close reading of Jerome's works into a narrative that restores its subject to his deserved place as one of the leading lights of the Hussite movement."--Stephen Lahey, University of Nebraska, Lincoln "Thomas Fudge, one of the very best experts on the late medieval Bohemian reformation, has produced an arresting and lively biography. Jerome of Prague, a wandering intellectual who scandalized established university men throughout Europe, a fierce and arrogant polemist in matters of philosophy and church reform, ended his days at the stake in May 1416. Fudge's book reconstructs Jerome's personality in all his complexity, human failings, and ultimately, his constancy."--Philippe Buc, University of Vienna "Drawing on his deep knowledge of Czech literature and scholarship, Thomas Fudge has produced a definitive account of Jerome of Prague that bring out the achievements of a remarkable reformer, who for too long has remained under the shadow of Jan Hus.
He shows how Jerome, a committed follower of Wycliffe, challenged the dominant orthodoxy of the late medieval church, ushering in themes subsequently taken up in the Protestant Reformation."-- Constant J. Mews, Monash University.