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Žižka and one
Žižka is considered to be among the greatest military leaders and innovators of all time and is one of six commanders in history who never lost a battle ( alongside Alexander the Great, Scipio Africanus, Genghis Khan, Alexander Suvorov, and Khalid ibn al-Walid ).
Žižka was on the winning side of the Battle of Grunwald, also called the 1st Battle of Tannenberg, one of the largest battles in Medieval Europe.
Žižka disapproved of this compromise and left Prague for Plzeň, one of the richest cities of the kingdom with his followers, but soon left that city.
Žižka took a large part in the organization of the new military community and became one of the four captains of the people ( hejtman ) who were at its head.
Žižka, who took part in the deliberations at Čáslav, was elected as one of the two representatives of Tábor.
Four captains of the people ( hejtmané ) were elected, one of whom was Žižka ; and a very strictly military discipline was instituted.
In December 1419, one of these formations under the command of Jan Žižka was surprised by Catholic forces under the command of Bohuslav of Švamberk.
Žižka set his men on a small dam between two ponds, from which one was without water then.
After one battle when his army disobeyed him and killed many prisoners, Žižka ordered the army to pray for forgiveness.
Meanwhile, as a governor of Prague, he dismissed the city's council, summoned a new one and succeeded to terminate the internal discords between Jan Žižka and Utraquists, enabling a successful Hussite military campaign to Moravia against Emperor Sigismund.

Žižka and by
The mob became enraged at this event and, led by Jan Žižka, stormed the town hall.
Kuttenberg ( Kutná Hora ) was taken by Jan Žižka, and after a temporary reconciliation of the warring parties was burned by the imperial troops in 1422, to prevent its falling again into the hands of the Taborites.
Jan Žižka z Trocnova, fictional portrait by Jan Vilímek
Žižka helped develop tactics of using tabors, called vozová hradba in Czech or Wagenburg by the Germans, as mobile fortifications.
Led by Žižka and their other captains, the Taborites set out to take part in the defence of the capital.
It was agreed that the now reunited Hussites should attack Moravia, part of which was still held by Sigismund's partisans, and that Žižka should be the leader in this campaign.
The people, headed by Jan Žižka, threw the burgomaster and several town-councillors, who had instigated this outrage, from the windows and into the street ( the first " Defenestration of Prague "), where they were killed by the fall.
At Prague a demagogue, the priest Jan Želivský, for a time obtained almost unlimited authority over the lower classes of the townsmen ; and at Tábor a religious communistic movement ( that of the so-called Adamites ) was sternly suppressed by Žižka.
He took possession of the town of Kutná Hora but was decisively defeated by Jan Žižka at the Battle of Deutschbrod ( Německý Brod ) on 6 January 1422.
After several military successes gained by Žižka in 1423 and the following year, a treaty of peace between the Hussites was concluded on 13 September 1424 at Libeň, a village near Prague, now part of that city.
Led by a Czech yeoman, Jan Žižka, the Taborites streamed into the capital.
Tabor's army was led by Jan Žižka, the Bohemian general who commanded his rag-tag army in defense of Bohemia against the crusading Imperial Army under Emperor Sigismund.
He was called to Bohemia, where he dealt with the Hussite insurrection from 1420 ( see Battle of Vítkov Hill ), being severely beaten by Jan Žižka at Havlíčkův Brod ( see Battle of Německý Brod ), in January 1422.
From the years 1876-77, several photos remain of Tábor Square shortly after the renovation of the Town Hall, and a photo-essay documenting the unveiling of the Jan Žižka Memorial by sculptor Josef Václav Myslbek.
Its stout defenses repelled all enemies except for a capture by Jan Žižka during the Hussite Wars in 1421 and sieges by the Swedes during the Thirty Years ' War in 1642 and 1647.
Led by Jan Žižka, the Hussites besieged 2, 000 Royalist crusaders.
In 1421 Jan Žižka stormed the town, which later on was retaken and devastated by the troops of Duke Leopold, bishop of Passau.
Two of Prague's most-visible landmarks are in Žižkov: the National Monument, with its giant statue of Jan Žižka on horseback ( by Bohumil Kafka, it is the largest equestrian statue in the world ); and the 216 meter-high Žižkov Television Tower, Prague's tallest structure.
In 2000, it was decorated with surrealist sculptures by David Černý of infants mounting an assault on the tower. Jan Žižka Monument
The 9-meter high and 16. 5-ton monument to Jan Žižka by Bohumil Kafka is the largest bronze equestrian statue in the world.

Žižka and .
His body was initially displayed in a mausoleum at the site of the Jan Žižka monument in the district of Žižkov, Prague.
So that year his body was cremated, the ashes returned to the Žižka Monument and placed in a sarcophagus.
After the end of the communist period, Gottwald's ashes were removed from the Žižka Monument and placed in a common grave at Prague's Olšany Cemetery, together with the ashes of about 20 other communist leaders which had also originally been placed in the Žižka Monument.
The ruins of the home castle of the Czech national hero Jan Žižka, Trocnov ( now part of Borovany ), are located some ten kilometres ( 6 miles ) southeast of the town.
Žižka nonetheless took the place, and under Bohemian auspices it awoke to a new period of prosperity.
In the centre of the city is Žižka Square.
In the centre of the square is the statue of Jan Žižka, the greatest of the Hussite leaders.
File: Tábor Žižka Square. jpg | Square of Jan Žižka with city hall and church, 1895, Ignác Šechtl
Jan Žižka z Trocnova a Kalicha ( or Johann Schischka ; ) ( c. 1360 – 1424 ), Czech general and Hussite leader, follower of Jan Hus, was born at small village Trocnov ( now a part of Borovany ) in Bohemia, into a gentried family.
The Hussite wars also marked the earliest successful use of pistols on the battlefield and Žižka was an inovator in the use of gunpowder.
From his experiences at the Battle of Grunwald, Žižka knew exactly how his enemies would attack, and he found new ways to defeat forces numerically superior to his own.
This led to the armed conflict in which Žižka would earn his fame.
They immediately began a siege of the city and Žižka was compelled to defend the Kingdom.
His army consisted of farmers and peasants, lacking both the funds and equipment to be classic soldiers with sword, horse and armor, Žižka used their farmers ' skills to boost their military efficiancy.
At Prague, Žižka and his men took up a strong position on the hill just outside the city known as the Vítkov, now in Žižkov, a district of Prague named after the battle in his honour.

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