<b>Open this letter after my death: writing as testament in the correspondence between Jan Hus and his disciple</b> - doi: 10.4025/actascieduc.v33i1.13221

  • Thiago Borges de Aguiar
Keywords: history of education, bohemia, epistolography, educators

Abstract

The priest and educator Jan Hus, who was killed by fire in 1415 the Council of Constance, wrote two letters to his disciple Martin of Volyne, in which left a set of instructions for distribution of their material possessions and an list of spiritual teachings. The letters were similar, and the first should only be opened if Martin received from a reliable source news of the death of Hus. This paper examines the context and content of these letters for clues (concept based on historian Carlo Ginzburg) from an educational activity on the part of the sender and the transmission of his place of master to his disciple

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Author Biography

Thiago Borges de Aguiar
Doutor em História da Educação pela USP. Pesquisador do Grupo de Estudos História da Educação e Religião da FEUSP.
Published
2011-05-23
How to Cite
Aguiar, T. B. de. (2011). <b>Open this letter after my death: writing as testament in the correspondence between Jan Hus and his disciple</b&gt; - doi: 10.4025/actascieduc.v33i1.13221. Acta Scientiarum. Education, 33(1), 87-95. https://doi.org/10.4025/actascieduc.v33i1.13221
Section
History of Education