John Hus and John Wycliffe were both educated reformers who were punished by the Council of Constance, Hus being tricked and ambushed on grounds of receiving a fair trial and Wycliffe was cast out by his peers until later after his death he exhumed by the Council and they burned his bones. He lived in the 15th century, and had resided in Bohemia, educating others and building more of a following until he was called to meet with the Council of Constance by the Emperor in order for him to receive a fair trial. However instead he was ambushed by the emperor and the Council of Constance and was sentenced to be burned at the stake. This event led to his followers coming together and they raised enough clout to be considered an actual separate religion by the same king at the time. John Wycliffe, lived in 14th century London, was considered as the “Morning Star of Reformation” (Christianity.com), who cared deeply for the poor and the common folk unlike his successor Martin Luther. His negative views on the church’s laws and practices at the time had gotten him isolated from his peers and exiled from the church. He did however manage to teach a group of people called Lollards who still follows his teachings to this day translating the books of the bible and spreading the word of its …show more content…
These predecessors of his had inspired Martin Luther in the 16th century to take action and change how people practiced their faith. Protestant comes out in 1529 from the following of the Lutheran Church (Protestants are everyone that follows the Christian faith, that are not Catholic nor Orthodox). Out of the many other forms of reformation before Luther’s time his is the one that had gained a much stronger following that stuck around and led to a rise of many people viewed about their faith (i.e., Pilgrims, Quakers, and Calvinist). He