Battle of Lipany

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Battle of Lipany
Part of the Hussite Wars

Date 30 May 1434
Location Lipany near Český Brod
Result Decisive Anti-Hussite Victory
Combatants
Taborites and Oreborites Utraquist and Catholics
Commanders
Prokop the Great
Jan Čapek of Sány
Diviš Bořek of Miletínek
Strength
18,000 soldiers Unknown
Casualties
13,000 soldiers Unknown
Hussite Wars
Nekmer - SudomĕřVítkovVyšehradNebovidy - Německý BrodHořiceÚstí nad LabemTachovLipanyGrotniki

The Battle of Lipany, also called the Battle of Cesky Brod, was fought 40 km east of Prague on May 30, 1434 and virtually ended the Hussite Wars. An army of Utraquist nobility and Catholics, called the Bohemian League, defeated the radical Taborites led by Prokop the Great, the overall commander, and by Čapek of Sány, the cavalry commander.

The Taborites set up a Wagenburg to start the battle. The Leaguer troops immediately fired a cannon barrage and then made an infantry assault. The infantry assault failed, and the remaining infantry retreated. The Taborites followed them in close pursuit. The withdrawal of the infantry was a ploy so that the heavy cavalry could charge at the pursuing infantry, which duly followed. The heavy cavalry crushed the Hussite infantry and charged all of the way into the Wagenburg. The Taborite cavalry commander, Čapek of Sány, had his men flee before the Leaguer heavy cavalry charged. This could have been betrayal, since Hussite cavalry would normally counter the enemy cavalry. Prokop the Great led a courageous last stand, but it was to no avail. The battle was the final loss for the Hussites.

The Taborite army was almost completely destroyed, and Taborites as a military force ceased to exist. The road to accept Compact of Basel was open; it was signed on 5 July 1436 in Jihlava and the next month, Sigismund was accepted as a King of Bohemia by all major factions. Sigismund commented after the Battle of Lipany that "the Bohemians could be overcome only by Bohemians."

The last formation of Taborites under the command of Jan Roháč of Dubé was besieged in his castle Sion near Kutná Hora. It was then captured by Sigismund's forces, and on 9 September 1437 Jan Roháč, who still refused to accept Sigismund as his King, was hanged in Prague. With the wars officially over, many Hussites were now hired by the same countries whom they had sacked during their "beautiful rides".

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