The Battle of Hořice (German name: Horschitz) was fought on 27 April 1423, between the Orebites faction of the Hussites and Bohemian Catholics.[2] The Hussites were led by Jan Žižka (who was completely blind at the time of the battle),[3] while the Catholics were led by the repeatedly-converting Čeněk of Wartenberg. The battle took place on the Gothard plateau, near Hořice. Thanks to a strategic position, which allowed perfect use of Hussite war wagons and Žižka's tactical skills, the Hussites eventually won the battle.

Battle of Hořice
Part of the Hussite Wars

Battle of Hořice
Date27 April 1423
Location
Result Decisive Hussite victory
Belligerents
Orebites Bohemian nobility
Commanders and leaders
Jan Žižka
Diviš Bořek of Miletínek
Čeněk von Wartenberg
Strength
2,700 infantry
300 cavalry
120 War wagons[1]
3,000 cavalry with some wagons and cannon
Casualties and losses
Unknown Heavy

Hussites took the high ground and built their wagon fort there. The Catholic cavalry could not ride up such a steep hill and was forced to dismount. The cannons owned by the nobles could not fire effectively uphill. These circumstances made it a battle between infantry behind fortifications and heavily armored infantry in the field. Žižka's men held the Wagenburg against repeated attacks by dismounted cavalry. Then, Žižka decided that the time was right to counterattack. With some cavalry, the Hussites charged downhill and swept Catholic forces from the battlefield.

References

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  1. ^ TOMAN, Hugo (1898). Husitské válečnictví za doby Žižkovy a Prokopovy (in Czech). Praha: Nákladem jubilejního fondu Král. České Společnosti Nauk.
  2. ^ Thomas A. Fudge; Helen J. Nicholson (2002). The Crusade Against Heretics in Bohemia, 1418-1437: Sources and Documents for the Hussite Crusades. Ashgate. p. x. ISBN 978-0-7546-0801-1.
  3. ^ The Slavonic Review. School of Slavonic Studies in the University of London, Kings̓ College. 1925. p. 283.

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