Malmö, Sweden
13th century
Vaxholm, Sweden
1760-1803
Linköping, Sweden
c. 1120
Stockholm, Sweden
1906
Haninge, Sweden
13th century
Ystad, Sweden
ca. 1200
Gothenburg, Sweden
1856-1859
Eksjö, Sweden
1887-1889
Askersund, Sweden
1664-1670
Gothenburg, Sweden
1914
Stockholm, Sweden
1672-1688
Lund, Sweden
1160s
Karlskrona, Sweden
1720-1744
Sigtuna, Sweden
1230-1255
Nyköping, Sweden
13th century
Karlskrona, Sweden
1697-1709
Örebro, Sweden
Late 1200s
Växjö, Sweden
ca. 1120
Halmstad, Sweden
c. 1432
Gamla Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
ca. 1164
The Jan Hus Memorial stands at one end of Old Town Square. The huge monument depicts victorious Hussite warriors and Protestants who were forced into exile 200 years after Hus, and a young mother who symbolises national rebirth. The monument was so large that the sculptor designed and built his own villa and studio where the work could be carried out. It was unveiled in 1915 to commemorate the 500th anniversary of Jan Hus' martyrdom. The memorial was designed by Ladislav Šaloun and paid for solely by public donations.
Born in 1369, Hus became an influential religious thinker, philosopher, and reformer in Prague. He was a key predecessor to the Protestant movement of the sixteenth century. In his works he criticized religious moral decay of the Catholic Church. Accordingly, the Czech patriot Hus believed that mass should be given in the vernacular, or local language, rather than in Latin. He was inspired by the teachings of John Wycliffe.