The Battle of Tábor took place in the early morning hours of 30 June 1420 in a locality between Tismenický stream [cs] and the Lužnice near the walls of a newly emerging Hussite village called Tábor. Between 3,000 and 9,000 Taborites, including women and children, remained in the village after a Hussite detachment left for Prague. Taking advantage of their weakened state, Oldřich II of Rosenberg laid siege to the village. He commanded a force composed of his own gunmen and Austrian mercenaries led by Lipolt Krajíř of Krajek, the governor of České Budějovice.

Battle of Tábor
Part of the Hussite Wars

Letter from King Sigismund ordering Oldřich II of Rosenberg to demolish Tábor
Date30 June 1420
Location
Result Decisive Hussite victory
Belligerents

Holy Roman Empire

Hussite coalition

Commanders and leaders
Oldřich II of Rosenberg
Lipolt Krajíř of Krajek
Mikuláš of Hus
Strength

4,800 cavalry and infantry

  • 4,000 Austrian cavalry
  • 500 mercenaries
  • 300 Rosenberg gunmen

Unknown

  • Reinforcement of 350 cavalry
Casualties and losses
Considerable losses Unknown

Learning of the siege, Mikuláš of Hus left Prague with 350 cavalry and returned to Tábor. In the early morning of 30 June 1420, he attacked the sleeping besiegers. Oldřich II of Rosenberg and his allies were caught off-guard by the attack and scattered, suffering heavy losses in their retreat. The Hussite victory lifted a week long siege, while Oldřich II missed the opportunity to eliminate the base of radical Hussites in the immediate vicinity of his estates.

Further reading

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  • Macek, Josef (1955). Tábor v husitském revolučním hnutí 2. díl. Prague: Rovnost.
  • Palacký, František (1907). Dějiny národu Českého v Čechách a na Moravě. Prague: B. Kočí.
  • Šmahel, František (1993). Husitská revoluce. Prague: Univerzita Karlova. ISBN 80-7184-075-0.
  • Šmahel, František (1969). Jan Žižka z Trocnova. Prague: Melantrich.

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