Is that plausible?![]()
Jan Hus had already been exposed to Lollardy by 1405, so it's likely that some Czech equivalent will arise eventually. But we're more than a decade before Lake Constance and the First Defenestration of Prague, so there's no political Hussitism yet - and Good King Wenceslaus is a close ally of his sometimes exasperating brother Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Hungary.
Zizka definitely fought at Tannenberg in 1410, so I don't see why he couldn't crusade in the other direction. Not sure about Prokop, he was a monk and a student before becoming a Taborite commander - but it's certainly not implausible that a monk with martial zeal would sign up for a Crusade.
Ooh, for a real treat - how about Zizka campaigning alongside Prince Hal Plantagenet (OTL's future Henry V)?!? Perhaps John the Fearless of Burgundy as well. Those two princes were among the keenest of Western nobility for old-style chivalry at this relatively late date, and I believe that both had very theoretical ideas of a Jerusalem campaign after fulfilling their ambitions in France.
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