The Bohemian Revolt was an uprising led by Pastor John and Heinrich Matthias von Thurn against Archduke (soon-to-be Emperor) Francis of the Archduchy of Austria. This uprising had officially started the 30 Years Francis.
Archduke Francis Habsburg Bergoglio (now Pope Francis) had been appointed as Archbishop of Prague, and elected King of the Bohemians in the year 1618. Being the de-facto Archduke of Austria, and a strict Catholic, Francis was not well liked by the Bohemians. Pastor John in retaliation had attempted to elect himself as King of Bohemia (which the majority of the Bohemian estates had accepted) and had stormed Prague castle with his associate, Heinrich Matthias von Thurn. They had hurled the Archduke out of the window, along with 2 other Catholic nobles; Vilem Slavata and Jaroslav Borzita. All 3 of the men had survived
When Francis had landed out of the window, he had been enraged with the Protestants like never before. Francis had then ran to Vienna to the Hofkriegsrat (the Imperial War Council) and had demanded to deploy the Austrian legions into Bohemia, which was accepted.
In the year 1619, Francis' cousin, Emperor Matthias, had died. Francis was then crowned Holy Roman Emperor and had fully declared war on Pastor John's Bohemia, known to many as "The Sodom and Gomorrah of Europe". The entire Bohemian court of Nobles was known to have taken turns raping Pastor John, and impregnating him with "new nobility for the Protestant Union" which Pastor John had already founded prior to the war. Unrest expanded into Austrian owned Silesia, where Pastor John had sought to expand next. This was halted by Francis at the battle of White Mountain, where the Bohemian Estates had been completely crushed. Francis had then regained control of Bohemia, but was in need of dire financial support from his allies. His first-cousin Craigslist Barflihan, the King of Spain, had been his most notable benefactor during this period of the Francis.
Shortly after the defeat, Pastor John had called to his allies. Sultan AC Fenton of the Ottomans could not aid, but the Transylvanians could. Istvan Rakoczi, Gabriel Bethlen and a few other princes of Transylvania had invaded Hungary and Moravia with Ottoman support, and later went to besiege Prague but had been deterred from a full invasion due to attacks from the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Shortly after his defeat, Pastor John had fled back to the County Palatine of the Rhine to rule until he was deposed by Duke Maximillian I of Bavaria,.