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(Czech pronunciation: [aʃ]; German: Asch) is a town in Cheb District in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 13,000 inhabitants.

Town centre
Location in the Czech Republic
Coordinates: 50°13′26″N 12°11′42″E / 50.22389°N 12.19500°E / 50.22389; 12.19500
Country Czech Republic
RegionKarlovy Vary
DistrictCheb
First mentioned1270
Government
 • MayorVítězslav Kokoř
Area
 • Total55.86 km2 (21.57 sq mi)
Elevation
666 m (2,185 ft)
Population
 (2023-01-01)[1]
 • Total12,804
 • Density230/km2 (590/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
352 01
Websitewww.muas.cz

Administrative parts Edit

 
Aš Panhandle

Villages of Dolní Paseky, Doubrava, Horní Paseky, Kopaniny, Mokřiny, Nebesa, Nový Žďár and Vernéřov are administrative parts of Aš.

Geography Edit

Aš is located about 19 kilometres (12 mi) northwest of Cheb, on the border with Germany. With the neighbouring municipalities Hranice, Krásná, Podhradí and Hazlov, it lies in the westernmost area of the Czech Republic known as the Aš Panhandle. This area is a salient surrounded by German territory in the east, north and west. It lies in the historical Egerland region.

Aš is situated in the Fichtel Mountains. The highest point of Aš and of the whole Czech part of the Fichtel Mountains is Háj, at 758 m (2,487 ft). The upper course of the White Elster river shortly after its source flows across the central part of the municipal territory, outside the town proper.

History Edit

11th–18th centuries Edit

Previously uninhabited hills and swamps, the town of Aš was founded in the early 11th century by German colonists[2] descending from the Bavarian march of the Nordgau in the course of the Ostsiedlung. So far, previous Slavic settlements in the area are not known.[3]

The first recorded rulers were the Vogt ministeriales from Weida, Thuringia, who gave the entire Vogtland region its name. In 1281, they officially received the estates as an immediate fief at the hands of King Rudolph I of Germany. Emperor Louis IV elevated them to Princes of the Holy Roman Empire in 1329. Nevertheless, two years later, they sold Aš land to King John of Bohemia, who since 1322 also held the adjacent Egerland in the south. Together with neighbouring Selb and Elster, Aš was enfeoffed to the Freiherren of Neuberg (Podhradí).[4] When in 1394 Konrad von Neuburg died without a male heir, by virtue of Hedwig von Neuburg's marriage to Konrad von Zedtwitz, Aš passed into the control of the noble House of Zedtwitz.

 
Church attendance in Aš, 19th century

In 1557, the Aš region was incorporated into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown by the Habsburg king Ferdinand I. Like the neighbouring Egerland, it remained Protestant until the Thirty Years' War, as the Counter Reformation did not stretch to the West Bohemian borderlands. In the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, the Protestant confession of the citizens was confirmed. In 1774, Empress Maria Theresa officially mediatised Aš as part of the Bohemian crown land within the Habsburg monarchy, against the delaying resistance by the Zedtwitz noble family. Nevertheless, she granted its Protestant citizens freedom of religion, confirmed in the 1781 Patent of Toleration, issued by her son Emperor Joseph II.

19th–20th centuries Edit

From 1806, Aš with Bohemia belonged to the Austrian Empire and Cisleithanian Austria after the Compromise of 1867. Until 1918, the town remained part of Austria-Hungary, head of the Asch district, one of the 94 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Bohemia.[5] In 1854 a county legal code was granted to the region, ending five centuries of legal control by the Zedtwitz family. Aš was linked to the Eger (Cheb)–Hof railway line in 1864, with a branch-off to Saxon Adorf opened in 1885. It obtained the status of a town in 1872, as the population grew due to a flourishing textile industry. By 1910 the population had risen to 21,880, from 9,405 in 1869.[2]

Upon the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy at the end of the World War I, a soldiers' council seized power and rejected the demands of separatists from Eger for annexation to the Bavarian lands of the German Weimar Republic, preferring to remain with the Republic of German-Austria, which was however soon denied by the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. During the negotiations of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye the Americans, like Allen Welsh Dulles, had failed to persuade other powers to make at least the Bohemian peninsulas within Germany, like Aš Land or Rumburk in the Šluknov Hook, legal parts of Weimar Germany. Thus the area became part of newly established state of Czechoslovakia, and received its current Czech name[6] On 18 November 1920, Czech militia toppled the monument of Emperor Joseph II against local protest, whereby three citizens were shot.[7] A 1921 Czechoslovak census counted 183 ethnic Czechs, in a population of 40,000 in the district,[6] a 1930 census 520 Czechs, in a population of 45,000 in the district.[6]

 
Wehrmacht soldiers parading in Aš, 1938

In 1937, the Sudeten German Party took over in Aš, led by Konrad Henlein, who for several years had worked in the town as a gym teacher. Henlein openly advocated the annexation of the Sudetenland territories to Nazi Germany, while Czech residents, mainly officials, were forced to leave the town. On 22 September 1938, a few days before the Munich Agreement, a Sudeten German Freikorps proclaimed a "Free State of Asch". Upon the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in October, according to the Agreement, Wehrmacht troops officially arrived, unopposed. By 1939 a German census counted a population of 23,130 in the town, almost 100% German Lutherans. From 1938 to 1945, Aš was administered as part of Reichsgau Sudetenland.

At the end of World War II, the town was occupied by U.S. Army forces on 20 April 1945. Czech officials arrested 64 men on 7 June and took them to Bory Prison in Plzeň, where half of them perished[8] Due to the Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia in 1946 by the Beneš decrees, the town's population was reduced to "half of the pre-war number of inhabitants".[9] A German expellee website states that 30,327 Germans have been expelled from March to November in 27 trains.[10] In 1949, 3,000 expellees met in far away Rüdesheim am Rhein, to protest, stating that their area never was inhabited by Slavs other than as a tiny minority.[4]

The population shrank further in 1950 due to the establishment of the Iron Curtain and the Czechoslovak border fortifications during the Cold War, as the whole Aš district was included into the border zone which made many people move out.[2] Because of the lowering number of inhabitants some houses remained uninhabited. There was lack of money for their renovation and it was necessary to demolish them.[2]

Demographics Edit

The present-day population in the town is roughly half of the pre-war population.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
186913,888—    
188017,589+26.6%
189019,885+13.1%
190023,737+19.4%
191027,772+17.0%
YearPop.±%
192124,618−11.4%
193028,916+17.5%
195012,484−56.8%
196111,209−10.2%
197012,843+14.6%
YearPop.±%
198012,925+0.6%
199112,285−5.0%
200112,584+2.4%
201112,643+0.5%
202112,257−3.1%
Source: Censuses[11][12]

Transport Edit

 
Main station

There are three road border crossings and one railway border crossing. Road border crossings lead to Bad Elster and Bad Brambach in Saxony in the east, as well as to Selb in Bavaria in the west. The railway border crossing leads to Selb.

The Cheb–Hranice v Čechách railway goes through the town. There are three train stations: (the main train station), Aš-město and Aš-předměstí (currently just a shelter). This railway and the first station were built in 1865. In 1968, the old Royal Bavarian State Railways station building was demolished, and the current one was built in 1969.[13] station also lies on the Cheb–Oberkotzau railway. This railway was closed during the Cold War, but reopened in 2015.

Education Edit

There are five kindergartens, four elementary schools, a gymnasium, a special school and a school of art located in Aš. A high school of textile also existed here.

Sights Edit

 
Goetheho Square with the town hall
 
Aš Museum
 
Luther monument

The main square of the town is Goethovo Square named after J. W. Goethe, who often visited the town. In the middle of the square is the Memorial of J. W. Goethe from 1932, designed by Johannes Watzal. The landmark of the square is the town hall. It was built in 1733 in the Baroque style, but in 1814 was burned out. In 1816 it was built again, according to the original plans.[14]

The Aš Museum was founded in 1892 and is subtitled "Ethnography and Textile Museum of Aš". It is housed in a building on the site of a former manor house, today called Zámeček ("Little Castle"). The most important textile collection is the collection of 22,000 pairs of gloves. Under the administration of the museum also operates "The stone crosses research society" which maintaints the central register of these monuments. The museum also includes gardens open to the public. Into the corner pillar of the garden is built the Salva Guardia stone relief with imperial symbols.[15]

The town firehouse is a significant building from 1930 designed by Emil Rösler. In 2014, it was reconstructed. Today it houses part of the town museum. [14]

The Evangelical Church of the Good Shepherd is located on the site of a former church from 1480–1490. The original church was rebuilt in the Baroque style and only the tower was preserved.[14]

The Church of Saint Nicholas is a Roman Catholic church built in 1867–1871 that replaced a late Baroque church from 1780. It has a 48 metres (157 ft) high tower.[14]

The Memorial of Dr. Martin Luther was erected in 1883 and re-erected in 2008. It is the only Luther Monument in the country and in the whole of the former Austria-Hungary. It was located next to the evangelical church, which was one of the most important monuments of the region. The church burned down in 1960 and today is commemorated by perimeter wall and wooden cross.[14][16]

On Háj, there is an eponymous observation tower. It was designed by Wilhelm Kreis and built in 1902–1903. The tower is 35 metres (115 ft) high.[14]

Gustav Geipel Memorial from 1924 is dedicated to this factory owner and patron of Aš, who sponsored children, poor and old people. Gustav Geipel's villa from 1888 is an architectural monument.[14]

Trivia Edit

Alongside with the municipality of , Aš has the shortest place name in the Czech Republic.[17]

Notable people Edit

Twin towns – sister cities Edit

Aš is twinned with:[18]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Population of Municipalities – 1 January 2023". Czech Statistical Office. 2023-05-23.
  2. ^ a b c d "Historie města" (in Czech). Město Aš. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
  3. ^ Frühgschichte November 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b Rüdesheimer Erklärung November 9, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den österreichischen Postwertzeichen-Ausgaben 1867, 1883 und 1890, Wilhelm KLEIN, 1967
  6. ^ a b c Cz. Republik November 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Chronik September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Die Verfolgung November 9, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Because of the removal of German inhabitants in 1946, Aš had only a half of the pre-war number of inhabitants"
  10. ^ Die Vertreibung November 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Historický lexikon obcí České republiky 1869–2011 – Okres Cheb" (in Czech). Czech Statistical Office. 2015-12-21. pp. 1–2.
  12. ^ "Population Census 2021: Population by sex". Public Database. Czech Statistical Office. 2021-03-27.
  13. ^ "Železniční stanice Aš" (in Czech). National Heritage Institute. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g "Monuments". Město Aš. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  15. ^ "The textile and ethnographic museum in Aš". Library and Museum of Aš. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  16. ^ "Pomník náboženského reformátora Martina Luthera v Aši" (in Czech). Czech Tourism. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  17. ^ "Zajímavosti názvů obcí v České republice" (in Czech). Czech Statistical Office. Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  18. ^ "Partnerská města" (in Czech). Město Aš. Retrieved 2020-07-23.

External links Edit

czech, pronunciation, german, asch, town, cheb, district, karlovy, vary, region, czech, republic, about, inhabitants, towntown, centreflagcoat, armslocation, czech, republiccoordinates, 22389, 19500, 22389, 19500country, czech, republicregionkarlovy, varydistr. As Czech pronunciation aʃ German Asch is a town in Cheb District in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic It has about 13 000 inhabitants AsTownTown centreFlagCoat of armsAsLocation in the Czech RepublicCoordinates 50 13 26 N 12 11 42 E 50 22389 N 12 19500 E 50 22389 12 19500Country Czech RepublicRegionKarlovy VaryDistrictChebFirst mentioned1270Government MayorVitezslav KokorArea Total55 86 km2 21 57 sq mi Elevation666 m 2 185 ft Population 2023 01 01 1 Total12 804 Density230 km2 590 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code352 01Websitewww wbr muas wbr cz Contents 1 Administrative parts 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 11th 18th centuries 3 2 19th 20th centuries 4 Demographics 5 Transport 6 Education 7 Sights 8 Trivia 9 Notable people 10 Twin towns sister cities 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksAdministrative parts Edit As Panhandle Villages of Dolni Paseky Doubrava Horni Paseky Kopaniny Mokriny Nebesa Novy Zdar and Vernerov are administrative parts of As Geography EditAs is located about 19 kilometres 12 mi northwest of Cheb on the border with Germany With the neighbouring municipalities Hranice Krasna Podhradi and Hazlov it lies in the westernmost area of the Czech Republic known as the As Panhandle This area is a salient surrounded by German territory in the east north and west It lies in the historical Egerland region As is situated in the Fichtel Mountains The highest point of As and of the whole Czech part of the Fichtel Mountains is Haj at 758 m 2 487 ft The upper course of the White Elster river shortly after its source flows across the central part of the municipal territory outside the town proper History Edit11th 18th centuries Edit Previously uninhabited hills and swamps the town of As was founded in the early 11th century by German colonists 2 descending from the Bavarian march of the Nordgau in the course of the Ostsiedlung So far previous Slavic settlements in the area are not known 3 The first recorded rulers were the Vogt ministeriales from Weida Thuringia who gave the entire Vogtland region its name In 1281 they officially received the estates as an immediate fief at the hands of King Rudolph I of Germany Emperor Louis IV elevated them to Princes of the Holy Roman Empire in 1329 Nevertheless two years later they sold As land to King John of Bohemia who since 1322 also held the adjacent Egerland in the south Together with neighbouring Selb and Elster As was enfeoffed to the Freiherren of Neuberg Podhradi 4 When in 1394 Konrad von Neuburg died without a male heir by virtue of Hedwig von Neuburg s marriage to Konrad von Zedtwitz As passed into the control of the noble House of Zedtwitz Church attendance in As 19th centuryIn 1557 the As region was incorporated into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown by the Habsburg king Ferdinand I Like the neighbouring Egerland it remained Protestant until the Thirty Years War as the Counter Reformation did not stretch to the West Bohemian borderlands In the 1648 Peace of Westphalia the Protestant confession of the citizens was confirmed In 1774 Empress Maria Theresa officially mediatised As as part of the Bohemian crown land within the Habsburg monarchy against the delaying resistance by the Zedtwitz noble family Nevertheless she granted its Protestant citizens freedom of religion confirmed in the 1781 Patent of Toleration issued by her son Emperor Joseph II 19th 20th centuries Edit From 1806 As with Bohemia belonged to the Austrian Empire and Cisleithanian Austria after the Compromise of 1867 Until 1918 the town remained part of Austria Hungary head of the Asch district one of the 94 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Bohemia 5 In 1854 a county legal code was granted to the region ending five centuries of legal control by the Zedtwitz family As was linked to the Eger Cheb Hof railway line in 1864 with a branch off to Saxon Adorf opened in 1885 It obtained the status of a town in 1872 as the population grew due to a flourishing textile industry By 1910 the population had risen to 21 880 from 9 405 in 1869 2 Upon the dissolution of the Austro Hungarian monarchy at the end of the World War I a soldiers council seized power and rejected the demands of separatists from Eger for annexation to the Bavarian lands of the German Weimar Republic preferring to remain with the Republic of German Austria which was however soon denied by the 1919 Paris Peace Conference During the negotiations of the Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye the Americans like Allen Welsh Dulles had failed to persuade other powers to make at least the Bohemian peninsulas within Germany like As Land or Rumburk in the Sluknov Hook legal parts of Weimar Germany Thus the area became part of newly established state of Czechoslovakia and received its current Czech name 6 On 18 November 1920 Czech militia toppled the monument of Emperor Joseph II against local protest whereby three citizens were shot 7 A 1921 Czechoslovak census counted 183 ethnic Czechs in a population of 40 000 in the district 6 a 1930 census 520 Czechs in a population of 45 000 in the district 6 Wehrmacht soldiers parading in As 1938In 1937 the Sudeten German Party took over in As led by Konrad Henlein who for several years had worked in the town as a gym teacher Henlein openly advocated the annexation of the Sudetenland territories to Nazi Germany while Czech residents mainly officials were forced to leave the town On 22 September 1938 a few days before the Munich Agreement a Sudeten German Freikorps proclaimed a Free State of Asch Upon the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in October according to the Agreement Wehrmacht troops officially arrived unopposed By 1939 a German census counted a population of 23 130 in the town almost 100 German Lutherans From 1938 to 1945 As was administered as part of Reichsgau Sudetenland At the end of World War II the town was occupied by U S Army forces on 20 April 1945 Czech officials arrested 64 men on 7 June and took them to Bory Prison in Plzen where half of them perished 8 Due to the Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia in 1946 by the Benes decrees the town s population was reduced to half of the pre war number of inhabitants 9 A German expellee website states that 30 327 Germans have been expelled from March to November in 27 trains 10 In 1949 3 000 expellees met in far away Rudesheim am Rhein to protest stating that their area never was inhabited by Slavs other than as a tiny minority 4 The population shrank further in 1950 due to the establishment of the Iron Curtain and the Czechoslovak border fortifications during the Cold War as the whole As district was included into the border zone which made many people move out 2 Because of the lowering number of inhabitants some houses remained uninhabited There was lack of money for their renovation and it was necessary to demolish them 2 Demographics EditThe present day population in the town is roughly half of the pre war population Historical populationYearPop 186913 888 188017 589 26 6 189019 885 13 1 190023 737 19 4 191027 772 17 0 YearPop 192124 618 11 4 193028 916 17 5 195012 484 56 8 196111 209 10 2 197012 843 14 6 YearPop 198012 925 0 6 199112 285 5 0 200112 584 2 4 201112 643 0 5 202112 257 3 1 Source Censuses 11 12 Transport Edit Main stationThere are three road border crossings and one railway border crossing Road border crossings lead to Bad Elster and Bad Brambach in Saxony in the east as well as to Selb in Bavaria in the west The railway border crossing leads to Selb The Cheb Hranice v Cechach railway goes through the town There are three train stations As the main train station As mesto and As predmesti currently just a shelter This railway and the first station were built in 1865 In 1968 the old Royal Bavarian State Railways station building was demolished and the current one was built in 1969 13 As station also lies on the Cheb Oberkotzau railway This railway was closed during the Cold War but reopened in 2015 Education EditThere are five kindergartens four elementary schools a gymnasium a special school and a school of art located in As A high school of textile also existed here Sights Edit Goetheho Square with the town hall As Museum Luther monumentThe main square of the town is Goethovo Square named after J W Goethe who often visited the town In the middle of the square is the Memorial of J W Goethe from 1932 designed by Johannes Watzal The landmark of the square is the town hall It was built in 1733 in the Baroque style but in 1814 was burned out In 1816 it was built again according to the original plans 14 The As Museum was founded in 1892 and is subtitled Ethnography and Textile Museum of As It is housed in a building on the site of a former manor house today called Zamecek Little Castle The most important textile collection is the collection of 22 000 pairs of gloves Under the administration of the museum also operates The stone crosses research society which maintaints the central register of these monuments The museum also includes gardens open to the public Into the corner pillar of the garden is built the Salva Guardia stone relief with imperial symbols 15 The town firehouse is a significant building from 1930 designed by Emil Rosler In 2014 it was reconstructed Today it houses part of the town museum 14 The Evangelical Church of the Good Shepherd is located on the site of a former church from 1480 1490 The original church was rebuilt in the Baroque style and only the tower was preserved 14 The Church of Saint Nicholas is a Roman Catholic church built in 1867 1871 that replaced a late Baroque church from 1780 It has a 48 metres 157 ft high tower 14 The Memorial of Dr Martin Luther was erected in 1883 and re erected in 2008 It is the only Luther Monument in the country and in the whole of the former Austria Hungary It was located next to the evangelical church which was one of the most important monuments of the region The church burned down in 1960 and today is commemorated by perimeter wall and wooden cross 14 16 On Haj there is an eponymous observation tower It was designed by Wilhelm Kreis and built in 1902 1903 The tower is 35 metres 115 ft high 14 Gustav Geipel Memorial from 1924 is dedicated to this factory owner and patron of As who sponsored children poor and old people Gustav Geipel s villa from 1888 is an architectural monument 14 Trivia EditAlongside with the municipality of Es As has the shortest place name in the Czech Republic 17 Notable people EditSebastian Knupfer 1633 1676 German composer Friedrich Wettengel 1750 1824 Lutheran theologian Andreas Leonhardt 1800 1866 Austrian composer Ernst Bareuther 1838 1905 Austrian politician Karl Alberti 1856 1953 German historian Emil Baumgartel 1885 1939 Austrian politician Otto Jager 1894 1917 German flying ace Wilhelm Ludwig 1901 1959 German geneticist Karl Fritzsch 1903 1945 German KZ commander Hermann Fischer 1912 1984 German athlete and Communist resistance fighter against Nazism Karl Komma 1913 2012 German composer Herbert Bareuther 1914 1945 German flying ace Rudolf Hilf 1923 2011 German historian and political scientist Ernst Wilfer 1923 2014 German engineer Oskar Fischer 1923 2020 German politician Anton Bodem 1925 2007 German theologian Gerhard Hahn born 1933 German professor of medieval studies Horst Tomayer 1938 2013 German writer and actor Marketa Zinnerova born 1942 children s book writer Charly Hollering 1944 2009 German jazz musician Wolf Stegemann born 1944 German journalist author and poet Rudiger Bartelmus born 1944 German theologian and professor Milan Boksa born 1951 football manager Petr Sepesi 1960 1985 singer Jiri Plisek born 1972 football player and manager Lukas Resetar born 1984 futsal player Lenka Maruskova born 1985 athlete Jiri Sekac born 1992 ice hockey playerTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in the Czech Republic As is twinned with 18 Fiumefreddo di Sicilia Italy Marktbreit Germany Oelsnitz Germany Plauen Germany Rehau GermanySee also EditNSTG AschReferences Edit Population of Municipalities 1 January 2023 Czech Statistical Office 2023 05 23 a b c d Historie mesta in Czech Mesto As Retrieved 2021 06 06 Fruhgschichte Archived November 6 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Rudesheimer Erklarung Archived November 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den osterreichischen Postwertzeichen Ausgaben 1867 1883 und 1890 Wilhelm KLEIN 1967 a b c Cz Republik Archived November 6 2007 at the Wayback Machine Chronik Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Die Verfolgung Archived November 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine Because of the removal of German inhabitants in 1946 As had only a half of the pre war number of inhabitants https web archive org web 20060715090423 http www muas cz html e historie htm Die Vertreibung Archived November 6 2007 at the Wayback Machine Historicky lexikon obci Ceske republiky 1869 2011 Okres Cheb in Czech Czech Statistical Office 2015 12 21 pp 1 2 Population Census 2021 Population by sex Public Database Czech Statistical Office 2021 03 27 Zeleznicni stanice As in Czech National Heritage Institute Retrieved 2022 06 08 a b c d e f g Monuments Mesto As Retrieved 2021 11 10 The textile and ethnographic museum in As Library and Museum of As Retrieved 2021 11 10 Pomnik nabozenskeho reformatora Martina Luthera v Asi in Czech Czech Tourism Retrieved 2021 11 10 Zajimavosti nazvu obci v Ceske republice in Czech Czech Statistical Office Retrieved 2020 07 22 Partnerska mesta in Czech Mesto As Retrieved 2020 07 23 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to As Official website Asch Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol II 9th ed 1878 p 677 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title As amp oldid 1169988854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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