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Moravia

Moravia (/məˈrviə/ mə-RAY-vee-ə,[6] also UK: /mɒˈ-/ morr-AY-,[7] US: /mɔːˈ-, mˈ-/ mor-AY-, moh-RAY-;[7][8] Czech: Morava [ˈmorava] (listen); German: Mähren [ˈmɛːʁən] (listen); Polish: Morawy [mɔˈravɨ]; Silesian: Morawa; Latin: Moravia) is a historical region in the east of the Czech Republic and one of three historical Czech lands, with Bohemia and Czech Silesia.

Moravia
Morava
The town of Mikulov

Moravia (green) in relation to the current regions of the Czech Republic
Location of Moravia in the European Union
Coordinates: 49°30′N 17°00′E / 49.5°N 17°E / 49.5; 17Coordinates: 49°30′N 17°00′E / 49.5°N 17°E / 49.5; 17
CountryCzech Republic
RegionsMoravian-Silesian, Olomouc, South Moravian, Vysočina, Zlín, South Bohemian, Pardubice
First mentioned822[2][3]
Consolidated833[4]
Former capitalBrno (1641–1948)[5]
Brno, Olomouc (until 1641), Velehrad (9th century)
Major citiesBrno, Ostrava, Olomouc, Zlín, Jihlava
Area
 • Total22,348.87 km2 (8,628.95 sq mi)
Population
 • Total3,100,000[1]
DemonymMoravian
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)

The medieval and early modern Margraviate of Moravia was a crown land of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown from 1348 to 1918, an imperial state of the Holy Roman Empire from 1004 to 1806, a crown land of the Austrian Empire from 1804 to 1867, and a part of Austria-Hungary from 1867 to 1918. Moravia was one of the five lands of Czechoslovakia founded in 1918. In 1928 it was merged with Czech Silesia, and then dissolved in 1948 during the abolition of the land system following the communist coup d'état.

Its area of 22,623.41 km2[note 1] is home to more than 3 million people.[9][10][11][1] The people are historically named Moravians, a subgroup of Czechs, the other group being called Bohemians.[12][13] Moravia also had been home of a large German-speaking population until their expulsion in 1945. The land takes its name from the Morava river, which runs from its north to south, being its principal watercourse. Moravia's largest city and historical capital is Brno. Before being sacked by the Swedish army during the Thirty Years' War, Olomouc served as the Moravian capital, and it is still the seat of the Archdiocese of Olomouc.[5]

Toponymy

The region and former margraviate of Moravia, Morava in Czech, is named after its principal river Morava. It is theorized that the river's name is derived from Proto-Indo-European *mori: "waters", or indeed any word denoting water or a marsh.[14]

The German name for Moravia is Mähren, from the river's German name March. This could have a different etymology, as march is a term used in the Medieval times for an outlying territory, a border or a frontier (cf. English march).

Geography

Moravia occupies most of the eastern part of the Czech Republic. Moravian territory is naturally strongly determined, in fact, as the Morava river basin, with strong effect of mountains in the west (de facto main European continental divide) and partly in the east, where all the rivers rise.

Moravia occupies an exceptional position in Central Europe. All the highlands in the west and east of this part of Europe run west–east, and therefore form a kind of filter, making north–south or south–north movement more difficult. Only Moravia with the depression of the westernmost Outer Subcarpathia, 14–40 kilometers (8.7–24.9 mi) wide, between the Bohemian Massif and the Outer Western Carpathians (gripping the meridian at a constant angle of 30°), provides a comfortable connection between the Danubian and Polish regions, and this area is thus of great importance in terms of the possible migration routes of large mammals[15] – both as regards periodically recurring seasonal migrations triggered by climatic oscillations in the prehistory, when permanent settlement started.

 
Rolling hills of the Králický Sněžník massif, Horní Morava, near the border with Bohemia
 
Šance Dam on the Ostravice River in the Moravian-Silesian Beskids; the river forms the border with Silesia.
 
Steppe landscape near Mohelno

Moravia borders Bohemia in the west, Lower Austria in the southwest, Slovakia in the southeast, Poland very shortly in the north, and Czech Silesia in the northeast. Its natural boundary is formed by the Sudetes mountains in the north, the Carpathians in the east and the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands in the west (the border runs from Králický Sněžník in the north, over Suchý vrch, across Upper Svratka Highlands and Javořice Highlands to tripoint nearby Slavonice in the south). The Thaya river meanders along the border with Austria and the tripoint of Moravia, Austria and Slovakia is at the confluence of the Thaya and Morava rivers. The northeast border with Silesia runs partly along the Moravice, Oder and Ostravice rivers. Between 1782 and 1850, Moravia (also thus known as Moravia-Silesia) also included a small portion of the former province of Silesia – the Austrian Silesia (when Frederick the Great annexed most of ancient Silesia (the land of upper and middle Oder river) to Prussia, Silesia's southernmost part remained with the Habsburgs).

Today Moravia includes the South Moravian Region,[16] the Zlín Region, vast majority of the Olomouc Region, southeastern half of the Vysočina Region and parts of the Moravian-Silesian, Pardubice and South Bohemian regions.

Geologically, Moravia covers a transitive area[clarification needed] between the Bohemian Massif and the Carpathians (from northwest to southeast), and between the Danube basin and the North European Plain (from south to northeast). Its core geomorphological features are three wide valleys, namely the Dyje-Svratka Valley (Dyjsko-svratecký úval), the Upper Morava Valley (Hornomoravský úval) and the Lower Morava Valley (Dolnomoravský úval). The first two form the westernmost part of the Outer Subcarpathia, the last is the northernmost part of the Vienna Basin. The valleys surround the low range of Central Moravian Carpathians. The highest mountains of Moravia are situated on its northern border in Hrubý Jeseník, the highest peak is Praděd (1491 m). Second highest is the massive of Králický Sněžník (1424  m) the third are the Moravian-Silesian Beskids at the very east, with Smrk (1278 m), and then south from here Javorníky (1072). The White Carpathians along the southeastern border rise up to 970 m at Velká Javořina. The spacious, but moderate Bohemian-Moravian Highlands on the west reach 837 m at Javořice.

The fluvial system of Moravia is very cohesive, as the region border is similar to the watershed of the Morava river, and thus almost the entire area is drained exclusively by a single stream. Morava's far biggest tributaries are Thaya (Dyje) from the right (or west) and Bečva (east). Morava and Thaya meet at the southernmost and lowest (148 m) point of Moravia. Small peripheral parts of Moravia belong to the catchment area of Elbe, Váh and especially Oder (the northeast). The watershed line running along Moravia's border from west to north and east is part of the European Watershed. For centuries, there have been plans to build a waterway across Moravia to join the Danube and Oder river systems, using the natural route through the Moravian Gate.[17][18]

History

Pre-history

 
Venus of Vestonice, the oldest surviving ceramic figurine in the world

Evidence of the presence of members of the human genus, Homo, dates back more than 600,000 years in the paleontological area of Stránská skála.[15]

Attracted by suitable living conditions, early modern humans settled in the region by the Paleolithic period. The Předmostí archeological (Cro-magnon) site in Moravia is dated to between 24,000 and 27,000 years old.[19][20] Caves in Moravský kras were used by mammoth hunters. Venus of Dolní Věstonice, the oldest ceramic figure in the world,[21][22] was found in the excavation of Dolní Věstonice by Karel Absolon.[23]

Roman era

Around 60 BC, the Celtic Volcae people withdrew from the region and were succeeded by the Germanic Quadi. Some of the events of the Marcomannic Wars took place in Moravia in AD 169–180. After the war exposed the weakness of Rome's northern frontier, half of the Roman legions (16 out of 33) were stationed along the Danube. In response to increasing numbers of Germanic settlers in frontier regions like Pannonia, Dacia, Rome established two new frontier provinces on the left shore of the Danube, Marcomannia and Sarmatia, including today's Moravia and western Slovakia.

In the 2nd century AD, a Roman fortress[24][25] stood on the vineyards hill known as German: Burgstall and Czech: Hradisko ("hillfort"), situated above the former village Mušov and above today's beach resort at Pasohlávky. During the reign of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, the 10th Legion was assigned to control the Germanic tribes who had been defeated in the Marcomannic Wars.[26] In 1927, the archeologist Gnirs, with the support of president Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, began research on the site, located 80 km from Vindobona and 22 km to the south of Brno. The researchers found remnants of two masonry buildings, a praetorium[27] and a balneum ("bath"), including a hypocaustum. The discovery of bricks with the stamp of the Legio X Gemina and coins from the period of the emperors Antoninus Pius, Marcus Aurelius and Commodus facilitated dating of the locality.

Ancient Moravia

 
Territory of Great Moravia in the 9th century: area ruled by Rastislav (846–870) map marks the greatest territorial extent during the reign of Svatopluk I (871–894), violet core is origin of Moravia.
 
Saint Wenceslas Cathedral in Olomouc, seat of bishops of Olomouc since the 10th century and the current seat of the Archbishopric of Olomouc, the Metropolitan archdiocese of Moravia

A variety of Germanic and major Slavic tribes crossed through Moravia during the Migration Period before Slavs established themselves in the 6th century AD. At the end of the 8th century, the Moravian Principality came into being in present-day south-eastern Moravia, Záhorie in south-western Slovakia and parts of Lower Austria. In 833 AD, this became the state of Great Moravia[28] with the conquest of the Principality of Nitra (present-day Slovakia). Their first king was Mojmír I (ruled 830–846). Louis the German invaded Moravia and replaced Mojmír I with his nephew Rastiz who became St. Rastislav.[29] St. Rastislav (846–870) tried to emancipate his land from the Carolingian influence, so he sent envoys to Rome to get missionaries to come. When Rome refused he turned to Constantinople to the Byzantine emperor Michael. The result was the mission of Saints Cyril and Methodius who translated liturgical books into Slavonic, which had lately been elevated by the Pope to the same level as Latin and Greek. Methodius became the first Moravian archbishop, the first archbishop in Slavic world, but after his death the German influence again prevailed and the disciples of Methodius were forced to flee. Great Moravia reached its greatest territorial extent in the 890s under Svatopluk I. At this time, the empire encompassed the territory of the present-day Czech Republic and Slovakia, the western part of present Hungary (Pannonia), as well as Lusatia in present-day Germany and Silesia and the upper Vistula basin in southern Poland. After Svatopluk's death in 895, the Bohemian princes defected to become vassals of the East Frankish ruler Arnulf of Carinthia, and the Moravian state ceased to exist after being overrun by invading Magyars in 907.[30][31]

Union with Bohemia

Following the defeat of the Magyars by Emperor Otto I at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955, Otto's ally Boleslaus I, the Přemyslid ruler of Bohemia, took control over Moravia. Bolesław I Chrobry of Poland annexed Moravia in 999, and ruled it until 1019,[32] when the Přemyslid prince Bretislaus recaptured it. Upon his father's death in 1034, Bretislaus became the ruler of Bohemia. In 1055, he decreed that Bohemia and Moravia would be inherited together by primogeniture, although he also provided that his younger sons should govern parts (quarters) of Moravia as vassals to his oldest son.

Throughout the Přemyslid era, junior princes often ruled all or part of Moravia from Olomouc, Brno or Znojmo, with varying degrees of autonomy from the ruler of Bohemia. Dukes of Olomouc often acted as the "right hand" of Prague dukes and kings, while Dukes of Brno and especially those of Znojmo were much more insubordinate. Moravia reached its height of autonomy in 1182, when Emperor Frederick I elevated Conrad II Otto of Znojmo to the status of a margrave,[33] immediately subject to the emperor, independent of Bohemia. This status was short-lived: in 1186, Conrad Otto was forced to obey the supreme rule of Bohemian duke Frederick. Three years later, Conrad Otto succeeded to Frederick as Duke of Bohemia and subsequently canceled his margrave title. Nevertheless, the margrave title was restored in 1197 when Vladislaus III of Bohemia resolved the succession dispute between him and his brother Ottokar by abdicating from the Bohemian throne and accepting Moravia as a vassal land of Bohemian (i.e., Prague) rulers. Vladislaus gradually established this land as Margraviate, slightly administratively different from Bohemia. After the Battle of Legnica, the Mongols carried their raids into Moravia.

The main line of the Přemyslid dynasty became extinct in 1306, and in 1310 John of Luxembourg became Margrave of Moravia and King of Bohemia. In 1333, he made his son Charles the next Margrave of Moravia (later in 1346, Charles also became the King of Bohemia). In 1349, Charles gave Moravia to his younger brother John Henry who ruled in the margraviate until his death in 1375, after him Moravia was ruled by his oldest son Jobst of Moravia who was in 1410 elected the Holy Roman King but died in 1411 (he is buried with his father in the Church of St. Thomas in Brno – the Moravian capital from which they both ruled). Moravia and Bohemia remained within the Luxembourg dynasty of Holy Roman kings and emperors (except during the Hussite wars), until inherited by Albert II of Habsburg in 1437.

After his death followed the interregnum until 1453; land (as the rest of lands of the Bohemian Crown) was administered by the landfriedens (landfrýdy). The rule of young Ladislaus the Posthumous subsisted only less than five years and subsequently (1458) the Hussite George of Poděbrady was elected as the king. He again reunited all Czech lands (then Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, Upper & Lower Lusatia) into one-man ruled state. In 1466, Pope Paul II excommunicated George and forbade all Catholics (i.e. about 15% of population) from continuing to serve him. The Hungarian crusade followed and in 1469 Matthias Corvinus conquered Moravia and proclaimed himself (with assistance of rebelling Bohemian nobility) as the king of Bohemia.

The subsequent 21-year period of a divided kingdom was decisive for the rising awareness of a specific Moravian identity, distinct from that of Bohemia. Although Moravia was reunited with Bohemia in 1490 when Vladislaus Jagiellon, king of Bohemia, also became king of Hungary, some attachment to Moravian "freedoms" and resistance to government by Prague continued until the end of independence in 1620. In 1526, Vladislaus' son Louis died in battle and the Habsburg Ferdinand I was elected as his successor.

Habsburg rule (1526–1918)

After the death of King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia in 1526, Ferdinand I of Austria was elected King of Bohemia and thus ruler of the Crown of Bohemia (including Moravia). The epoch 1526–1620 was marked by increasing animosity between Catholic Habsburg kings (emperors) and the Protestant Moravian nobility (and other Crowns') estates. Moravia,[36] like Bohemia, was a Habsburg possession until the end of World War I. In 1573 the Jesuit University of Olomouc was established; this was the first university in Moravia. The establishment of a special papal seminary, Collegium Nordicum, made the University a centre of the Catholic Reformation and effort to revive Catholicism in Central and Northern Europe. The second largest group of students were from Scandinavia.

Brno and Olomouc served as Moravia's capitals until 1641. As the only city to successfully resist the Swedish invasion, Brno become the sole capital following the capture of Olomouc. The Margraviate of Moravia had, from 1348 in Olomouc and Brno, its own Diet, or parliament, zemský sněm (Landtag in German), whose deputies from 1905 onward were elected separately from the ethnically separate German and Czech constituencies.

The oldest surviving theatre building in Central Europe, the Reduta Theatre, was established in 17th-century Moravia. Ottoman Turks and Tatars invaded the region in 1663, taking 12,000 captives.[37] In 1740, Moravia was invaded by Prussian forces under Frederick the Great, and Olomouc was forced to surrender on 27 December 1741. A few months later the Prussians were repelled, mainly because of their unsuccessful siege of Brno in 1742. In 1758, Olomouc was besieged by Prussians again, but this time its defenders forced the Prussians to withdraw following the Battle of Domstadtl. In 1777, a new Moravian bishopric was established in Brno, and the Olomouc bishopric was elevated to an archbishopric.[38] In 1782, the Margraviate of Moravia was merged with Austrian Silesia into Moravia-Silesia, with Brno as its capital. Moravia became a separate crown land of Austria again in 1849,[39][40] and then became part of Cisleithanian Austria-Hungary after 1867. According to Austro-Hungarian census of 1910 the proportion of Czechs in the population of Moravia at the time (2.622.000) was 71.8%, while the proportion of Germans was 27.6%.[41]

20th century

Following the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, Moravia became part of Czechoslovakia. As one of the five lands of Czechoslovakia, it had restricted autonomy. In 1928 Moravia ceased to exist as a territorial unity and was merged with Czech Silesia into the Moravian-Silesian Land (yet with the natural dominance of Moravia). By the Munich Agreement (1938), the southwestern and northern peripheries of Moravia, which had a German-speaking majority, were annexed by Nazi Germany, and during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia (1939–1945), the remnant of Moravia was an administrative unit within the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.

In 1945 after the end of World War II and Allied defeat of Germany, Czechoslovakia expelled the ethnic German minority of Moravia to Germany and Austria. The Moravian-Silesian Land was restored with Moravia as part of it and towns and villages that were left by the former German inhabitants, were re-settled by Czechs, Slovaks and reemigrants.[42] In 1949 the territorial division of Czechoslovakia was radically changed, as the Moravian-Silesian Land was abolished and Lands were replaced by "kraje" (regions), whose borders substantially differ from the historical Bohemian-Moravian border, so Moravia politically ceased to exist after more than 1100 years (833–1949) of its history. Although another administrative reform in 1960 implemented (among others) the North Moravian and the South Moravian regions (Severomoravský and Jihomoravský kraj), with capitals in Ostrava and Brno respectively, their joint area was only roughly alike the historical state and, chiefly, there was no land or federal autonomy, unlike Slovakia.

After the fall of the Soviet Union and the whole Eastern Bloc, the Czechoslovak Federal Assembly condemned the cancellation of Moravian-Silesian land and expressed "firm conviction that this injustice will be corrected" in 1990. However, after the breakup of Czechoslovakia into Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, Moravian area remained integral to the Czech territory, and the latest administrative division of Czech Republic (introduced in 2000) is similar to the administrative division of 1949. Nevertheless, the federalist or separatist movement in Moravia is completely marginal.

The centuries-lasting historical Bohemian-Moravian border has been preserved up to now only by the Czech Roman Catholic Administration, as the Ecclesiastical Province of Moravia corresponds with the former Moravian-Silesian Land. The popular perception of the Bohemian-Moravian border's location is distorted by the memory of the 1960 regions (whose boundaries are still partly in use).

Economy

An area in South Moravia, around Hodonín and Břeclav, is part of the Viennese Basin. Petroleum and lignite are found there in abundance. The main economic centres of Moravia are Brno, Olomouc and Zlín, plus Ostrava lying directly on the Moravian–Silesian border. As well as agriculture in general, Moravia is noted for its viticulture; it contains 94% of the Czech Republic's vineyards and is at the centre of the country's wine industry. Wallachia have at least a 400-year-old tradition of slivovitz making.[43]

The Czech automotive industry also had a large role in the industry of Moravia in the 20th century; the factories of Wikov in Prostějov and Tatra in Kopřivnice produced many automobiles.

Moravia is also the centre of the Czech firearm industry, as the vast majority of Czech firearms manufacturers (e.g. CZUB, Zbrojovka Brno, Czech Small Arms, Czech Weapons, ZVI, Great Gun) are found in Moravia. Almost all the well-known Czech sporting, self-defence, military and hunting firearms are made in Moravia. Meopta rifle scopes are of Moravian origin. The original Bren gun was conceived here, as were the assault rifles the CZ-805 BREN and Sa vz. 58, and the handguns CZ 75 and ZVI Kevin (also known as the "Micro Desert Eagle").

The Zlín Region hosts several aircraft manufacturers, namely Let Kunovice (also known as Aircraft Industries, a.s.), ZLIN AIRCRAFT a.s. Otrokovice (formerly known under the name Moravan Otrokovice), Evektor-Aerotechnik and Czech Sport Aircraft. Sport aircraft are also manufactured in Jihlava by Jihlavan Airplanes/Skyleader.

Aircraft production in the region started in 1930s; after a period of low production post-1989, there are signs of recovery post-2010, and production is expected to grow from 2013 onwards.[44]

Machinery industry

The machinery industry has been the most important industrial sector in the region, especially in South Moravia, for many decades. The main centres of machinery production are Brno (Zbrojovka Brno, Zetor, První brněnská strojírna, Siemens), Blansko (ČKD Blansko, Metra), Kuřim (TOS Kuřim), Boskovice (Minerva, Novibra) and Břeclav (Otis Elevator Company). A number of other, smaller machinery and machine parts factories, companies and workshops are spread over Moravia.

Electrical industry

The beginnings of the electrical industry in Moravia date back to 1918. The biggest centres of electrical production are Brno (VUES, ZPA Brno, EM Brno), Drásov, Frenštát pod Radhoštěm and Mohelnice (currently Siemens).

Cities and towns

Cities

Towns

People

 
Moravian nationality, as declared by people in the 1991 census
 
Moravian Slovak costumes (worn by men and women) during the Jízda králů ("Ride of the Kings") Festival held annually in the village of Vlčnov (southeastern Moravia)

The Moravians are generally a Slavic ethnic group who speak various (generally more archaic) dialects of Czech. Before the expulsion of Germans from Moravia the Moravian German minority also referred to themselves as "Moravians" (Mährer). Those expelled and their descendants continue to identify as Moravian. [45] Some Moravians assert that Moravian is a language distinct from Czech; however, their position is not widely supported by academics and the public.[46][47][48][49] Some Moravians identify as an ethnically distinct group; the majority consider themselves to be ethnically Czech. In the census of 1991 (the first census in history in which respondents were allowed to claim Moravian nationality), 1,362,000 (13.2%) of the Czech population identified as being of Moravian nationality (or ethnicity). In some parts of Moravia (mostly in the centre and south), majority of the population identified as Moravians, rather than Czechs. In the census of 2001, the number of Moravians had decreased to 380,000 (3.7% of the country's population).[50] In the census of 2011, this number rose to 522,474 (4.9% of the Czech population).[51][52]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
9th c.500,000—    
13th c. 580,000+16.0%
15th c. 650,000+12.1%
17751,134,674+74.6%
1800 1,656,397+46.0%
1810 1,346,802−18.7%
1820 1,443,804+7.2%
1830 1,643,637+13.8%
1840 1,703,995+3.7%
1850 1,793,674+5.3%
1878 2,103,847+17.3%
1880 2,160,471+2.7%
1890 2,285,321+5.8%
1900 2,447,121+7.1%
1910 2,693,027+10.0%
1921 2,662,884−1.1%
1930 2,827,648+6.2%
1950 2,610,650−7.7%
2014 3,125,000+19.7%
Source: Růžková, J., Josef Škrabal, J.; et al. (2006). Historický lexikon obcí České republiky 1869–2005 [Historical lexicon of municipalities in the Czech Republic 1869–2005] (PDF) (in Czech). Vol. Díl I. Český statistický úřad. pp. 51–54. ISBN 978-80-250-1311-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Moravia historically had a large minority of ethnic Germans, some of whom had arrived as early as the 13th century at the behest of the Přemyslid dynasty. Germans continued to come to Moravia in waves, culminating in the 18th century. They lived in the main city centres and in the countryside along the border with Austria (stretching up to Brno) and along the border with Silesia at Jeseníky, and also in two language islands, around Jihlava and around Moravská Třebová. After the World War II, the Czechoslovak government almost fully expelled them in retaliation for their support of Nazi Germany's invasion and dismemberment of Czechoslovakia (1938–1939) and subsequent German war crimes (1938–1945) towards the Czech, Moravian, and Jewish populations.

Moravians

Notable people from Moravia include (in order of birth):

 
Old ethnic division of Moravians according to an encyclopaedia of 1878

Ethnographic regions

Moravia can be divided on dialectal and lore basis into several ethnographic regions of comparable significance. In this sense, it is more heterogenous than Bohemia. Significant parts of Moravia, usually those formerly inhabited by the German speakers, are dialectally indifferent, as they have been resettled by people from various Czech (and Slovak) regions.

The principal cultural regions of Moravia are:

Places of interest

 
Lednice Castle
 
Punkevní Cave in the Moravian Karst

World Heritage Sites

Other

See also

Notes

References

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  21. ^ Jonathan Jones: Carl Andre on notoriety and a 26,000-year-old portrait – the week in art. The Guardian 25 January 2013
  22. ^ "Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov sites".
  23. ^ Oldest homes were made of mammoth bone. The Times 29.8.2005
  24. ^ "Detašované pracoviště Dolní Dunajovice – Hradisko u Mušova".
  25. ^ "Opevnění – Detašované pracoviště Dolní Dunajovice, AÚ AV ČR Brno, v. v. i."
  26. ^ Hanel, Norbert; Cerdán, Ángel Morillo; Hernández, Esperanza Martín (1 January 2009). Limes XX: Estudios sobre la frontera romana (Roman frontier studies). Editorial CSIC – CSIC Press. ISBN 9788400088545 – via Google Books.
  27. ^ "Lázeňská a obytná budova – Detašované pracoviště Dolní Dunajovice, AÚ AV ČR Brno, v. v. i."
  28. ^ Florin Kurta. The history and archaeology of Great Moravia: an introduction. in: "Early Medieval Europe", 2009 volume 17 (3)
  29. ^ Reuter, Timothy. (1991). Germany in the Early Middle Ages, London: Longman, page 82
  30. ^ Štefan, Ivo (2011). "Great Moravia, Statehood and Archaeology: The "Decline and Fall" of One Early Medieval Polity". In Macháček, Jiří; Ungerman, Šimon (eds.). Frühgeschichtliche Zentralorte in Mitteleuropa. Bonn: Verlag Dr. Rudolf Habelt. pp. 333–354. ISBN 978-3-7749-3730-7. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  31. ^ Spiesz, Anton; Caplovic, Dusan (2006). Illustrated Slovak History: A Struggle for Sovereignty in Central Europe. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 978-0-86516-426-0.
  32. ^ The exact dating of the conquest of Moravia by Bohemian dukes is uncertain. Czech and some Slovak historiographers suggest the year 1019, while Polish, German and other Slovak historians suggest 1029, during the rule of Boleslaus' son, Mieszko II Lambert.
  33. ^ There are no primary testimonies about creating a margraviate (march) as distinct political unit
  34. ^ Svoboda, Zbyšek; Fojtík, Pavel; Exner, Petr; Martykán, Jaroslav (2013). "Odborné vexilologické stanovisko k moravské vlajce" (PDF). Vexilologie. Zpravodaj České vexilologické společnosti, o.s. č. 169. Brno: Česká vexilologická společnost. pp. 3319, 3320.
  35. ^ Pícha, František (2013). "Znaky a prapory v kronice Ottokara Štýrského" (PDF). Vexilologie. Zpravodaj České vexilologické společnosti, o.s. č. 169. Brno: Česká vexilologická společnost. pp. 3320–3324.
  36. ^ Evan Rail (23 September 2011). The Castles of Moravia. NYT 23.9.2011
  37. ^ Lánové rejstříky (1656–1711) 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine (in Czech)
  38. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Moravia".
  39. ^ Czechoslovakia: A Country Study. US Army. 1898. p. 27.
  40. ^ "Moravia | historical region, Europe | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  41. ^ Hans Chmelar: Höhepunkte der österreichischen Auswanderung. Die Auswanderung aus den im Reichsrat vertretenen Königreichen und Ländern in den Jahren 1905–1914. (= Studien zur Geschichte der österreichisch-ungarischen Monarchie. Band 14) Kommission für die Geschichte der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien 1974, ISBN 3-7001-0075-2, S. 109.
  42. ^ Bičík, Ivan; Štěpánek, Vít (1994). "Post-war changes of the land-use structure in Bohemia and Moravia: Case study Sudetenland". GeoJournal. 32 (3): 253–259. doi:10.1007/BF01122117. S2CID 189878438.
  43. ^ "Jelínek's 400-Year Tradition of Making Slivovitz Bears Fruit in the U.S." OU Kosher Certification. 5 October 2010.
  44. ^ "Leteckou výrobu v Česku čeká v roce 2013 růst. Pomůže modernizace L-410 (Czech aircraft production expected to grow in 2013)". Hospodářské noviny IHNED. 2012. ISSN 1213-7693.
  45. ^ Bill Lehane: ČSÚ (Czech statistical office) plays down census disputes – Campaign want to include Moravian language in count (Moravian identity). The Prague Post 9.3.2011 20
  46. ^ Kolínková, Eliška (26 December 2008). "Číšník tvoří spisovnou moravštinu". Mladá fronta DNES (in Czech). iDnes. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  47. ^ Zemanová, Barbora (12 November 2008). "Moravané tvoří spisovnou moravštinu". Brněnský Deník (in Czech). denik.cz. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  48. ^ O spisovné moravštině a jiných "malých" jazycích (Naše řeč 5, ročník 83/2000) (in Czech)
  49. ^ Kolínková, Eliška (30 December 2008). "Amatérský jazykovědec prosazuje moravštinu jako nový jazyk". Mladá fronta DNES (in Czech). iDnes. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  50. ^ Robert B. Kaplan; Richard B. Baldauf (1 January 2005). Language Planning and Policy in Europe. Multilingual Matters. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-1-85359-813-5.
  51. ^ Tesser, Lynn (14 May 2013). Ethnic Cleansing and the European Union: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Security, Memory and Ethnography. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 213–. ISBN 978-1-137-30877-1.
  52. ^ Ibp, Inc (10 September 2013). Czech Republic Mining Laws and Regulations Handbook - Strategic Information and Basic Laws. Int'l Business Publications. pp. 8–. ISBN 978-1-4330-7727-2.

Further reading

External links

  • Moravian museum official website 14 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine (in Czech, English, and German)
  • Moravian gallery official website (in Czech and English)
  • Moravian library official website (in Czech, English, and German)
  • Moravian land archive official website 26 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine (in Czech)
  • Province of Moravia – Czech Catholic Church – official website
  • Welcome to the 2nd largest city of the CR (in Czech, English, and German)
  • (in Czech, English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Polish, Russian, Japanese, and Chinese)
  • Znojmo – City of Virtue 8 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine (in Czech, English, and German)
  •   Texts on Wikisource:

moravia, this, article, about, czech, region, other, uses, disambiguation, also, morr, ɔː, czech, morava, ˈmorava, listen, german, mähren, ˈmɛːʁən, listen, polish, morawy, mɔˈravɨ, silesian, morawa, latin, historical, region, east, czech, republic, three, hist. This article is about the Czech region For other uses see Moravia disambiguation Moravia m e ˈ r eɪ v i e me RAY vee e 6 also UK m ɒ ˈ morr AY 7 US m ɔː ˈ m oʊ ˈ mor AY moh RAY 7 8 Czech Morava ˈmorava listen German Mahren ˈmɛːʁen listen Polish Morawy mɔˈravɨ Silesian Morawa Latin Moravia is a historical region in the east of the Czech Republic and one of three historical Czech lands with Bohemia and Czech Silesia Moravia MoravaHistorical landThe town of MikulovFlagCoat of armsMoravia green in relation to the current regions of the Czech RepublicLocation of Moravia in the European UnionCoordinates 49 30 N 17 00 E 49 5 N 17 E 49 5 17 Coordinates 49 30 N 17 00 E 49 5 N 17 E 49 5 17CountryCzech RepublicRegionsMoravian Silesian Olomouc South Moravian Vysocina Zlin South Bohemian PardubiceFirst mentioned822 2 3 Consolidated833 4 Former capitalBrno 1641 1948 5 Brno Olomouc until 1641 Velehrad 9th century Major citiesBrno Ostrava Olomouc Zlin JihlavaArea Total22 348 87 km2 8 628 95 sq mi Population Total3 100 000 1 DemonymMoravianTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST The medieval and early modern Margraviate of Moravia was a crown land of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown from 1348 to 1918 an imperial state of the Holy Roman Empire from 1004 to 1806 a crown land of the Austrian Empire from 1804 to 1867 and a part of Austria Hungary from 1867 to 1918 Moravia was one of the five lands of Czechoslovakia founded in 1918 In 1928 it was merged with Czech Silesia and then dissolved in 1948 during the abolition of the land system following the communist coup d etat Its area of 22 623 41 km2 note 1 is home to more than 3 million people 9 10 11 1 The people are historically named Moravians a subgroup of Czechs the other group being called Bohemians 12 13 Moravia also had been home of a large German speaking population until their expulsion in 1945 The land takes its name from the Morava river which runs from its north to south being its principal watercourse Moravia s largest city and historical capital is Brno Before being sacked by the Swedish army during the Thirty Years War Olomouc served as the Moravian capital and it is still the seat of the Archdiocese of Olomouc 5 Contents 1 Toponymy 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Pre history 3 2 Roman era 3 3 Ancient Moravia 3 4 Union with Bohemia 3 5 Habsburg rule 1526 1918 3 6 20th century 4 Economy 4 1 Machinery industry 4 2 Electrical industry 5 Cities and towns 5 1 Cities 5 2 Towns 6 People 6 1 Moravians 6 2 Ethnographic regions 7 Places of interest 7 1 World Heritage Sites 7 2 Other 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksToponymy EditThe region and former margraviate of Moravia Morava in Czech is named after its principal river Morava It is theorized that the river s name is derived from Proto Indo European mori waters or indeed any word denoting water or a marsh 14 The German name for Moravia is Mahren from the river s German name March This could have a different etymology as march is a term used in the Medieval times for an outlying territory a border or a frontier cf English march Geography EditMoravia occupies most of the eastern part of the Czech Republic Moravian territory is naturally strongly determined in fact as the Morava river basin with strong effect of mountains in the west de facto main European continental divide and partly in the east where all the rivers rise Moravia occupies an exceptional position in Central Europe All the highlands in the west and east of this part of Europe run west east and therefore form a kind of filter making north south or south north movement more difficult Only Moravia with the depression of the westernmost Outer Subcarpathia 14 40 kilometers 8 7 24 9 mi wide between the Bohemian Massif and the Outer Western Carpathians gripping the meridian at a constant angle of 30 provides a comfortable connection between the Danubian and Polish regions and this area is thus of great importance in terms of the possible migration routes of large mammals 15 both as regards periodically recurring seasonal migrations triggered by climatic oscillations in the prehistory when permanent settlement started Rolling hills of the Kralicky Sneznik massif Horni Morava near the border with Bohemia Sance Dam on the Ostravice River in the Moravian Silesian Beskids the river forms the border with Silesia Steppe landscape near Mohelno Moravia borders Bohemia in the west Lower Austria in the southwest Slovakia in the southeast Poland very shortly in the north and Czech Silesia in the northeast Its natural boundary is formed by the Sudetes mountains in the north the Carpathians in the east and the Bohemian Moravian Highlands in the west the border runs from Kralicky Sneznik in the north over Suchy vrch across Upper Svratka Highlands and Javorice Highlands to tripoint nearby Slavonice in the south The Thaya river meanders along the border with Austria and the tripoint of Moravia Austria and Slovakia is at the confluence of the Thaya and Morava rivers The northeast border with Silesia runs partly along the Moravice Oder and Ostravice rivers Between 1782 and 1850 Moravia also thus known as Moravia Silesia also included a small portion of the former province of Silesia the Austrian Silesia when Frederick the Great annexed most of ancient Silesia the land of upper and middle Oder river to Prussia Silesia s southernmost part remained with the Habsburgs Today Moravia includes the South Moravian Region 16 the Zlin Region vast majority of the Olomouc Region southeastern half of the Vysocina Region and parts of the Moravian Silesian Pardubice and South Bohemian regions Geologically Moravia covers a transitive area clarification needed between the Bohemian Massif and the Carpathians from northwest to southeast and between the Danube basin and the North European Plain from south to northeast Its core geomorphological features are three wide valleys namely the Dyje Svratka Valley Dyjsko svratecky uval the Upper Morava Valley Hornomoravsky uval and the Lower Morava Valley Dolnomoravsky uval The first two form the westernmost part of the Outer Subcarpathia the last is the northernmost part of the Vienna Basin The valleys surround the low range of Central Moravian Carpathians The highest mountains of Moravia are situated on its northern border in Hruby Jesenik the highest peak is Praded 1491 m Second highest is the massive of Kralicky Sneznik 1424 m the third are the Moravian Silesian Beskids at the very east with Smrk 1278 m and then south from here Javorniky 1072 The White Carpathians along the southeastern border rise up to 970 m at Velka Javorina The spacious but moderate Bohemian Moravian Highlands on the west reach 837 m at Javorice The fluvial system of Moravia is very cohesive as the region border is similar to the watershed of the Morava river and thus almost the entire area is drained exclusively by a single stream Morava s far biggest tributaries are Thaya Dyje from the right or west and Becva east Morava and Thaya meet at the southernmost and lowest 148 m point of Moravia Small peripheral parts of Moravia belong to the catchment area of Elbe Vah and especially Oder the northeast The watershed line running along Moravia s border from west to north and east is part of the European Watershed For centuries there have been plans to build a waterway across Moravia to join the Danube and Oder river systems using the natural route through the Moravian Gate 17 18 History EditPre history Edit Venus of Vestonice the oldest surviving ceramic figurine in the world Palava mountains with Vestonice Reservoir area of palaeolithic settlement Evidence of the presence of members of the human genus Homo dates back more than 600 000 years in the paleontological area of Stranska skala 15 Attracted by suitable living conditions early modern humans settled in the region by the Paleolithic period The Predmosti archeological Cro magnon site in Moravia is dated to between 24 000 and 27 000 years old 19 20 Caves in Moravsky kras were used by mammoth hunters Venus of Dolni Vestonice the oldest ceramic figure in the world 21 22 was found in the excavation of Dolni Vestonice by Karel Absolon 23 Roman era Edit Around 60 BC the Celtic Volcae people withdrew from the region and were succeeded by the Germanic Quadi Some of the events of the Marcomannic Wars took place in Moravia in AD 169 180 After the war exposed the weakness of Rome s northern frontier half of the Roman legions 16 out of 33 were stationed along the Danube In response to increasing numbers of Germanic settlers in frontier regions like Pannonia Dacia Rome established two new frontier provinces on the left shore of the Danube Marcomannia and Sarmatia including today s Moravia and western Slovakia In the 2nd century AD a Roman fortress 24 25 stood on the vineyards hill known as German Burgstall and Czech Hradisko hillfort situated above the former village Musov and above today s beach resort at Pasohlavky During the reign of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius the 10th Legion was assigned to control the Germanic tribes who had been defeated in the Marcomannic Wars 26 In 1927 the archeologist Gnirs with the support of president Tomas Garrigue Masaryk began research on the site located 80 km from Vindobona and 22 km to the south of Brno The researchers found remnants of two masonry buildings a praetorium 27 and a balneum bath including a hypocaustum The discovery of bricks with the stamp of the Legio X Gemina and coins from the period of the emperors Antoninus Pius Marcus Aurelius and Commodus facilitated dating of the locality Ancient Moravia Edit See also Great Moravia Territory of Great Moravia in the 9th century area ruled by Rastislav 846 870 map marks the greatest territorial extent during the reign of Svatopluk I 871 894 violet core is origin of Moravia Saint Wenceslas Cathedral in Olomouc seat of bishops of Olomouc since the 10th century and the current seat of the Archbishopric of Olomouc the Metropolitan archdiocese of Moravia A variety of Germanic and major Slavic tribes crossed through Moravia during the Migration Period before Slavs established themselves in the 6th century AD At the end of the 8th century the Moravian Principality came into being in present day south eastern Moravia Zahorie in south western Slovakia and parts of Lower Austria In 833 AD this became the state of Great Moravia 28 with the conquest of the Principality of Nitra present day Slovakia Their first king was Mojmir I ruled 830 846 Louis the German invaded Moravia and replaced Mojmir I with his nephew Rastiz who became St Rastislav 29 St Rastislav 846 870 tried to emancipate his land from the Carolingian influence so he sent envoys to Rome to get missionaries to come When Rome refused he turned to Constantinople to the Byzantine emperor Michael The result was the mission of Saints Cyril and Methodius who translated liturgical books into Slavonic which had lately been elevated by the Pope to the same level as Latin and Greek Methodius became the first Moravian archbishop the first archbishop in Slavic world but after his death the German influence again prevailed and the disciples of Methodius were forced to flee Great Moravia reached its greatest territorial extent in the 890s under Svatopluk I At this time the empire encompassed the territory of the present day Czech Republic and Slovakia the western part of present Hungary Pannonia as well as Lusatia in present day Germany and Silesia and the upper Vistula basin in southern Poland After Svatopluk s death in 895 the Bohemian princes defected to become vassals of the East Frankish ruler Arnulf of Carinthia and the Moravian state ceased to exist after being overrun by invading Magyars in 907 30 31 Union with Bohemia Edit Main articles Margraviate of Moravia Duchy of Bohemia and Kingdom of Bohemia Following the defeat of the Magyars by Emperor Otto I at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955 Otto s ally Boleslaus I the Premyslid ruler of Bohemia took control over Moravia Boleslaw I Chrobry of Poland annexed Moravia in 999 and ruled it until 1019 32 when the Premyslid prince Bretislaus recaptured it Upon his father s death in 1034 Bretislaus became the ruler of Bohemia In 1055 he decreed that Bohemia and Moravia would be inherited together by primogeniture although he also provided that his younger sons should govern parts quarters of Moravia as vassals to his oldest son Throughout the Premyslid era junior princes often ruled all or part of Moravia from Olomouc Brno or Znojmo with varying degrees of autonomy from the ruler of Bohemia Dukes of Olomouc often acted as the right hand of Prague dukes and kings while Dukes of Brno and especially those of Znojmo were much more insubordinate Moravia reached its height of autonomy in 1182 when Emperor Frederick I elevated Conrad II Otto of Znojmo to the status of a margrave 33 immediately subject to the emperor independent of Bohemia This status was short lived in 1186 Conrad Otto was forced to obey the supreme rule of Bohemian duke Frederick Three years later Conrad Otto succeeded to Frederick as Duke of Bohemia and subsequently canceled his margrave title Nevertheless the margrave title was restored in 1197 when Vladislaus III of Bohemia resolved the succession dispute between him and his brother Ottokar by abdicating from the Bohemian throne and accepting Moravia as a vassal land of Bohemian i e Prague rulers Vladislaus gradually established this land as Margraviate slightly administratively different from Bohemia After the Battle of Legnica the Mongols carried their raids into Moravia The main line of the Premyslid dynasty became extinct in 1306 and in 1310 John of Luxembourg became Margrave of Moravia and King of Bohemia In 1333 he made his son Charles the next Margrave of Moravia later in 1346 Charles also became the King of Bohemia In 1349 Charles gave Moravia to his younger brother John Henry who ruled in the margraviate until his death in 1375 after him Moravia was ruled by his oldest son Jobst of Moravia who was in 1410 elected the Holy Roman King but died in 1411 he is buried with his father in the Church of St Thomas in Brno the Moravian capital from which they both ruled Moravia and Bohemia remained within the Luxembourg dynasty of Holy Roman kings and emperors except during the Hussite wars until inherited by Albert II of Habsburg in 1437 After his death followed the interregnum until 1453 land as the rest of lands of the Bohemian Crown was administered by the landfriedens landfrydy The rule of young Ladislaus the Posthumous subsisted only less than five years and subsequently 1458 the Hussite George of Podebrady was elected as the king He again reunited all Czech lands then Bohemia Moravia Silesia Upper amp Lower Lusatia into one man ruled state In 1466 Pope Paul II excommunicated George and forbade all Catholics i e about 15 of population from continuing to serve him The Hungarian crusade followed and in 1469 Matthias Corvinus conquered Moravia and proclaimed himself with assistance of rebelling Bohemian nobility as the king of Bohemia The subsequent 21 year period of a divided kingdom was decisive for the rising awareness of a specific Moravian identity distinct from that of Bohemia Although Moravia was reunited with Bohemia in 1490 when Vladislaus Jagiellon king of Bohemia also became king of Hungary some attachment to Moravian freedoms and resistance to government by Prague continued until the end of independence in 1620 In 1526 Vladislaus son Louis died in battle and the Habsburg Ferdinand I was elected as his successor Bohemia and Moravia in the 12th century Church of St Thomas in Brno mausoleum of Moravian branch House of Luxembourg rulers of Moravia and the old governor s palace a former Augustinian abbey 12th century Romanesque St Procopius Basilica in Trebic The Moravian banner of arms which first appeared in the medieval era 34 35 Habsburg rule 1526 1918 Edit After the death of King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia in 1526 Ferdinand I of Austria was elected King of Bohemia and thus ruler of the Crown of Bohemia including Moravia The epoch 1526 1620 was marked by increasing animosity between Catholic Habsburg kings emperors and the Protestant Moravian nobility and other Crowns estates Moravia 36 like Bohemia was a Habsburg possession until the end of World War I In 1573 the Jesuit University of Olomouc was established this was the first university in Moravia The establishment of a special papal seminary Collegium Nordicum made the University a centre of the Catholic Reformation and effort to revive Catholicism in Central and Northern Europe The second largest group of students were from Scandinavia Brno and Olomouc served as Moravia s capitals until 1641 As the only city to successfully resist the Swedish invasion Brno become the sole capital following the capture of Olomouc The Margraviate of Moravia had from 1348 in Olomouc and Brno its own Diet or parliament zemsky snem Landtag in German whose deputies from 1905 onward were elected separately from the ethnically separate German and Czech constituencies The oldest surviving theatre building in Central Europe the Reduta Theatre was established in 17th century Moravia Ottoman Turks and Tatars invaded the region in 1663 taking 12 000 captives 37 In 1740 Moravia was invaded by Prussian forces under Frederick the Great and Olomouc was forced to surrender on 27 December 1741 A few months later the Prussians were repelled mainly because of their unsuccessful siege of Brno in 1742 In 1758 Olomouc was besieged by Prussians again but this time its defenders forced the Prussians to withdraw following the Battle of Domstadtl In 1777 a new Moravian bishopric was established in Brno and the Olomouc bishopric was elevated to an archbishopric 38 In 1782 the Margraviate of Moravia was merged with Austrian Silesia into Moravia Silesia with Brno as its capital Moravia became a separate crown land of Austria again in 1849 39 40 and then became part of Cisleithanian Austria Hungary after 1867 According to Austro Hungarian census of 1910 the proportion of Czechs in the population of Moravia at the time 2 622 000 was 71 8 while the proportion of Germans was 27 6 41 Habsburg Empire Crown lands growth of the Habsburg territories and Moravia s status Administrative division of Moravia as crown land of Austria in 189320th century Edit Following the break up of the Austro Hungarian Empire in 1918 Moravia became part of Czechoslovakia As one of the five lands of Czechoslovakia it had restricted autonomy In 1928 Moravia ceased to exist as a territorial unity and was merged with Czech Silesia into the Moravian Silesian Land yet with the natural dominance of Moravia By the Munich Agreement 1938 the southwestern and northern peripheries of Moravia which had a German speaking majority were annexed by Nazi Germany and during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia 1939 1945 the remnant of Moravia was an administrative unit within the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia In 1945 after the end of World War II and Allied defeat of Germany Czechoslovakia expelled the ethnic German minority of Moravia to Germany and Austria The Moravian Silesian Land was restored with Moravia as part of it and towns and villages that were left by the former German inhabitants were re settled by Czechs Slovaks and reemigrants 42 In 1949 the territorial division of Czechoslovakia was radically changed as the Moravian Silesian Land was abolished and Lands were replaced by kraje regions whose borders substantially differ from the historical Bohemian Moravian border so Moravia politically ceased to exist after more than 1100 years 833 1949 of its history Although another administrative reform in 1960 implemented among others the North Moravian and the South Moravian regions Severomoravsky and Jihomoravsky kraj with capitals in Ostrava and Brno respectively their joint area was only roughly alike the historical state and chiefly there was no land or federal autonomy unlike Slovakia After the fall of the Soviet Union and the whole Eastern Bloc the Czechoslovak Federal Assembly condemned the cancellation of Moravian Silesian land and expressed firm conviction that this injustice will be corrected in 1990 However after the breakup of Czechoslovakia into Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993 Moravian area remained integral to the Czech territory and the latest administrative division of Czech Republic introduced in 2000 is similar to the administrative division of 1949 Nevertheless the federalist or separatist movement in Moravia is completely marginal The centuries lasting historical Bohemian Moravian border has been preserved up to now only by the Czech Roman Catholic Administration as the Ecclesiastical Province of Moravia corresponds with the former Moravian Silesian Land The popular perception of the Bohemian Moravian border s location is distorted by the memory of the 1960 regions whose boundaries are still partly in use Jan Cerny president of Moravia in 1922 1926 later also Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia A general map of Moravia in the 1920s In 1928 Moravia was merged into Moravia Silesia one of four lands of Czechoslovakia together with Bohemia Slovakia and Subcarpathian Rus Economy EditAn area in South Moravia around Hodonin and Breclav is part of the Viennese Basin Petroleum and lignite are found there in abundance The main economic centres of Moravia are Brno Olomouc and Zlin plus Ostrava lying directly on the Moravian Silesian border As well as agriculture in general Moravia is noted for its viticulture it contains 94 of the Czech Republic s vineyards and is at the centre of the country s wine industry Wallachia have at least a 400 year old tradition of slivovitz making 43 The Czech automotive industry also had a large role in the industry of Moravia in the 20th century the factories of Wikov in Prostejov and Tatra in Koprivnice produced many automobiles Moravia is also the centre of the Czech firearm industry as the vast majority of Czech firearms manufacturers e g CZUB Zbrojovka Brno Czech Small Arms Czech Weapons ZVI Great Gun are found in Moravia Almost all the well known Czech sporting self defence military and hunting firearms are made in Moravia Meopta rifle scopes are of Moravian origin The original Bren gun was conceived here as were the assault rifles the CZ 805 BREN and Sa vz 58 and the handguns CZ 75 and ZVI Kevin also known as the Micro Desert Eagle The Zlin Region hosts several aircraft manufacturers namely Let Kunovice also known as Aircraft Industries a s ZLIN AIRCRAFT a s Otrokovice formerly known under the name Moravan Otrokovice Evektor Aerotechnik and Czech Sport Aircraft Sport aircraft are also manufactured in Jihlava by Jihlavan Airplanes Skyleader Aircraft production in the region started in 1930s after a period of low production post 1989 there are signs of recovery post 2010 and production is expected to grow from 2013 onwards 44 The Tatra 77 1934 WIKOV Supersport 1931 Thonet No 14 chair The speed train Tatra M 290 0 Slovenska strela 1936 Zlin XIII aircraft on display at the National Technical Museum in Prague Zetor 25A tractor Electron microscope Brno Aeroplane L 410 NG by Let Kunovice Precise rifle scope by MeOpta The modern BREN gun M 2 11 The modern street car EVO 2 Diesel railway coach class Bfhpvee295Machinery industry Edit The machinery industry has been the most important industrial sector in the region especially in South Moravia for many decades The main centres of machinery production are Brno Zbrojovka Brno Zetor Prvni brnenska strojirna Siemens Blansko CKD Blansko Metra Kurim TOS Kurim Boskovice Minerva Novibra and Breclav Otis Elevator Company A number of other smaller machinery and machine parts factories companies and workshops are spread over Moravia Electrical industry Edit The beginnings of the electrical industry in Moravia date back to 1918 The biggest centres of electrical production are Brno VUES ZPA Brno EM Brno Drasov Frenstat pod Radhostem and Mohelnice currently Siemens Cities and towns EditCities Edit Brno c 381 000 inhabitants former land capital and nowadays capital of South Moravian Region industrial judicial educational and research centre railway and motorway junction Ostrava c 288 000 inh central part Moravska Ostrava lies historically in Moravia most of the outskirts are in Czech Silesia capital of Moravian Silesian Region centre of heavy industry Olomouc c 101 000 inh capital of Olomouc Region medieval land capital seat of Roman Catholic archbishop cultural centre of Hanakia and Central Moravia Zlin c 75 000 inh capital of Zlin Region modern city developed after World War I by the Bata Shoes company Frydek Mistek c 56 000 inh twin city lying directly on the old Moravian Silesian border the western part Mistek is Moravian in the industrial area around Ostrava Jihlava c 51 000 inh mostly in Moravia northwestern periphery lies in Bohemia capital of Vysocina Region centre of the Moravian Highlands Prostejov c 44 000 inh former centre of clothing and fashion industry birthplace of Edmund Husserl Prerov c 43 000 inh important railway hub and archeological site Predmosti Towns Edit Trebic 35 000 another centre in the Highlands with exceptionally preserved Jewish quarter Znojmo 34 000 historical and cultural centre of southwestern Moravia Kromeriz 29 000 historical town in southern Hanakia Vsetin 26 000 centre of the Moravian Wallachia Sumperk 26 000 centre of the north of Moravia at the foot of Hruby Jesenik Uherske Hradiste 25 000 cultural centre of the Moravian Slovakia Breclav 25 000 important railway hub in the very south of Moravia Hodonin 25 000 another town in the Moravian Slovakia the birthplace of Tomas Garrigue Masaryk Novy Jicin 23 000 historical town with hatting industry Valasske Mezirici 22 000 centre of chemical industry in Moravian Wallachia Koprivnice 22 000 centre of automotive industry Tatra south from Ostrava Vyskov 21 000 local centre at a motorway junction halfway between Brno and Olomouc Zdar nad Sazavou 21 000 industrial town in the Highlands near the border with Bohemia Blansko 20 000 industrial town north from Brno at the foot of the Moravian KarstPeople EditMain article Moravians ethnic group Moravian nationality as declared by people in the 1991 census Moravian Slovak costumes worn by men and women during the Jizda kralu Ride of the Kings Festival held annually in the village of Vlcnov southeastern Moravia The Moravians are generally a Slavic ethnic group who speak various generally more archaic dialects of Czech Before the expulsion of Germans from Moravia the Moravian German minority also referred to themselves as Moravians Mahrer Those expelled and their descendants continue to identify as Moravian 45 Some Moravians assert that Moravian is a language distinct from Czech however their position is not widely supported by academics and the public 46 47 48 49 Some Moravians identify as an ethnically distinct group the majority consider themselves to be ethnically Czech In the census of 1991 the first census in history in which respondents were allowed to claim Moravian nationality 1 362 000 13 2 of the Czech population identified as being of Moravian nationality or ethnicity In some parts of Moravia mostly in the centre and south majority of the population identified as Moravians rather than Czechs In the census of 2001 the number of Moravians had decreased to 380 000 3 7 of the country s population 50 In the census of 2011 this number rose to 522 474 4 9 of the Czech population 51 52 Historical populationYearPop 9th c 500 000 13th c 580 000 16 0 15th c 650 000 12 1 17751 134 674 74 6 18001 656 397 46 0 18101 346 802 18 7 18201 443 804 7 2 18301 643 637 13 8 18401 703 995 3 7 18501 793 674 5 3 18782 103 847 17 3 18802 160 471 2 7 18902 285 321 5 8 19002 447 121 7 1 19102 693 027 10 0 19212 662 884 1 1 19302 827 648 6 2 19502 610 650 7 7 20143 125 000 19 7 Source Ruzkova J Josef Skrabal J et al 2006 Historicky lexikon obci Ceske republiky 1869 2005 Historical lexicon of municipalities in the Czech Republic 1869 2005 PDF in Czech Vol Dil I Cesky statisticky urad pp 51 54 ISBN 978 80 250 1311 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Moravia historically had a large minority of ethnic Germans some of whom had arrived as early as the 13th century at the behest of the Premyslid dynasty Germans continued to come to Moravia in waves culminating in the 18th century They lived in the main city centres and in the countryside along the border with Austria stretching up to Brno and along the border with Silesia at Jeseniky and also in two language islands around Jihlava and around Moravska Trebova After the World War II the Czechoslovak government almost fully expelled them in retaliation for their support of Nazi Germany s invasion and dismemberment of Czechoslovakia 1938 1939 and subsequent German war crimes 1938 1945 towards the Czech Moravian and Jewish populations Moravians Edit Comenius Gregor Mendel Frantisek Palacky Jaromir Mundy Tomas Garrigue Masaryk Leos Janacek Sigmund Freud Edmund Husserl Alphonse Mucha Adolf Loos Tomas Bata Kurt Godel Emil Zatopek Milan Kundera Ivan LendlNotable people from Moravia include in order of birth See also List of people from Moravia Anton Pilgram 1450 1516 architect sculptor and woodcarver Jan Amos Komensky Comenius 1592 1670 educator and theologian last bishop of Unity of the Brethren Georg Joseph Camellus 1661 1706 Jesuit missionary to the Philippines pharmacist and botanist David Zeisberger 1717 1807 Moravian missionary to the Leni Lenape Apostle to the Indians Georgius Prochaska 1749 1820 ophthalmologist and physiologist Frantisek Palacky 1798 1876 historian and politician The Father of the Czech nation Gregor Mendel 1822 1884 founder of genetics Ernst Mach 1838 1916 physicist and philosopher Tomas Garrigue Masaryk 1850 1937 philosopher and politician first president of Czechoslovakia Leos Janacek 1854 1928 composer Sigmund Freud 1856 1939 founder of psychoanalysis Edmund Husserl 1859 1938 philosopher Alfons Mucha 1860 1939 painter Zdenka Wiedermannova Motyckova 1868 1915 women s rights activist Adolf Loos 1870 1933 architect pioneer of functionalism Karl Renner 1870 1950 Austrian statesman co founder of Friends of Nature movement Tomas Bata 1876 1932 entrepreneur founder of Bata Shoes company Old ethnic division of Moravians according to an encyclopaedia of 1878 Joseph Schumpeter 1883 1950 economist and political scientist Marie Jeritza 1887 1982 soprano singer Hans Krebs 1888 1947 Nazi SS Brigadefuhrer executed for war crimes Ludvik Svoboda 1895 1979 general of I Czechoslovak Army Corps seventh president of Czechoslovakia Klement Gottwald 1896 1953 first Czechoslovak communist president Erich Wolfgang Korngold 1897 1957 composer George Placzek 1905 1955 physicist participant in Manhattan Project Kurt Godel 1906 1978 theoretical mathematician Oskar Schindler 1908 1974 Nazi Germany entrepreneur saviour of almost 1 200 Jews during the WWII Jan Kubis 1913 1942 paratrooper who assassinated Nazi despot R Heydrich Bohumil Hrabal 1914 1997 writer Thomas J Bata 1914 2008 entrepreneur son of Tomas Bata and former head of the Bata shoe company Emil Zatopek 1922 2000 long distance runner multiple Olympic gold medalist Karel Reisz 1926 2002 filmmaker pioneer of the British Free Cinema movement Milan Kundera born 1929 writer Vaclav Nedomansky born 1944 ice hockey player Karel Kryl 1944 1994 poet and protest singer songwriter Karel Loprais 1949 2021 truck race driver multiple winner of the Dakar Rally Ivana Trump 1949 2022 socialite and business magnate former wife of Donald Trump Ivan Lendl born 1959 tennis player Petr Necas born 1964 politician Czech Prime Minister 2010 2013 Paulina Porizkova born 1965 model actress writer Jana Novotna 1968 2017 tennis player Jiri Slegr born 1971 ice hockey player member of the Triple Gold Club Bohuslav Sobotka born 1971 social democratic politician Czech Prime Minister 2014 2017 Magdalena Kozena born 1973 mezzo soprano Marketa Irglova born 1988 Academy awarded singer songwriter Petra Kvitova born 1990 tennis player Adam Ondra born 1993 rock climber Barbora Krejcikova born 1996 tennis playerEthnographic regions Edit Moravia can be divided on dialectal and lore basis into several ethnographic regions of comparable significance In this sense it is more heterogenous than Bohemia Significant parts of Moravia usually those formerly inhabited by the German speakers are dialectally indifferent as they have been resettled by people from various Czech and Slovak regions The principal cultural regions of Moravia are Hanakia Hana in the central and northern part Lachia Lassko in the northeastern tip Highlands Horacko in the west Moravian Slovakia Slovacko in the southeast Moravian Wallachia Valassko in the eastPlaces of interest EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2016 Lednice Castle Punkevni Cave in the Moravian Karst World Heritage Sites Edit Gardens and Castle at Kromeriz Historic Centre of Telc Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc Jewish Quarter and St Procopius Basilica in Trebic Lednice Valtice Cultural Landscape Pilgrimage Church of St John of Nepomuk at Zelena Hora Tugendhat Villa in BrnoOther Edit Hranice Abyss the deepest known underwater cave in the worldSee also EditExtreme points of Moravia Flag of Moravia German South Moravia Moravian traditional musicNotes Edit Including Moravian enclaves in Silesia 9 10 References Edit a b ARTEGA Kraje v CR pocet obyvatel hruba mzda a nezamestnanost Archived from the original on 15 October 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Royal Frankish Annals year 822 pp 111 112 Morava Iniciativa Nasa Fakta o Morave Nasa Morava Bowlus Charles R 2009 Nitra when did it become a part of the Moravian realm Evidence in the Frankish sources Early Medieval Europe 17 3 311 328 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0254 2009 00279 x S2CID 161655879 a b Encyklopedie dejin mesta Brna 2004 Moravia Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Moravia Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 22 August 2019 a b Moravia Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 22 August 2019 Moravia The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 22 August 2019 a b Dodatek I Prehled Moravy a Slezska podle zup Statisticky lexikon obci v republice Ceskoslovenske Morava a Slezsko in Czech Praha Statni urad statisticky 1924 p 133 a b Dodatek IV Moravske enklavy ve Slezsku Statisticky lexikon obci v republice Ceskoslovenske Morava a Slezsko in Czech Praha Statni urad statisticky 1924 p 138 Zmeny v rozloze obci a okresu Statisticky lexikon obci v republice Ceskoslovenske II Zeme Moravskoslezska in Czech Praha 1935 pp 149 and 151 a s Economia 18 February 2000 Jsem Moravan Rikate cele CR Cechy Pro Moravaky jste ignorant 8 February 2010 SRAMEK Rudolf MAJTAN Milan Lutterer Ivan Zemepisna jmena Ceskoslovenska Mlada fronta 1982 Praha str 202 a b Anton Mauricio Galobart Angel Turner Alan May 2005 Co existence of scimitar toothed cats lions and hominins in the European Pleistocene Implications of the post cranial anatomy of Homotherium latidens Owen for comparative palaeoecology Quaternary Science Reviews 24 10 11 1287 1301 Bibcode 2005QSRv 24 1287A doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2004 09 008 Not only here for the beer Moravia the Czech Republic s wine region The Guardian 2011 Administrator About the multipurpose water corridor Danube Oder Elbe Archived from the original on 17 May 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Klimo Emil Hager Herbert 2000 The Floodplain Forests in Europe Current Situation and Perspectives European Forest Institute research reports Leiden Brill p 48 ISBN 9789004119581 Veleminskaa J Bruzekb J Veleminskyd P Bigonia L Sefcakovae A Katinaf F 2008 Variability of the Upper Palaeolithic skulls from Predmosti near Prerov Czech Republic Craniometric comparison with recent human standards Homo 59 1 1 26 doi 10 1016 j jchb 2007 12 003 PMID 18242606 Viegas Jennifer 7 October 2011 Prehistoric dog found with mammoth bone in mouth Discovery News Retrieved 11 October 2011 Jonathan Jones Carl Andre on notoriety and a 26 000 year old portrait the week in art The Guardian 25 January 2013 Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov sites Oldest homes were made of mammoth bone The Times 29 8 2005 Detasovane pracoviste Dolni Dunajovice Hradisko u Musova Opevneni Detasovane pracoviste Dolni Dunajovice AU AV CR Brno v v i Hanel Norbert Cerdan Angel Morillo Hernandez Esperanza Martin 1 January 2009 Limes XX Estudios sobre la frontera romana Roman frontier studies Editorial CSIC CSIC Press ISBN 9788400088545 via Google Books Lazenska a obytna budova Detasovane pracoviste Dolni Dunajovice AU AV CR Brno v v i Florin Kurta The history and archaeology of Great Moravia an introduction in Early Medieval Europe 2009 volume 17 3 Reuter Timothy 1991 Germany in the Early Middle Ages London Longman page 82 Stefan Ivo 2011 Great Moravia Statehood and Archaeology The Decline and Fall of One Early Medieval Polity In Machacek Jiri Ungerman Simon eds Fruhgeschichtliche Zentralorte in Mitteleuropa Bonn Verlag Dr Rudolf Habelt pp 333 354 ISBN 978 3 7749 3730 7 Retrieved 27 August 2013 Spiesz Anton Caplovic Dusan 2006 Illustrated Slovak History A Struggle for Sovereignty in Central Europe Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 978 0 86516 426 0 The exact dating of the conquest of Moravia by Bohemian dukes is uncertain Czech and some Slovak historiographers suggest the year 1019 while Polish German and other Slovak historians suggest 1029 during the rule of Boleslaus son Mieszko II Lambert There are no primary testimonies about creating a margraviate march as distinct political unit Svoboda Zbysek Fojtik Pavel Exner Petr Martykan Jaroslav 2013 Odborne vexilologicke stanovisko k moravske vlajce PDF Vexilologie Zpravodaj Ceske vexilologicke spolecnosti o s c 169 Brno Ceska vexilologicka spolecnost pp 3319 3320 Picha Frantisek 2013 Znaky a prapory v kronice Ottokara Styrskeho PDF Vexilologie Zpravodaj Ceske vexilologicke spolecnosti o s c 169 Brno Ceska vexilologicka spolecnost pp 3320 3324 Evan Rail 23 September 2011 The Castles of Moravia NYT 23 9 2011 Lanove rejstriky 1656 1711 Archived 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine in Czech CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Moravia Czechoslovakia A Country Study US Army 1898 p 27 Moravia historical region Europe Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 26 April 2022 Hans Chmelar Hohepunkte der osterreichischen Auswanderung Die Auswanderung aus den im Reichsrat vertretenen Konigreichen und Landern in den Jahren 1905 1914 Studien zur Geschichte der osterreichisch ungarischen Monarchie Band 14 Kommission fur die Geschichte der Osterreichisch Ungarischen Monarchie Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften Wien 1974 ISBN 3 7001 0075 2 S 109 Bicik Ivan Stepanek Vit 1994 Post war changes of the land use structure in Bohemia and Moravia Case study Sudetenland GeoJournal 32 3 253 259 doi 10 1007 BF01122117 S2CID 189878438 Jelinek s 400 Year Tradition of Making Slivovitz Bears Fruit in the U S OU Kosher Certification 5 October 2010 Leteckou vyrobu v Cesku ceka v roce 2013 rust Pomuze modernizace L 410 Czech aircraft production expected to grow in 2013 Hospodarske noviny IHNED 2012 ISSN 1213 7693 Bill Lehane CSU Czech statistical office plays down census disputes Campaign want to include Moravian language in count Moravian identity The Prague Post 9 3 2011 20 Kolinkova Eliska 26 December 2008 Cisnik tvori spisovnou moravstinu Mlada fronta DNES in Czech iDnes Retrieved 7 December 2011 Zemanova Barbora 12 November 2008 Moravane tvori spisovnou moravstinu Brnensky Denik in Czech denik cz Retrieved 7 December 2011 O spisovne moravstine a jinych malych jazycich Nase rec 5 rocnik 83 2000 in Czech Kolinkova Eliska 30 December 2008 Amatersky jazykovedec prosazuje moravstinu jako novy jazyk Mlada fronta DNES in Czech iDnes Retrieved 7 December 2011 Robert B Kaplan Richard B Baldauf 1 January 2005 Language Planning and Policy in Europe Multilingual Matters pp 27 ISBN 978 1 85359 813 5 Tesser Lynn 14 May 2013 Ethnic Cleansing and the European Union An Interdisciplinary Approach to Security Memory and Ethnography Palgrave Macmillan pp 213 ISBN 978 1 137 30877 1 Ibp Inc 10 September 2013 Czech Republic Mining Laws and Regulations Handbook Strategic Information and Basic Laws Int l Business Publications pp 8 ISBN 978 1 4330 7727 2 Further reading EditThe Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful 1877 volume 15 London Charles Knight Moravia pp 397 398 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica 2003 Chicago New Delhi Paris Seoul Sydney Taipei Tokyo Volume 8 p 309 Moravia ISBN 0 85229 961 3 Filip Jan 1964 The Great Moravia exhibition CSAV Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Galuska Ludek Mitacek Jiri Novotna Lea eds 2010 Treausures of Moravia story of historical land Brno Moravian Museum ISBN 978 80 7028 371 4 National Geographic Society Wonders of the Ancient World National Geographic Atlas of Archaeology Norman Hammond consultant Nat l Geogr Soc multiple staff authors Nat l Geogr R H Donnelley amp Sons Willard OH 1994 1999 Reg or Deluxe Ed 304 pp Deluxe ed photo p 248 Venus Dolni Vestonice 24 000 B C In section titled The Potter s Art pp 246 253 Dekan Jan 1981 Moravia Magna The Great Moravian Empire Its Art and Time Minneapolis Control Data Arts ISBN 0 89893 084 7 Hugh Agnew 2004 The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown Hoower Press Stanford ISBN 0 8179 4491 5 Rona Tas Andras 1999 Hungarians amp Europe in the Early Middle Ages An Introduction to Early Hungarian History translated by Nicholas Bodoczky Central European University Press Budapest ISBN 963 9116 48 3 Wihoda Martin 2015 Vladislaus Henry The Formation of Moravian Identity Brill Publishers ISBN 9789004250499 Kirschbaum Stanislav J 1996 A History of Slovakia The Struggle for Survival St Martin s Press New York ISBN 0 312 16125 5 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio edited by Gy Moravcsik translated by R J H Jenkins Dumbarton Oaks Edition Washington D C 1993 Hlobil Ivo Daniel Ladislav 2000 The last flowers of the middle ages from the gothic to the renaissance in Moravia and Silesia Olomouc Brno Moravian Galery Muzeum umeni Olomouc ISBN 9788085227406 David Jiri 2009 Moravian estatism and provincial councils in the second half of the 17th century Folia historica Bohemica 1 24 111 165 ISSN 0231 7494 Svoboda Jiri A 1999 Hunters between East and West the paleolithic of Moravia New York Plenum Press ISSN 0231 7494 Absolon Karel 1949 The diluvial anthropomorphic statuettes and drawings especially the so called Venus statuettes discovered in Moravia New York Salmony 1949 ISSN 0231 7494 Musil Rudolf 1971 G Mendel s Discovery and the Development of Agricultural and Natural Sciences in Moravia Brno Moravian Museum Simsa Martin 2009 Open Air Museum of Rural Architecture in South East Moravia Straznice National Institute of Folk Culture ISBN 9788087261194 Miller Michael R 2010 The Jews of Moravia in the Age of Emancipation Cover of Rabbis and Revolution edition Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804770569 Bata Thomas J 1990 Bata Shoemaker to the World Stoddart Publishers Canada ISBN 9780773724167 Prochazka Jiri 2009 Vienna obsessa Thesaurus Moraviae Brno ITEM ISBN 80 903476 8 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moravia Moravian museum official website Archived 14 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Czech English and German Moravian gallery official website in Czech and English Moravian library official website in Czech English and German Moravian land archive official website Archived 26 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Czech Province of Moravia Czech Catholic Church official website Welcome to the 2nd largest city of the CR in Czech English and German Welcome to Olomouc city of good cheer in Czech English German French Spanish Italian Polish Russian Japanese and Chinese Znojmo City of Virtue Archived 8 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Czech English and German Texts on Wikisource Moravia New International Encyclopedia Vol XIII 1905 Moravia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XVI 9th ed 1883 Moravia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed 1911 Moravia Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 10 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moravia amp oldid 1153177498, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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