Aš
Aš | |||
Town | |||
Town Centre | |||
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Country | Czech Republic | ||
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Region | Karlovy Vary | ||
District | Cheb | ||
Commune | Aš | ||
Elevation | 666 m (2,185 ft) | ||
Coordinates | CZ 50°13′N 12°11′E / 50.217°N 12.183°ECoordinates: CZ 50°13′N 12°11′E / 50.217°N 12.183°E | ||
Area | 55.86 km2 (21.57 sq mi) | ||
Population | 13,167 | ||
Density | 236 / km2 (611 / sq mi) | ||
First mentioned | 1270 | ||
Mayor | Dalibor Blažek | ||
Timezone | CET (UTC+1) | ||
- summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | ||
Postal code | 352 01 | ||
Location in the Czech Republic
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Location in Cheb District
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Wikimedia Commons: Aš | |||
Statistics: statnisprava.cz | |||
Website: www | |||
Aš (Czech pronunciation: [aʃ]; German: Asch) is a town of Cheb District in the Karlovy Vary Region of the Czech Republic.
Geography
The town is situated in the Elster Mountains, in the northwesternmost area of the historic Bohemia region close to the border with Germany. With the neighbouring municipalities Hranice, Krásná, Podhradí and Hazlov in the south it forms Aš Land (Czech: Ašský výběžek or Ašsko), a panhandle area surrounded by German territory in the east, north and west. This area, located north of the historic Egerland, is also referred to as Bohemian Vogtland.
The Aš municipal area comprises the localities of Dolní Paseky, Doubrava, Horní Paseky, Kopaniny, Mokřiny, Nebesa, Nový Žďár, and Vernéřov.
Road border crossings lead to Bad Elster and Eichigt in Saxony in the east, as well as to Selb in Bavaria in the west. Pedestrians and bicyclists can directly reach Bad Brambach in the east and Rehau in the west. Border controls have been abolished since the Czech Republic implemented the Schengen Agreement in 2007.
History
Previously uninhabited hills and swamps, the town of Asch was founded in the early 11th century by German colonists[1] 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.[2] Similar to the Egerland region, the dialect spoken in the town was that of the Upper Palatinate region in the south, also known as Northern Bavarian. In the adjacent Saxon Vogtlandkreis to the east, this dialect is only found in localities close to the Czech border, such as Adorf and Markneukirchen. The Upper Palatinate dialect has a stronger presence in the Bad Brambach area, where it is known as Southern Vogtlandic (Südvogtländisch).
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 the Bavarian elevated them to Princes of the Holy Roman Empire in 1329, nevertheless two years later, they sold Aš Land to the Luxembourg 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).[3] When in 1394 Konrad von Neuburg died without a male heir, by virtue of Hedwig von Neuburg's marriage to Konrad von Zedtwitz, Asch passed into the control of the noble House of Zedtwitz.
In 1557 the Aš region was finally 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.
From 1806, Asch with Bohemia belonged to the Austrian Empire and Cisleithanian Austria after the Compromise of 1867. Until 1918, the town remained part of the Austria-Hungary, head of the Asch district, one of the 94 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Bohemia.[4] In 1854 a county legal code was granted to the region, ending five centuries of legal control by the Zedtwitz family. Asch 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 rose to 21.880, from 9.405 in 1869[1]
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[5] On 18 November 1920, Czech militia toppled the monument of Emperor Joseph II against local protest, whereby three citizens were shot: 27yo Ferdinand Künzel, 45yo baker Eduard Schindler, 22yo Robert Käßmann[6] A 1921 Czechoslovak census counted 183 ethnic Czechs, in a population of 40 000 in the district,[5] a 1930 census 520 Czechs, in a population of 45 000 in the district[5]
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 Asch was one of the Municipalities in 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 abducted them to Bory Prison in Plzeň prison, where half of them perished[7] Due to the Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia in 1946 by the Beneš decrees, the city's population was reduced, according to the official website[8] to "half of the pre - war number of inhabitants", suggesting the other half were Czechs at the time. In contrast, a German expellee website states that 30,327[9] have been expelled from March to October in 27 trains, leaving both town and district basically depopulated, considering that many soldiers were dead or POW at the time, and some Germans already had moved over US-occupied Germany voluntarily. In 1949, 3000 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.[3]
The official website states that population shrank further in 1950 due to the establishment of the Iron Curtain and the Czechoslovak border fortifications during the Cold War by the ruling Communists, as the whole Aš district was included into the border zone which made many people move out.[1] 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.[1] The present-day population in the town is at approximately 12,000, roughly half of the pre-war population.
Year | 1850 | 1930 | 1947 | 1961 | 1970 | 1975 | 1976 | 1980 | 1985 | 1989 |
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Population | 6825 | 22930 | 11378 | 9667 | 11622 | 11963 | 13954 | 14054 | 13419 | 13229 |
Year | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population | 13193 | 12298 | 12314 | 12445 | 12516 | 12486 | 12377 | 12340 | 12302 | 12285 | 12264 | 12590 | 12582 | 12676 | 12866 | 12814 | 12840 | 12957 |
Landmarks
Buildings
- Town Hall 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.
- Town museum was built in 1892, and was completely reconstructed from 2009-2010. A central evidence of stone crosses of Czech Republic is located in this building. Also a collection of 25 000 pairs of gloves is located here.
- Catholic church of St. Nicholas from 1871.
- Salva Guardia Reichspost stone relief with imperial symbols. In these days it was part of the town museum's gardens.
- Watchtower Háj from 1902-1903 was designed by W. Kreis. The tower is 36 metres high.
- Town firehouse from 1930 designed by Emil Rösler.
Memorials and statues
- Memorial of J. W. Goethe from 1932, designed by Johannes Watzal is located on Goethe plaza.
- Memorial with statue of Martin Luther from 1883, designed by J. Rössner is located on Hus plaza. Re-erected in 2008, it is currently the only Luther memorial in the Czech Republic.
- Edvard Beneš memorial from 1947 is located on Okružní street.
- Gustav Geipel memorial from 1924, designed by Johannes Watzal is located on Okružní street. Gustav Geipel was citizen of Aš (?-1914), who sponsored poor weavers, children and old people.
- Theodor Körner memorial from 1903 is located close to watchtower.
- Friedrich Ludwig Jahn memorial from 1909 is also located close to watchtower.
- Robert Schumann memorial desk from 1901 is located at the school of art.
- War Memorial (1848–1869) is located at the central cemetery.
- World War II memorial is also located at the central cemetery.
- US memorial is located on Masaryk plaza.
- USSR memorial is located at the central cemetery.
Destroyed memorials
- Memorial with statue of Emperor Joseph II from 1883 (a pedestal still exists, and is a part of the town museum gardens),
- Friedrich Schiller memorial desk from 1905,
- World War I memorial,
- "Ehrendenkmal" was a memorial dedicated to athletes who died in WWI. This memorial was located next to the Tyršův dům (Jahnhalle), a local indoor stadium on Klicperova street.
- The first statue of Soviet soldier was destroyed in early 1970s. The second statue is now located in gardens of the town museum.
Education
There are five kindergartens, four elementary schools, a gymnasium, a special school and a school of art located in Aš. A few years ago, a high school of textile also existed here.
Twin towns
Aš is twinned with:
- Rehau, Germany
- Plauen, Germany, since 1962
- Oelsnitz, Vogtland, Germany, since 2001
- Fiumefreddo di Sicilia, Italy, since 2004
- Marktbreit, Germany, since 2012
Transport
Railway 148 (Cheb-Hranice v Čechách) goes through the town. There are three train stations located here: Aš (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. The railway also continues to Hranice, but there is only one service per day.
Aš station also lies on the Cheb–Oberkotzau railway railway. This railway was closed during the Cold War, but reopened in 2015.
Notable people
- Karl Alberti (1856-1953), historian
- Ernst Bareuther (1838-1905), German politician
- Rüdiger Bartelmus (born 1944), theologian and professor
- Emil Baumgärtel (1885-1939), Austrian politician (SPÖ)
- Anton Bodem (1925-2007), theologian
- Milan Bokša (born 1951), footballer
- Hermann Fischer (1912-1984), athlete and resistance fighter against Nazism
- Oskar Fischer (born 1923), politician
- Karl Fritzsch (1903-1945), KZ-commander
- Gerhard Hahn (born 1933), professor
- Charly Höllering (1944-2009), jazz musician and graphic artist
- Karl Komma (1913-2012), composer
- Sebastian Knüpfer (1633–1676), composer
- Andreas Leonhardt (1800-1866), composer
- Wilhelm Ludwig (1901-1959), geneticist
- Rudolf Hilf (1923-2011), political scientist and displaced politician
- Lenka Marušková (born 1985), athlete
- Jiří Plíšek (born 1972), footballer
- Daniel Procházka, stylist
- Lukáš Rešetár (born 1984), futsal player
- Jiří Sekáč (born 1992), hockey player
- Petr Sepéši (1960-1985), singer
- Wolf Stegemann (born 1944), German journalist, author and poet
- Horst Thomayer (1938-2013), writer and actor
- Friedrich Wettengel (1750-1824), Lutheran theologian
- Ernst Wilfer (1923-2014), German engineer
- Georg Wollner (1903-1948), National Socialist politician
- Petr Zahrádka, poet
- Marketa Zinnerová (born 1942), children's book writer
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 The town of As
- ↑ Frühgschichte
- 1 2 Rüdesheimer Erklärung
- ↑ Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den österreichischen Postwertzeichen-Ausgaben 1867, 1883 und 1890, Wilhelm KLEIN, 1967
- 1 2 3 Cz. Republik
- ↑ Chronik
- ↑ Die Verfolgung
- ↑ "Because of the removal of German inhabitants in 1946 As had only a half of the pre - war number of inhabitants" http://web.archive.org/web/20060715090423/http://www.muas.cz/html/e_historie.htm
- ↑ Die Vertreibung
- ↑ Progress of population of Aš between 1850 and 2001, according to: Obce Ašska v proměnách času, Kolektiv autorů, MÚ Aš (2005)
- ↑ according to ČSÚ
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aš. |
- (Czech) (English) (German) Official website of town of Aš
- (Czech) (German) Website of expelled Germans (from Germans point of view)
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