PÅ™Ãbram
PÅ™Ãbram | |||
Town | |||
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Country | Czech Republic | ||
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Region | Central Bohemian | ||
District | PÅ™Ãbram | ||
Commune | PÅ™Ãbram | ||
River | Litavka | ||
Elevation | 502 m (1,647 ft) | ||
Coordinates | CZ 49°41′18″N 14°0′33″E / 49.68833°N 14.00917°ECoordinates: CZ 49°41′18″N 14°0′33″E / 49.68833°N 14.00917°E | ||
Area | 33.41 km2 (12.9 sq mi) | ||
- land | 33 km2 (13 sq mi) | ||
- water | 0.38 km2 (0 sq mi) | ||
- urban | 2.1 km2 (1 sq mi) | ||
Population | 35,475 | ||
Density | 1,062 / km2 (2,751 / sq mi) | ||
First mentioned | 1216 | ||
- Town privileges | 1579 | ||
Mayor | Jindřich Vařeka (ANO) | ||
Timezone | CET (UTC+1) | ||
- summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | ||
Postal code | 261 01 | ||
![]() ![]() ![]() Location in the Czech Republic
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Wikimedia Commons: PÅ™Ãbram | |||
Statistics: statnisprava.cz | |||
Website: www.pribram-city.cz | |||
PÅ™Ãbram (Czech pronunciation: [ˈprÌÌŠiËbram]; German: Freiberg in Böhmen, Przibram or Pribram, in the time of the German occupation (1939–1945) Pibrans) is a city in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic with a population of 35,147. The city is located on the Litavka river and the foothills of the Brdy Range, 60 km (37 mi) south-west of Prague; the country's capital. The city is well known for its mining history and more recently its new venture into economic restructuring.
The city is the third largest in the Central Bohemian Region (behind Kladno and Mladá Boleslav) and is a natural administrative and cultural center of the south-western part of the region, although it also tends to be largely influenced by the economy and lifestyle of Prague.
Widely known pilgrimage site Svatá Hora ("Holy Mount") is located just above the city, while the Mining Museum PÅ™Ãbram, including the communist labor camp Vojna memorial is another tourism attraction.
History
From legends to Middle Ages
Several legends mentioning PÅ™Ãbram in the early history of Czech statehood are mentioned in the Annales Bohemorum written by Václav Hájek z LiboÄan in the first half of the 16th century. The legends talk about princess LibuÅ¡e’s prophecy and the destroying of the BÅ™ezové Hory mines by HorymÃr of NeumÄ›tely. Both of these mentioned stories also depict the silver mining in the region.
Hájek also explains the name of the city, although his etymology is now believed to be partially fancied, the basics of it is probably true, as the city name is derived from the name of a person, probably the site owner.
Since 1216 (first written mention), the PÅ™Ãbram estate has been owned by Prague bishops and soon received its walls. The city castle was built under Prague archbishop ArnoÅ¡t of Pardubice. During Hussite wars in the 15th century, PÅ™Ãbram stood on the reformation side, but was captured and pillaged four times by Catholic aristocracy.
Archbishop ZdenÄ›k ZajÃc of Hasenburk gave PÅ™Ãbram town privileges, which were confirmed by King Jiřà z PodÄ›brad in 1463, and in 1496 PÅ™Ãbram was named town by King Ladislaus II, as PÅ™Ãbram was passed over to Czech king’s hands. The economic state of city however decreased as the rulers often impledged the city and temporary masters did not care about the city development.
Modern history
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Information about the silver and iron mining in PÅ™Ãbram were furthered in mining books from late 16th century survived to present days. In 1579 Rudolf II promoted the reputation of PÅ™Ãbram by naming it the “Royal Mining Cityâ€. The Thirty Years' War had a large impact on PÅ™Ãbram, lowering the population and causing violent recatholicization that was supported by the growing importance of Holy Mountain, nearby the pilgrimage site.
Since the 17th century the mining boom was followed with the city growth. The city however gave the majority of its mining profit share over in favor of central Vienna government, which soon slowed the development of the city when the silver mining was at its peak at the end of the 18th century.
Five major deep-mines are built in the 18th century in BÅ™ezové Hory near PÅ™Ãbram, starting with the St. Adalbert mine (Czech: Vojtěšský důl). The PÅ™Ãbram mining district became one of the most modern in Europe in the 19th century, which remained true until the 1920s. PÅ™Ãbram built educational sites and became the seat of central mining authorities and the mining academy. The St. Mary mine (Czech: Mariánský důl) fire in 1892 was a large-scale catastrophe, as 319 miners died. Although the real importance of PÅ™Ãbram mines declined after 1900, the city’s reputation as the educational and cultural centre remained high.
Region with strong partisan resistance was around PÅ™Ãbram during the World War II. Several prominent citizens participated in the resistance, and many were killed by Nazi occupiers. Student AntonÃn StoÄes, his father and PÅ™Ãbram’s gymnasium director Josef LukeÅ¡, were executed in Tábor in the 1942 days following the assassination of Reichsprotektor Reinhard Heydrich. Their story was idealized in Jan Drda’s fiction Vyššà princip (English: Higher Principle). General Richard TesaÅ™Ãk,[1] the Hero of the Soviet Union, or legionary Alois Laub, leader of the military resistance group Oliver, executed in Brandenburg in 1945, were born in PÅ™Ãbram.
At the beginning of May 1945, PÅ™Ãbram spontaneously rose up against the occupiers, the Czech authority took formally the power, but the Wehrmacht unit threatened with declaration of martial law. After negotiations, the city was liberated by the Soviet partisan brigade Death of Fascism (Czech: Smrt faÅ¡ismu, Russian: Смерть фашизма) led by Captain Yevgeny Antonovich Olesinsky. Although the majority of German forces had left the city before the liberation itself, PÅ™Ãbram’s surroundings are said to be the place where the last shots of the World War II were fired. German troops trying to leave Soviet zone over the demarcation line were met by partisan units and eventually fought Soviet Army, General von Pückler agreed to a surrender 12 May 1945, four days after the V-E Day.
In 1950, the cities of PÅ™Ãbram and BÅ™ezové Hory were merged.
The last epoch of PÅ™Ãbram mining occurred since the 1950s, when the district was opened again for uranite mining, several mines around the city were opened. The industry was included into a program of penal labour that Communist Czechoslovak government used for persecution of regime objectors. Labor camps PÅ™Ãbram-Vojna and PÅ™Ãbram-Brody were run there 1949-1951, holding up to 800 detainees.[2] The new city quarter was built for more than a half of citizens; BÅ™ezové Hory and several villages (e.g. ZdaboÅ™) became part of city, which population overcame 40,000 citizens.
Located near to the Brdy military area, PÅ™Ãbram was an important locality during the 1968 Occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact forces. The army command in PÅ™Ãbram was labeled focus of contrarevolution in the Czechoslovak Army as it did not cooperate the occupation forces and harbored the Czechoslovak Television during its independent broadcasting. The rioting of PÅ™Ãbram-BytÃz crime prisoners and the strike of PÅ™Ãbram miners were the other major events related to the August 1968 invasion.
The 1989 Velvet Revolution influenced the city life as much as the mines closure.
Politics and administration
PÅ™Ãbram city assembly is the highest authority of the city . Authorities are elected during communal election every four years and has 25 members. The assembly elects the City council of six members including the mayor and two vice-mayors. As former county (Czech: okres) city, PÅ™Ãbram now has a status of the city with extended agency (Czech: obec s rozÅ¡ÃÅ™enou působnostÃ).
All city council seats are now occupied by the Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD) members and the SNK European Democrats (SNK-ED), their minority coalition was enabled by the votes of Communists. Josef Řihák (ČSSD) is the current city mayor.
PÅ™Ãbram area of almost 13 km2 (5 sq mi) is divided into 18 city quarters, nine central numbered using Roman numerals, the others are usually the villages added to the city before in the second half of the 20th century like Brod, BytÃz, Jerusalem, Lazec, Žežice and others.
Elections in PÅ™Ãbram
The last time the city council was elected October 2006. During the post parliamentary election period when there was no state government with Parliament’s confidence and the situation was highly confrontational between the two strongest Czech parties – the Civic Democrats ODS and Social Democrats ČSSD.
Both parties strengthened their position in the PÅ™Ãbram council for the second elections in a row, while the Christian Democrats of the former mayor Josef Vacek lost both two remaining seats, Vacek himself did not act as the party leader, but he was unsuccessfully running for re-election.
The result gave the Civic Democrats a chance to continue their coalition with the Social Democrats or to close a coalition deal with the SNK European Democrats, but they were not able to do so. After two weeks of negotiations, the minority coalition of Social Democrats and SNK European Democrats was approved by the Communists' votes. The coalition broke later and it was substituted by a large majority coalition of Social Democrats and Civic Democrats.
Summary of the 2006 PÅ™Ãbram council elections results[3]
Parties and coalitions | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Civic Democratic Party (ODS) | Ivan Fuksa | 86,272 | 33.13 | 11 | +4 | |
Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD) | Josef Řihák | 62,290 | 23.92 | 8 | +2 | |
Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM) | Jiřà Svoboda | 35,518 | 13.64 | 4 | -1 | |
SNK European Democrats (SNK-ED) | Petr Kareš | 19,819 | 7.61 | 2 | +2 | |
Christian and Democratic Union - Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-ÄŒSL) | Lenka PtáÄková Melicharová | 12,566 | 4.82 | 0 | -2 | |
Green Party (SZ) | Alena Šálová | 11,637 | 4.47 | 0 | 0 | |
Change for PÅ™Ãbram (Coalition of Path of Change (CZ) and independents) | Jiřà Schmidt | 10,473 | 4.02 | 0 | -2 | |
Union for PÅ™Ãbram (Coalition of Freedom Union – Democratic Union US-DEU and independents) | VladimÃr KřÞ | 9,344 | 3.59 | 0 | -1 | |
Union of Independents (SN) | - | did not participate | - | 0 | -2 | |
other | 12,411 | 4.77 | 0 | 0 | ||
Total (turnout 39.77%) | 260,330 | 25 | 0 |
Since the 1989 Velvet Revolution, the free parliamentary elections have been held five times in the Czech Republic. In 1990, the Civic Forum received clear majority of 50 to 57 per cent of votes in PÅ™Ãbram. In 1992, rightist coalition of Civic Democratic Party and Christian Democratic Party (KDS) won in PÅ™Ãbram with a total of 25 to 34.8%. Both times the deputies in three parliament chambers were elected. Since 1996, the Czech Social Democratic Party won in PÅ™Ãbram, starting with 30% of votes in 1996 and between 34.3 and 36.8% in 1998, 2002 and 2006; with Civic Democrats in second place all times. In 2010 elections Social Democrats won ahead of Civic Democrats once again, but they got only 24.7%.[4]
City of PÅ™Ãbram is the center of PÅ™Ãbram electoral district for the Senate elections. Social Democrat ZdenÄ›k VojÃÅ™ won the seat in 1996 in the second round, but he lost the seat to Civic Democrat JaromÃr Volný in 2002. The results in city itself were comparable to the overall district results both times.
Economy
PÅ™Ãbram’s economy was determined by the mining industry and supplying companies for hundreds of years. At the end of the 1980s, when the mining was slowly derogating, the basic PÅ™Ãbram corporations included the Uranium Mines (Czech: Uranové doly full name Czech State Uranium Industry Czech: ÄŒeský státnà uranový průmysl), the Ore Mines (Czech: Rudné doly) and suppliers like ZRUP (Czech: Základna rozvoje uranového průmyslu English: Base of Uranium Industry Development) and others. Also the Hamiro company was located in PÅ™Ãbram,
After 1989, the economy restructured because of the closure of mines and privatization. The nationwide important branch office of state enterprise Diamo is the successor of the Uranium Mines, the office is named the Administration of Uranium Deposits (Czech: Správa uranových ložisek). Several of the supplying companies continue their activities under new owners. The list of the PÅ™Ãbram’s biggest companies follows:
- ZAT, a. s. – production of control systems for power engineering and industry;
- ZRUP, a. s.[5] – prefab buildings production;
- DISA Industries, s.r.o. – production of shot blasting equipment;
- KovohutÄ› PÅ™Ãbram nástupnická, a. s. – recycling and production of lead and precious metals;
- Halex-Schauenberg – steel buildings and steel construction;
- Vibros, s.r.o. – production of surface vibrators and vibrating machines;
- Průzkum PÅ™Ãbram, s.r.o. – mining and geological works;
- Ravak int. – the biggest producer of baths and shower-baths in middle and eastern Europe;
- Yoko, s.r.o. – plush toys;
- Stella Ateliers, s.r.o. – production of bed linen.
Several food industry companies or affiliates have also larger than regional importance (baking industry, beverages, meat-packing). Many services or trading companies have their seat in PÅ™Ãbram.
The District Economic Chamber PÅ™Ãbram was found in 1993.
Despite the development of PÅ™Ãbram enterprises, the unemployment in city and close surroundings stays high on 8.8 per cent[6] in July 2006 – higher than in other parts of former PÅ™Ãbram district and over average in the Central Bohemian Region.
Transport
Road transport
PÅ™Ãbram is located near a crossroads of a national road #18 (from Rožmitál pod TÅ™emÅ¡Ãnem and Votice) and the R4 expressway, which was modernized in the 1980s to a highway type road between PÅ™Ãbram and Prague; it heads south to Strakonice and Vimperk in the opposite direction, and in Germany is connected to road number 2 to Munich via Passau.
PÅ™Ãbram has an extensive system of bus connections to nearby villages and cities as well as to Prague and more distant Czech cities. Direct lines however connect PÅ™Ãbram also to Slovakia cities, like Poprad or KoÅ¡ice.
Intra-city transport is run by Connex PÅ™Ãbram company. The system includes 15 bus lines numbered 1 to 16 (number 13 is empty). Connex PÅ™Ãbram uses buses Karosa (B731, B732, B932 or B952) and SOR (B 9.5 and BN 12). Basic line no. 2 has regular 10-minutes interval (5 minutes in rush periods), other lines periodicity varies down to several buses per day.
The Bus terminal is located next to the railway station, the busiest hub for city buses is however located in the Jirásek Parks (Czech: Jiráskovy sady) near the Pražská street.
Railroad transport
Railroad from Zdice to ProtivÃn, which runs directly through PÅ™Ãbram, was built in 1875. The train is now used especially for short-distance commutating. ÄŒeské BudÄ›jovice or Most are available direct by the Bezdrev fast train. The railway station is also important for goods and cargo transport.
Airplane transport
The PÅ™Ãbram airport (ICAO airport code LKPM), located 6 km (4 mi) away north-east of PÅ™Ãbram at Dlouhá Lhota, is a civil airport with a daylight operation on one 1.45 km (1 mi) long runway.
Landmarks and places of interest
Svatá Hora monastery and St. Jacob church are dominants of the city’s panorama. Old town has the following landmarks:

- Svatá Hora – baroque church and monastery at a pilgrimage site, connected to the city with unique roofed stairs;
- Tomás Garrigue Masaryk Square:
- the St. Jacob church (found 1298, baroque aisle, 19th century neo-gothic tower),
- former court building (decorated with sgraffiti from Mikoláš Aleš mining drawings),
- city library and other historic buildings;
- City Hall – neo-renascence building from 1890, architect Václav Ignác Ulmann;
- ZámeÄek-Ernestinum – castle found in the 14th century, later archbishop residence, now culture centre, original gothic bay
- memorial of victims of World War I, statue of archbishop Arnošt of Pardubice (sculptor Ivar Kodym);
- Pražská street – precinct with shops and restaurants, on the top end, the St. Wenceslas square (Czech: Václavské námÄ›stÃ) is located with a statue "St. Wenceslas" (in Czech sv. Vaclav)] of the granit-diorit (1998, sculptor prof. Stanislav Hanzik);
- Jiráskovy sady (English: Jirásek Parks) – the park in the center of the old town, surrounded by historical buildings:
- the konvikt (ecclesiastical school), former mining academy rectorate or PÅ™Ãbram district office, architect V. I. Ulmann,
- statue memorial to Alois Jirásek literature work (sculptor Václav Šára), bust of general Richard TesaÅ™Ãk;
- PÅ™Ãbram cemetery – graves of many PÅ™Ãbram natives, memorial of 1892 St. Mary mine disaster victims (the duplicate one is located in the ZdaboÅ™ cemetery), memorial of the Red Army World War II victims;
- AntonÃn Dvořák bust on the Dvořák Front (Czech: Dvořákovo nábÅ™ežÃ).
In new city, built after 1945, you can find:
- House of Culture – built 1959, architect V. Hilský, house of PÅ™Ãbram theatre,
- near is statue of AntonÃn Dvořák (sculptor Josef Wagner);
- statue of Miner (sculptor L. Lošák) at the PÅ™Ãbram gymnasium
In Březové Hory you can find:
- Five historical mines and other buildings of the Mining Museum PÅ™Ãbram;
- St. Adalbert church – neo-renascence, built 1889;
- St. Prokop church – found on a place of old wooden campanile in the 18th century;
- church of Master Jakoubek of StÅ™Ãbro Charge – built 1936.
Culture
Due to the notable levels of education and cultural interactions in the city, PÅ™Ãbram was nicknamed Brdy Athens (Czech: Podbrdské Athény) at the end of the 19th century. The city’s culture was then largely influenced by the mining industry, which went on until the late 20th century. Mining life was described by poets and writers Fráňa KuÄera, Quido Maria VyskoÄil and FrantiÅ¡ek Gellner, who lived or studied in PÅ™Ãbram. Many books by PÅ™Ãbram's most famous writer, Jan Drda, were inspired by PÅ™Ãbram and he used the names of the city's neighbouring villages in his tales. Some of the stories in his NÄ›má barikáda (English: Silent Barricade) have their origin in PÅ™Ãbram (especially Vyššà princip – see Modern History) while his MÄ›steÄko na dlani (English: City on Palm) describes PÅ™Ãbram directly, although reality is distorted there by having a river flowing through the city, which is named Rukapáň (English: God’s Hand) in the book.
The city library was opened in 1900.
The theatre in PÅ™Ãbram has a long history thanks to a long tradition of theatricals. During the struggle to build the permanent theatre stage, the plays had to be performed in different halls for a long time, especially in the Sokolovna, the hall of PÅ™Ãbram Sokol. In 1959 the House of Culture (Czech: Kulturnà dům) was built, which hosts the PÅ™Ãbram theatre and includes a cinema hall (the only other cinema is the open-air stage, while two pre-1989 more cinema-halls were closed). The first cinema productions were however held in PÅ™Ãbram as early as in 1914. The PÅ™Ãbram theatre is a permanent scene with a professional ensemble, its repertory is enriched by regular on-tour performances by Prague’s and other cities ensembles. The reputation of PÅ™Ãbram ensemble is derived not only from departure of several actors to bigger ensembles, but also from the nationwide successful spectacle of Hrdý Budžes (English: Proud Budžes), a comedy play after book of PÅ™Ãbram born Irena Dousková. Barbora Hrzánová won the Thálie award as the best Czech female stage actress of the 2004 year.
Musical life of PÅ™Ãbram is connected to the name of AntonÃn Dvořák, who had his summerhouse in near Vysoká u PÅ™ÃbramÄ› and visited PÅ™Ãbram often. In 1969, the AntonÃn Dvořák Music Festival was founded in PÅ™Ãbram, which has been organized annually until now, bringing domestic as well as foreign musicians and ensembles to the city and its neighbourhood. PÅ™Ãbram has its own amateur philharmonic orchestra, the PÅ™Ãbram Big Band still helds its concerts, miners‘ bands perform during annual miners‘festivals, the newest form of musical performances was brought to PÅ™Ãbram with the Ensemble of Svatá Hora Horn-Blowers.
The most important form of the city’s musical activities was the choir singing. Starting with the LumÃr-Dobromila association, founded and directed by composer, choirmaster and choral director Bohumil Fidler for fifteen years, and continuing as the PÅ™Ãbram Mixed Choir, the ensemble made a great impact on several generations of PÅ™Ãbram citizens. The most important choir leaders were AntonÃn VepÅ™ek and his son, VladimÃr. In 1939, AntonÃn VepÅ™ek founded PÅ™Ãbram Children Choir, which is one of the oldest children choruses in the Czech Republic. Several children choruses are organized in PÅ™Ãbram elementary and art schools, where the city hosts annual international show of children choruses.
Popular music is played in several clubs in PÅ™Ãbram, with the Junior club the oldest of them. Of the PÅ™Ãbram music groups, the E!E punk rock band is the most important.
Miners in PÅ™Ãbram used to earn more money by handicrafts (embroidery, woodcarving, painting etc.), often on good artistic level. The Christmas cribs-making (Czech: betlém) lives until today, the museum collects also several mechanical models of mine. Of the professional artists, painter and graphic artist Karel Hojden, pupil of Max Å vabinský was the most important. The world-known photographer of the first half of the 20th century FrantiÅ¡ek Drtikol was born in PÅ™Ãbram. The city gallery, which now seats in ZámeÄek-Ernestinum, former Prague archbishop's residence, is named after him and offers permanent exhibition of his works.
The PÅ™Ãbram museum was founded in 1886 and after several changes of form it is now run by the Central-Bohemian Region and named Mining Museum PÅ™Ãbram. It is the biggest museum of its kind in the Czech Republic, it contains the objects of historical mine with old headstock, miner’s house, drift with a mining train, exhibition of mining history, geological collection and others.
Education
PÅ™Ãbram was the site of the Mining University, the tradition of which still continues today however the institution was moved to Ostrava in 1945. For more information about the university see below.
With the removal of the Mining University, PÅ™Ãbram lost the status of university city. In the 1990s, the city authorities aspired for the status again. In 2005 the College of European and Regional Studies (Czech: Vysoká Å¡kola evropských a regionálnÃch studiÃ, VÅ ERS) with seat in ÄŒeské BudÄ›jovice opened its affiliate in PÅ™Ãbram, with 30 students in the courses.[7]
There were news of another university department opened in PÅ™Ãbram in 2006 autumn, specialized on correspondence course of physical therapy.[8]
High schools offer in PÅ™Ãbram includes two gymnasiums, technical school, business academy, medical school and training college. Gymnasium PÅ™Ãbram was founded 1871 and serves as a general educational propaedeutics institutions for applicants for university studies. The Pod Svatou Horou gymnasium was founded in the 1990s. The technical school was derived from the preliminary courses of the Mining University, so called Mining School, founded already in 1851. In 2006 the school had 564 students.[9]
Seven elementary schools are in PÅ™Ãbram, six of them with traditional educational program (the number was reduced by two in the 1990s). The remaining one, found in 1991, stands on the Waldorf education program and it has also opened its own high school.
The city has 13 kindergartens and runs also two musical and art schools.[10]
Mining University in PÅ™Ãbram (1894–1945)
(see also Technical University of Ostrava)

Mining education in PÅ™Ãbram dates from the beginning of the 19th century. The School of Mines was founded in 1851 and it was changed to Mining Academy in 1865. It was then the only mining educational institution in the Czech lands. The academy struggled in the shadow of Leoben academy, which repeatedly obtained its privileges in advance.
Important professors and lecturers of this era include:
- Geologist František Pošepný: one of the most important educators in the 19th century and of all the school's history;
- Mine surveyor (German: Markscheider) Gustav Ziegelheim: Professor for mining, ore processing and mine surveying as of 1882, Director of the School of Mines from 1883 to 1885 and from 1889 to 1895.[11]
In 1894, the academy received its university status decree and A. Hoffmann was elected the first chancellor of the university in 1898.
At the beginning of the 20th century the national conflicts lead to attempts to move Leoben academy to Vienna, while the PÅ™Ãbram school should have been dissolved. Long proceedings and the fact, that three quarters of the mining production of the Austria-Hungary was provided by the mines in the Czech lands, resulted in keeping both mining schools (Leoben and PÅ™Ãbram) alive. In 1904 both Leoben and PÅ™Ãbram institutions were renamed Mining Academy (Czech: Vysoká Å¡kola báňská) with prof. Josef Theurer as the first chancellor.
The university started with 11 departments, but the number grew to 18 in 1924. The university had the right to name doctors of mining sciences (dr. mont.). The highest number of students was almost 500 in 1921, but in the late 1930s the number fell to 120.
The position of the institution changed basically after arousal of Czechoslovakia in 1918, one year later the Czech language became the official language of the university. Many attempts to move it out of PÅ™Ãbram recurred, several of them initiated from the university itself, but they were refused.
World War II and the closure of Czech universities interrupted the work of the institution, which was resumed in 1945. The university was however moved to Ostrava within few months to bring the education closer to the booming mining industry in the Ostrava region. The last mining university students left PÅ™Ãbram in 1946 summer.[12]
Sports
PÅ™Ãbram is the home of 1. FK PÅ™Ãbram football club, successor of past Dukla Prague. The top division games have been played at the Na Litavce Stadium since 1997. The other PÅ™Ãbram’s football club Spartak (also called HorymÃr) plays regional competition.
PÅ™Ãbram’s volleyball club Vavex PÅ™Ãbram, found in 1935, has been a member of the Czech top division since 1998.
The ice hockey club entered regional league in 2006. The city is regular host of a city run, several road cycling races including the Grand Prix of PÅ™Ãbram. The Rallye PÅ™Ãbram (former Rallye Vltava) used to be part of the European Championships, now is the integrant part of the national championships. The movement of the little football plays a major role in the sport for all in the city and region organizing regular long-term competitions twice a year for almost 50 teams.
Besides the Na Litavce Stadium, the sport facilities in PÅ™Ãbram include two indoor ice rinks (main arena for approx. 5,000 spectators opened in 1978), indoor sports arena (opened 1978, capacity enlarged in reconstruction in 2005), modern open-air and indoor swimming pool and several playgrounds and tennis centers. Many of the PÅ™Ãbram’s elementary schools have their sport-oriented classes and they have sports facilities like the high schools in the city.
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
PÅ™Ãbram is twinned with:
-
Hoorn, Netherlands, since 1992;
-
Villerupt, France, since before 1989;
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Chekhov, Russia, since before 1989;
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Freiberg, Germany, since 1999;
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Kežmarok, Slovakia, since 1997;
-
Königs Wusterhausen, Germany, since before 1989;
-
Altötting, Germany.[13]
Notable people born in or otherwise connected to PÅ™Ãbram
- listed chronologically
- ArnoÅ¡t of Pardubice (German: Ernst von Pardubitz, 1297, probably in Glatz - 1364, Raudnitz), Archbishop of Prague, owner of the PÅ™Ãbram domain;
- Bohuslav BalbÃn (1621, Hradec Králové - 1688, Prague), writer and poet, lived in PÅ™Ãbram;
- FrantiÅ¡ek PoÅ¡epný (1836–1895), geologist, director of the School of Mines in PÅ™Ãbram;[14]
- Gustav Ziegelheim (1839, VyÅ¡kov – 1904, PÅ™Ãbram), professor for mining, ore processing and mine surveying, director of the School of Mines in PÅ™Ãbram;[15]
- AntonÃn Dvořák (1841–1904), composer, stayed often in nearby Vysoká u PÅ™ÃbramÄ›, composed his opera Rusalka there;
- Bohumil Fidler (1860–1944), composer, choirmaster, choir director and music teacher;
- Jiřà Baborovský (1875–1946)
- FrantiÅ¡ek Gellner (1881–1914), Jewish poet, lived and studied in PÅ™Ãbram;
- FrantiÅ¡ek Drtikol (1883, PÅ™Ãbram - 1961, Prague), photographer, born in PÅ™Ãbram;
- HermÃna Týrlová (1900–1993), cartoon-movie maker, born i BÅ™ezové Hory;
- Adina Mandlová (1910, Mladá Boleslav - 1991 PÅ™Ãbram), Czech actress, died there
- Jan Drda (1915, PÅ™Ãbram - 1970, DobÅ™ÃÅ¡), writer, born in PÅ™Ãbram;
- Richard TesaÅ™Ãk (1915–1967), general and war hero;
- Josef Doležal (1920, PÅ™Ãbram - 1999 in Prague)
- Josef Vacek (born 1959, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Ivan Fuksa (born 1963, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Martin Å vejnoha (born 1977, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Filip Dort (born 1980)
- Patrik Å tefan (born 1980)
- Stanislav Nohýnek (born 1983)
- FrantiÅ¡ek Rajtoral (1986, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Tomáš PilÃk (born 1988, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Milan Mišůn (born 1990, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Pavel PilÃk (born 1992, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Jiřà Veselý (born 1993, PÅ™Ãbram)
- Martin KubÃn (?), physician, Johns Hopkins University, born in PÅ™Ãbram;
PÅ™Ãbram meteorite
The city was the impact site of the PÅ™ibram meteorite in 1959. This was the first meteorite whose trajectory was tracked by multiple cameras recording the associated fireball. Several fragments of it were found close to PÅ™Ãbram at the nearby village of Luhy.[16]
References
Bibliography
- VELFL, Josef. PÅ™Ãbram v průbÄ›hu staletÃ. PÅ™Ãbram : MÄ›stský úřad, 2003. 166 p. ISBN 80-239-1174-0.
- ÄŒÃKA, Jan KráÄÃm starou PÅ™ÃbramÃ. PÅ™Ãbram : OlÅ¡anská & HyÅ¡pler, 1998. 83 p. ISBN 80-902362-1-9.
Notes
- ↑ Richard TesaÅ™Ãk in the Czech Radio web article (in Czech)
- ↑ “Totalita.cz†(in Czech)
- ↑ Parties and coalitions are listed according to their participation in the 2002 and 2006 elections, with 2006 logos. The results are cited according to the Czech Statistical Office electoral web.
- ↑ www.volby.cz, Czech Statistical Office web for 2010 elections
- ↑ The abbreviation a.s. (Czech: akciová spoleÄnost) stands for joint stock company, abbreviation s. r. o. (Czech: spolÄnost s ruÄenÃm omezeným) stands for limited liability company
- ↑ PÅ™Ãbramský denÃk article in Czech
- ↑ College of European and Regional Studies news webpage (in Czech)
- ↑ interview with VÅ ERS director V. KřÞ
- ↑ Technical school PÅ™Ãbram history webpage (in Czech)
- ↑ City of PÅ™Ãbram official site education webpage (in Czech)
- ↑ H. G., Professor Gustav Ziegelheim (Nekrolog). In: Österr. Zs. f. Berg- und Hüttenwesen, 23 (1904), S. 105–106
- ↑ Section composed after the Technical University of Ostrava history webpage (in Czech) Archived August 13, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ The cities of Königs Wusterhausen and Altötting are mentioned on the municipal website as cities with continued collaboration, but not listed among the sister cities themselves. Königs Wusterhausen used to have a strong relation to PÅ™Ãbram before 1989.
- ↑ cs:František Pošepný
- ↑ H. G., Professor Gustav Ziegelheim (Nekrolog). In: Österr. Zs. f. Berg- und Hüttenwesen, 23 (1904), S. 105–106
- ↑ "Multiple fall of PÅ™Ãbram meteorites photographed" by Z. Ceplecha, Bull. Astron. Inst. Czechoslovakia, 12, 21-46, NASA ADS
External links
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- Municipal website
Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Přibram". Encyclopædia Britannica 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 313.