Hradec Králové
Hradec Králové | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : | Czech Republic | |||
Historical part of the country : | Bohemia | |||
Region : | Královéhradecký kraj | |||
District : | Hradec Králové | |||
Area : | 10561 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 50 ° 13 ′ N , 15 ° 50 ′ E | |||
Height: | 235 m nm | |||
Residents : | 92,742 (Jan 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 500 00 | |||
traffic | ||||
Railway connection: |
Chlumec nad Cidlinou – Międzylesie Hradec Králové – Ostroměř |
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structure | ||||
Status: | Statutory city | |||
Districts: | 21st | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Alexandr Hrabálek (as of 2018) | |||
Address: | Československé armády 408 502 00 Hradec Králové |
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Municipality number: | 569810 | |||
Website : | www.hradeckralove.org |
Hradec Králové ( Czech city on the upper reaches of the Elbe in the foothills of the Giant Mountains in northeastern Bohemia . It is the administrative center of the Hradec Králové region , a university town and a bishopric . The Battle of Königgrätz between Prussia and Austria took place near the city in 1866 .
; German Königgrätz ; Latin Reginogradecium ) is ageography
Hradec Králové is located at an altitude of 240 m nm at the confluence of the Elbe and Adler ( Orlice ) rivers in the southwestern part of the region of the same name, about 21 km north of Pardubice and 112 km east of Prague.
history
middle Ages
Königgrätz was fortified as early as 1062, was named a royal city in 1225 and in 1307 Elisabeth Richza of Poland , widow of kings Wenceslaus II and Rudolf I , was assigned as a widow's seat . Since then, the city has had the name Grecz Reginae or Hradec Králové instead of the previous Hradec (Grecz / Grätz).
In German by 1800 at the latest, instead of the correct translation König in grätz, the name Königgrätz prevailed, also as an official name.
The city was one of the first to side with the Hussites ; Jan Žižka was buried there in 1424. She suffered from the turbulent conflicts of the Hussite Wars and remained predominantly Protestant until the Thirty Years' War .
Modern times
From 1574 to 1580, the White Tower (Bílá věž) was built in the Renaissance style, which has the second largest bell in Bohemia, the Augustin . During the Thirty Years War the city was conquered by the Swedes in 1639, occupied and plundered for eight months. In 1664 the city became the bishop's seat of the newly founded diocese of Königgrätz of the Catholic Church. The Jesuit Antonín Koniáš first wrote his index Clavis haeresim in claudens et aperiens there in 1729 , which, in his opinion, listed heretical works and classified them as undesirable literature. In doing so he developed great zeal, had books destroyed and brought about draconian punishments for their unauthorized possession. In his opinion, every "decent" Catholic should keep his private collection of books available for examination by the confessor . His work caused noticeable losses from Hradec Králové from the Czech cultural heritage .
During the Seven Years' War (1756 to 1763) the city was affected by clashes between the Prussian and Austrian troops. Under Emperor Joseph II Königgrätz was declared a fortress in 1778; In the years 1780 to 1789, mighty fortifications were built around the city . During this time the administration of the Königgrätzer Kreis was housed in Horziniowes Castle, and in 1792 it returned to the city after the fortress was closed.
19th century
The Napoleonic campaigns also left their mark on the city: there was a great shortage of food in 1809 due to the presence or passage of the armies of Archduke Karl as well as supplies to other Bohemian cities such as Prague and Theresienstadt , which were also preparing for fear of sieges . In 1866, northwest of the city (near Sadowa ), the Prussian army inflicted a devastating defeat on the united Austrian and Saxon armies in the battle of Königgrätz . The battle decided the German war for Prussia .
The fortifications had lost their importance in the warfare of the time and were razed in 1884. They made room for spacious parks and buildings as evidence of the architectural trends of classical modernism, such as the Art Nouveau originating from Vienna and the subsequent reform style . These include department stores , hotel buildings, savings banks , but also residential buildings.
20th century
After the First World War , when it grew steadily and new modern buildings were added, the city was given the nickname Salon der Republik . Many of these buildings have been preserved and renovated. These include buildings designed by Hubert Gessner , Josef Gočár , Jan Kotěra , Oldřich Liska, Otakar Novotný, Jan Rejchl, Václav Rejchl, Bohumíl Waigant and Václav Weinzettl .
Urban structure
Hradec Králové is characterized by a differentiated urban structure. The main parts are the historic old town ( Staré město ) and the new town ( Nové město ). The old town is located on a mighty, elongated rock elevation, the original structure of which is barely recognizable due to centuries of urban development . The old town can only be reached by vehicle via two streets. Side stairs lead up. The old town center of Königgrätz with its ecclesiastical and civil buildings is located on the elevation.
Around this elevation are old barracks and warehouse buildings from the time of the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy . The old town is bordered to the west and south by the Elbe and the Adler , which converge to the southwest not far from the ice stadium . Of the former floodplain landscape of both rivers, there is only a significant area to the north of the old town, which today has a park-like character. The river banks in the inner city area are paved in the manner of a canal throughout. Old meandering fragments of the Adler and Elbe are still present on the outskirts of the built-up area and represent natural protection zones.
The New Town can be reached from the Old Town via the architecturally remarkable Prague Elbe Bridge ( Pražsky most ). This district extends in a westerly direction and is traversed by a star-shaped network of streets running across it, which originates from this bridge. The central street ( Gočárova třída ) of the New Town leads to the station area, which it only touches laterally through a bend. In the course of urban development, the Prague suburb ( Pražské předmestí ), the Silesian suburb ( Slezské předmestí ) and the Moravian suburb ( Moravské předmestí ) emerged. Other settlements, former villages, were later incorporated. In the south lies the Nový Hradec Králové (Neu-Königgrätz) district with an old church building on an elevation.
City structure
The districts of Hradec Králové include:
- Hradec Králové ( old town ) - 3.45 km², 16.350 inhabitants.
- Březhrad ( Brezhrad ) - 2.80 km², 950 inhabitants.
- Kukleny ( Kuklen ) - 4.03 km², 2503 Ew.
- Malšova Lhota ( Lhota Malschowa ) - 1.94 km², 526 inhabitants.
- Malšovice ( Malschowitz ) - 2.37 km², 2670 inhabitants.
- Moravské Předměstí ( Moravian Suburbs )
- Nový Hradec Králové ( Neu Königgrätz ) - 24.74 km², 24.331 Ew., With Kluky ( Kluk )
- Piletice ( Piletitz ) - 3.03 km²
- Plačice ( Platschitz )
- Plácky ( Platzka )
- Plotiště nad Labem ( Plotisch )
- Pouchov ( Bauschenhof )
- Pražské Předměstí ( Prague Suburbs )
- Roudnička ( Kleinraudnitz )
- Rusek ( Rusek )
- Slatina
- Slezské Předměstí ( Silesian Suburbs )
- Svinary ( Swinar )
- Svobodné Dvory ( Freihöfe )
- Třebeš ( Trebesch )
- Věkoše ( Wiekosch ) - 5.54 km², 2651 inhabitants.
politics
coat of arms
Description: In red, a gold-armored and crowned silver double-tailed lion standing to the left with a golden capital letter "G" in his paws.
flag
The flag of Hradec Králové consists of three horizontal stripes white-yellow-red. The ratio of width to length is 2: 3.
Town twinning
Hradec Králové maintains twinning agreements with the following nine cities:
city | country | since |
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Alessandria | Piedmont, Italy | 1961 |
Arnhem | Gelderland, Netherlands | 1992 |
Banská Bystrica | Central Slovakia, Slovakia | 1950 |
Wroclaw | Lower Silesia, Poland | 2003 |
to water | Hessen, Germany | 1990 |
Kaštela | Split-Dalmatia, Croatia | 1992 |
Kronstadt | Saint Petersburg, Russia | 2019 |
Metz | Grand Est, France | 2001 |
Chernihiv | Ukraine | 2010 |
Wałbrzych | Lower Silesia, Poland | 1991 |
Economy and Infrastructure
Companies
Petrof pianos have been manufactured in the village since 1864 and have been exported since 1924. The family business is (as of 2008) with up to 5000 pianinos and 900 grand pianos per year, currently one of the largest piano producers in Europe in terms of the number of pieces.
traffic
Streets
Today's city center, made up of the old town and the new town, is surrounded by a broad inner ring road . The supra-regional connections meet this ring in a star shape. It thus reduces the flow of supraregional traffic through the city center.
Hradec Králové is on the European roads :
- E 67 (Via Baltica) : Helsinki - Warsaw - Kłodzko - Hradec Králové - Prague
- E 442 : Karlovy Vary - Liberec - Hradec Králové - Olomouc - Žilina .
The D11 motorway from the direction of Prague ends southwest of Hradec Králové, there are plans to extend it in the future, past the city, towards southern Poland.
In addition, Hradec Králové is the intersection of various 1st and 2nd class streets:
- I / 11: Chlumec nad Cidlinou - Hradec Králové - Třebechovice pod Orebem - Týniště nad Orlicí - Vamberk - Žamberk - Šumperk - Rýmařov - Bruntál - Opava - Ostrava - Havířov - Český Těšín - Třinec - Mosty u Jablunkova - Slovak border
- I / 33: Hradec Králové - Jaroměř - Náchod - Polish border
- I / 35: Polish border - Hradek nad Nisou - Liberec - Turnov - Jičín - Hořice - Hradec Králové - Holice - Vysoké Mýto - Litomyšl - Moravská Třebová - Mohelnice - Olomouc - Lipník - Hranice - Valašské Meziříčí - Rožnov pod Radhoštěm - Slovak border
- I / 37: Trutnov - Jaroměř - Hradec Králové - Pardubice - Chrudim - Slatiňany - Ždírec nad Doubravou - Žďár nad Sázavou - Křižanov - Velá Bíteš
- II / 308: Hradec Králové - Černilov - Libřice - Bohuslavice - Nové Město nad Metují
- II / 324: Městec Králové - Skochovice - Nový Bydžov - Nechanice - Stěžery - Hradec Králové - Opatovice nad Labem - Hrobice - Pardubice
train
The main train station of Hradec Králové is located west of the city center and is the intersection of the following railway lines:
- Velký Osek - Hradec Králové - Choceň (timetable number 020)
- Pardubice– Hradec Králové –Jaroměř (timetable number 031)
- Hradec Králové - Jičín - Turnov (timetable number 041)
There are connections to many cities in the Czech Republic via these lines.
air traffic
The Hradec Králové airport is located a few kilometers outside north-northeast of the city center.
education
There are several higher education institutions in the city. The University of Hradec Králové is located there. The city is also home to the Faculty of Pharmacy and one of the Faculties of Medicine of Charles University in Prague and the Faculty of Military Health of the University of Defense .
The 10th International Physics Olympiad took place there from July 7th to 17th, 1977 .
Attractions
The historic city center was declared an urban monument reserve in 1962 .
- Big ring (Velké náměstí) with
- town hall
- White tower with Clement's chapel
- Holy Spirit Church (Cathedral)
- Former Jesuit Church (Church of the Assumption) and Jesuit College
- Mariensäule (plague column)
- Small ring with residence house
- Old Royal Brewery (now district administration)
- Jirasek Park at the confluence of the Elbe and Adler (Orlice) rivers
- Alleys in the old town
- Klicpera Theater
- Former seminary (Purkrabský dům) on the site of the former castle (Na Hradě)
- East Bohemian Museum
- Former synagogue , built in 1904/05
- Jewish Cemetery
- Všesportovní stadion , home ground of FC Hradec Králové
Culture
The East Bohemian State Philharmonic Orchestra "Filharmonie Hradec Králové" was founded in 1978 and is one of the leading Czech symphony orchestras. It emerged from the city opera orchestra. Ondřej Kukal has been the chief conductor since 2002 (2007).
The Klicpera Theater is located in the old town . The building is in a small square north of the market. On the market square opposite the mighty Jesuit Church is the Modern Art Gallery . It is located in an architecturally remarkable building by the architect Osvald Polívka (designed in 1912).
The East Bohemian Museum on the inner-city bank of the Elbe is one of the most important buildings of modern architecture in this city .
In 2011, the city announced that it was seeking to be registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site .
Cultural events
- The Rock for People festival has been taking place at the beginning of July since 2007 .
- Since 2003, the Hip Hop Kemp , one of the largest European hip-hop festivals, has been taking place on part of the airfield every August .
- At the beginning of September this is also the venue for the CIAF air show
- The annual jazz festival “Jazz goes to town” takes place in October .
- In autumn (October / November) the “Filharmonie Hradec Králové” organizes the festival “Hudební fórum Hradec Králové” (Musikforum Königgrätz) with concerts for contemporary orchestral music.
Personalities
sons and daughters of the town
- Bohuslav Balbín (1621–1688), Czech Jesuit, man of letters, historian, geographer, patriot and advocate of the Czech language, active participant in the re-Catholicization.
- Krystian Pešek (1676–1744), astronomer and teacher in Zittau
- Johann Wenzel Pohl (1720–1790), Bohemian grammarian
- Stanislaus Wydra (1741–1804), theologian and mathematician
- Václav Hanka (1791–1861), Bohemian linguist
- Carl von Rokitansky (1804–1878), Austrian pathologist, politician and philosopher
- Václav Vladivoj Tomek (1818–1905), Bohemian historian
- Adolf Lubich von Milovan (1819–1901), Austro-Hungarian lieutenant general
- Rudolf Lodgman von Auen (1877–1962), Sudeten German politician
- Jaroslav Durych (1886–1962), poet
- Rudolf Medek (1890–1940), writer and soldier
- Bohdan Heřmanský (1900–1974), painter
- Otakar Vávra (1911–2011), film director
- Avigdor Dagan (1912–2006), poet, prose writer and publicist of Jewish origin
- Franz Peter Künzel (* 1925), translator of Czech literature, editor and editor
- Walter Künzel (* 1928), Professor of Preventive Dentistry and Rector Emeritus, Medical Academy Erfurt
- Zbyněk Hejda (1930–2013), historian, publishing editor, translator and poet
- Jiří Petr (1931–2014), Professor of Crop Production and Rector Emeritus
- Aleš Smetana (* 1931), Czechoslovak-Canadian entomologist
- Ivan Palec (1933-2010), Czech actor
- Dominik Duka ( OP ) (* 1943), Archbishop of Prague
- Jan Šafránek (* 1948), Czech painter and draftsman
- Lenka Chytilová (* 1952), poet and translator; also worked as a publishing editor and high school teacher in Hradec Králové
- Zuzana Navarová (1959–2004), Czech singer and composer
- Jan Hrdina (* 1976), ice hockey player
- Jakub Ficenec (* 1977), German-Czech ice hockey player
- Jan Dolanský (* 1978), actor
- Pavel Košťál (* 1980), football player
- Robin Vik (* 1980), tennis player
- Dušan Frosch (* 1981), German-Czech ice hockey player
- Richard Jareš (* 1981), ice hockey player
- Ondřej Kraják (* 1991), football player
- Kateřina Siniaková (* 1996), tennis player
- Filip Hronek (* 1997), ice hockey player
Lived and worked in the city
- Karl Joseph Biener von Bienenberg (1731–1798), district chief of Königgrätz, prehistoric
- Maximilian Reising von Reisinger (1774–1848), field marshal lieutenant, commandant of the fortress Josefstadt - Königgrätz.
- Inocenc Arnošt Bláha (1879–1960), Czech sociologist, philosopher, educator
- František Fabiánek (1884–1967), Czech sculptor
- Ignát Herrmann (1854–1935), Czech writer, humorist and editor
- Alois Jirásek (1851–1930), Czech writer and historian
- František Cyril Kampelík (1805–1872), Czech educator and founder of self-help cooperatives
- Jan Kotěra (1871–1923), Czech architect, designer and graphic artist
- František Plesnivý (1845–1918), Bohemian architect
- Jiří Šotola (1924–1989), Czech poet, writer and dramaturge
- Ivan Tuček (1942–1999), world champion in aerobatics (1978)
Sports
- Mountfield HK , ice hockey club in the Tipsport Extraliga
- FC Hradec Králové , football club in the 2nd division ( Fotbalová národní liga )
- Hala Sokol Hradec Králové , basketball club in the 1st Czech league
literature
- Karel Josef Biener z Bienbergu: History of the city of Königgratz . Volume 1, Prague 1780 ( e-copy )
- Petr David, Vladimír Soukup, Jan Jakl, Oliver Groschner (translator): Hradec Králové . Soukup a David, Praha 1997, ISBN 80-86050-12-2 (= travel guide through Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia ).
- Jakub Potůček: Hradec Králové. Architektura a Urbanism 1895–2009 . Muzeum východních Čech ve spolupráci s vydavatelstvím Garamon, Hradec Králové 2009, ISBN 978-80-86472-42-3 (Czech).
Web links
- City website (Czech / English)
- Virtual show
- List of links to sights (monuments, churches, museums, etc.)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
- ↑ In 1809 the female name of this city was still in use in the newspapers of the time. See Augsburgische Ordinari Postzeitung , Nro. 135, Wednesday June 7th, 1809.
- ↑ Jaroslav Vrchotka: Libraries in Bohemia . In: Bernhard Fabian: Handbook of the historical book inventory in Germany, Austria and Europe (Fabian handbook). online edition of the University of Göttingen
- ^ Clavis haeresim claudens et aperiens. bibliographic entry in the joint union catalog (GVK)
- ^ Partnerská města: Hradec Králové. Retrieved February 20, 2020 .
- ↑ Zahraniční aktivity, Hradec Králové. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on February 27, 2017 ; accessed on February 26, 2017 .
- ↑ Міста партнери (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Information center / Hučák hydropower plant
- ↑ Where can I read more about PETROF? In: petrof.cz. Petrof , May 7, 2008, accessed July 18, 2012 .
- ^ Lothar Martin: Radio Prag - Nachrichten - 26-01-2009 20:08. Economic crisis: Further layoffs in piano manufacturing and the glass industry. (No longer available online.) In: radio.cz . Český rozhlas , January 26, 2009, archived from the original on February 10, 2013 ; Retrieved July 18, 2012 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Organizer of the IPhO ( Memento of the original from June 23, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Hradec Králové / Königgrätz is trying to get an entry in the UNESCO World Heritage List on Radio Prague from April 25, 2011