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Rokytnice nad Jizerou
Czech Republic
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Rokytnice nad Jizerou (German Rochlitz an der Iser) is a town in the Giant Mountains in the Czech Republic. It lies in the valley of the Huťský potok (Hüttenbach), a tributary of the Jizera (Iser) at the foot of the Kotel (Kesselkoppe), five kilometers south of Harrachov (Harrachsdorf). History The town was founded around 1574. From 1629 onwards, many Protestant religious refugees migrated from Arnau (Hostinné). In the Bohemian Horní Branná (Brennei), about 20 km from both Arnau and Rochlitz, the Protestant church was the place of worship for the Rochlitz Protestants until 1654. In 1682, 200 people fled as exiles due to Habsburg pressure to re-Catholicize the Protestant population. For the sake of their religious freedom, they traveled with 300 cattle as a means of transporting their belongings over the Böhmersteig in the Giant Mountains to the Protestant Saxon Schwarzbächl in the Uechtritz region. The leaders were Nathaniel Müller and the village judge George Gernert. At the behest of Emperor Leopold II and the Elector of Saxony, Johann Georg II, 120 exiles were brought back to Rochlitz by 1708.[3] In 1776, there was another peasant uprising in the region. In 1839, J. Grossmann opened a textile factory. It is still one of the most important economic sectors in Rokytnice. From the middle of the 19th century, Rochlitz formed a municipality in the Rochlitz an der Jizera judicial district, with Rochlitz being the seat of the judicial district. In 1899, Rokytnice got a train station on the Starkenbach–Rochlitz local railway line. The town belonged to Austria until 1918, then to Czechoslovakia, and was annexed to the German Reich with the Sudetenland in 1938. After the Second World War, the German population was expelled. After the occupation of the town in 1945, the Red Army immediately continued the production of bed linen in the Gernert weaving mill, and a Gernert family and a Gebert family were allowed to stay permanently to maintain textile production. In 2022, Rokytnice has 2537 inhabitants.
Copyright: Frank Ellmerich
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 15768x7884
Taken: 21/07/2024
Uploaded: 20/11/2024
Published: 20/11/2024
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Tags: rochlitz; rokytnice; nad; jizerou; iser; gaint; mountains; harrachov; harrachsdorf; riesengebierge; rübezahl; labe; elbe; kotel; kesselkoppe; starkenbach; czech; tschechische; republik; republic; czechoslovakia; gernert; gebert; weberei; weaving
More About Czech Republic

The Czech Republic is a cool little landlocked country south of Germany and Poland, with a national addiction to pork and beer. Potatos, cabbage, and dumplings are close behind them, and they also have this great bar food called "utopenec." It means "a drowned man," it's pickled sausage with onions, perfect with some dark wheat bread and beer. The Czech bread is legendary, like a meal all by itself.Czechoslovakia first became a sovereign state in 1918 when it declared independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The state of Czechoslovakia lasted until the "Velvet Divorce" of 1993, which created Slovakia and the Czech Republic.It was occupied by Germany in WWII but escaped major damage, unlike most other European cities. The nation's capital, Prague, retains some of Europe's most beautiful Baroque architecture as well as one of the largest medieval castle complexes still standing. The President of the Czech Republic has his offices in the Prague Castle even today.There was a coup d'etat in 1948 and Czechoslovakia fell under Soviet rule. For fifty years Czechoslovakia was a Socialist state under the USSR, subject to censorship, forced atheism and even the arrest of jazz musicians!In 1989, communist police violently squashed a pro-democracy demonstration and pissed everybody off so bad that a revolution erupted over it, finally ending the Communist rule.The next twenty years saw rapid economic growth and westernization. Today in Prague you can eat at McDonald's or KFC, shop for snowboarding boots and go see a punk rock show.The Czech Republic took over the presidency of the European Union in January 2009. This instantly created lots of political drama because the President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Klaus, is a renowned Euroskeptic.We anxiously await the outcome of "President Klaus vs. the Lisbon Treaty", a world heavywieght fight sceduled for spring 2009.Text by Steve Smith.


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