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Ancient Moravia
Around 60 BC the Celtic Boii people withdrew from the region and were succeeded in turn by the Germanic Quadi and in the sixth century the Slavic tribes. At the end of the eighth 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 A.D. this became the state of Great Moravia with the conquest of the Principality of Nitra (present-day Slovakia; from 10th century into 1918 part of the Kingdom of Hungary). Their first king was MojmÃr I (ruled 830-846). Louis the German invaded Moravia and replaced MojmÃr I with his nephew Rastiz who became St. Rastislav.[1] 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 Michal. The result was the mission of SS 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, but after his death the German influence again prevailed and the disciples of Methodius were forced to flee. So the unique situation which anticipated the II. Vatican Council by several centuries was destroyed. 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 906/7.
Cities
* Brno (county seat) * Olomouc [1] (county seat) * ZlÃn (county seat) * PÅ™erov * VsetÃn * ProstÄ›jov * TÅ™ebÃÄ * Jihlava (county seat) * KroměřÞ * Znojmo * Ostrava (county seat) * Frýdek-MÃstek * Å umperk * Uherský Brod
Description
Moravia (Czech: Morava; German: Mähren (help·info); Silesian: Morawijo; Polish: Morawy) is a historical region in central Europe in the east of the Czech Republic, one of the former Czech lands. It takes its name from the Morava River which rises in the northwest of the region.
Economy
In the south around HodonÃn and BÅ™eclav the land is part of the Viennese Basin and petroleum and lignite are drilled for in its deeper sediments. In the area around Ostrava there was intensive coal mining until around 1995. Iron, chemicals, leather and building materials are the main industrial goods. The main economic centres are Brno, Olomouc, ZlÃn and Ostrava. As well as other agriculture, 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.
Geography
Moravia occupies most of the eastern third of the Czech Republic including the South Moravian Region and the ZlÃn Region, as well as parts of the Moravian-Silesian, Olomouc, Pardubice, VysoÄina and South Bohemian regions. In the north, Moravia borders Poland and Czech Silesia; in the east, Slovakia; in the south, Lower Austria; and in the west, Bohemia. Its northern boundary is formed by the Sudetes mountains which become the Carpathians in the east. The meandering Dyje flows through the border country with Austria and there is a protected area on both sides of the border in the area around Hardegg. At the heart of the country lie the sedimentary basins of the Morava and the Dyje at a height of 180 to 250 m. In the west, the Bohemian-Moravian Heights rise to over 800 m although the highest mountain is in the north-west, the PradÄ›d in the Sudetes at 1490 m. Further south lie the JesenÃky highlands (400 to 600 m) which fall to 310 m at the upper reaches of the River Oder (the Moravian Gate) near Hranice and then rise again as the Beskids to the 1322 m high Lysá hora. These three mountain ranges plus the "gate" between the latter two form part of the European Watershed. Moravia's eastern boundary is formed by the White Carpathians and JavornÃky. Between 1782–1850, Moravia (also thus known as Moravia-Silesia) also included a small portion of the former province of Silesia – the so-called 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).
Joining to 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, received Moravia. Boleslaus I of Poland annexed Moravia in 999, and ruled it until 1019, when the Přemyslid prince Bretislaus recaptured it. Upon his father's death in 1035, Bretislaus also became the ruler of Bohemia. In 1054, Bretislaus decreed that the Bohemian and Moravians lands would be inherited together by primogeniture, although he also provided that his younger sons should govern parts 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. Moravia reached its height of autonomy in 1182, when Emperor Frederick I elevated Moravia to the status of a margraviate (or mark), immediately subject to the emperor, independent of Bohemia. This status was short-lived: in 1197, Vladislaus III of Bohemia resolved the succession dispute between him and his brother Ottokar by abdicating from the Bohemian throne and accepting the margraviate of Moravia as a vassal of Bohemia. Since then, Moravia has shared its history with Bohemia. The Přemyslid dynasty became extinct in 1306, and in 1310 John of Luxembourg became king of Bohemia. 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 till 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. circa 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 Czech 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 freedom 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.
Other
* Members of the Moravian Church are also known for producing the world's thinnest biscuit, Moravian Spice Cookies The original settlers in Herrnhut escaped religious persecution in the German-speaking Kuhländchen of Moravia beginning in 1722.[2] * There is a little competitiveness between Moravians and Bohemians, but very mild and more in the way of being a source of humour than animosity. * The most noticeable difference between Moravia and Bohemia is the spoken language. While in Bohemia most of the people speak the Central Bohemian dialect, there are plenty of different dialects in Moravia.
People
The Moravians are a Slavic ethnic group who speak various dialects of Czech. Some Moravians regard themselves as an ethnically distinct group; others consider themselves to be ethnically Czech. In the census of 1991, 1,362,000 (13.2%) of the Czech population described themselves as being of Moravian nationality. In the census of 2001, this number had decreased to 380,000 (3.7% of the population).[citation needed] Moravia historically had a minority of ethnic Germans, although they were largely expelled after World War II. Notable people from Moravia include: * Anton Pilgram (1450-1516), architect, sculptor and woodcarver * Jan Ãmos Komenský (Comenius) (1592-1670), educator and theologian, last bishop of Unity of the Brethren * Georgius Prochaska (1749-1820), ophthalmologist and physiologist * FrantiÅ¡ek Palacký (1798-1876), historian and politician, "The Father of the Nation" * Hirsch Bär Fassel (1802-1883), pioneer of Reform Judaism * Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst (1814-1865), violinist * Gregor Mendel (1822-1884), biologist, father of genetics * Ernst Mach (1838-1916), physicist and philosopher * Tomáš Masaryk (1850-1937), philosopher and politician, first president of Czechoslovakia * LeoÅ¡ JanáÄek (1854-1928), composer * Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), father of psychoanalysis * Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), philosopher * Alfons Mucha (1860-1939), painter * Karl Renner (1870-1950), politician, co-founder of Friends of Nature movement * Tomáš BaÅ¥a (1876-1932), entrepreneur, founder of Bata Shoes company * Joseph Schumpeter (1883-1950), economist and political scientist * George Placzek (1905-1955), physicist, participant in Manhattan Project * Kurt Gödel (1906-1978), theoretical mathematician * Milan Kundera (1929-), writer * Jan Eskymo Welzl (1868-1948), traveller and gold-digger, later story-teller * Franz Krommer (1759-1831), composer
See also
* Great Moravia * German South Moravia * Moravian Wallachia * Moravian Slovakia * Moravian Church/ Unitas Fratrum * Moravian traditional music
Sources
* Róna-Tas, András (1999) Hungarians & 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 ; * 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) p. 181
Twentieth century
Following the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, Moravia became part of Czechoslovakia (and was part of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in World War II). In 1945 the ethnic German minority of Moravia were expelled. (See Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia after World War II). With the break up of Czechoslovakia, Moravia became a part of the Czech Republic in 1993.
Under the Habsburgs
The epoch 1526–1620 was marked by increasing animosity between Catholic Habsburg kings (emperors) and rather Protestant Moravian (and other Crowns') estates. Moravia, like Bohemia, remained as a Habsburg possession until the end of World War I. Until 1641 Moravia's capital was the centrally-located Olomouc, but after its capture by the Swedes it moved to the larger city of Brno which resisted the invaders successfully. The Margraviate of Moravia had its own parliament – zemský sněm (Landtag in German), whose deputies were elected (from 1905 onward) in ethnically separate German and Czech constituencies.