Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
[4] Many members of the Czech nobility participated in the creation of the National Museum in Prague (founded in 1818) From the 17th century, only the Catholic Czech nobility significantly participated in the functioning of the Habsburg Monarchy. Newly arrived families gradually identified with the Czech lands and often also with the Czech ...
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Czech noble families (4 C, 1 P) Nobility from Prague ... (6 P) Moravian nobility (3 C, 30 P) Pages in category ...
They also bought landed property and had acquired almost one-fifth of the estates of between 1.15–5.75 km 2 (280–1,420 acres) by 1913. [345] The most prominent Jewish burghers were awarded with nobility [note 20] and there were 26 aristocratic families and 320 noble families of Jewish origin in 1918. [347]
21 June 1305 - 4 August 1306 4 August 1306 Olomouc aged 16: Bohemia Viola of Cieszyn 5 October 1305 Brno no children Uncrowned (as Bohemian king). Also King of Hungary (1301–1305) and King of Poland. Anna (Anna PÅ™emyslovna) 10 October 1290 Daughter of Wenceslaus II and Judith of Austria: 4 August 1306 - 1306 3/4 July 1307 - 3 December 1310 3 ...
This page was last edited on 29 September 2020, at 21:37 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Duke of Bavaria, Charles Albert, was proclaimed king by the Czech nobility. Although Maria-Theresa regained most of the Bohemian Kingdom and was crowned queen in Prague in 1743, all of the highly industrialized territory of Silesia except for Tesin , Opava , and Krnov was ceded to Prussia in the 1742 Treaty of Breslau .
The Germans received most of the land confiscated from Czech owners and came to constitute the new Bohemian nobility. [1] The remaining Czech Catholic nobles gradually abandoned Czech particularism and became loyal servants of the imperial system. [1] German Catholic immigrants took over commerce and industry as well. [1]
Milena Jesenská (1896–1944), Czech journalist and translator, friend of Franz Kafka Jan Jesenský Jr. (1904–1942), Czech scientist, assistant professor of Charles University Ferenc Jeszenszky (1905–1990), Hungarian economist, during 1949–52 was a president of Hungarian National Bank in Budapest