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UNESCO WORLD CULTURAL HERITAGE - 11 SITES IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
HISTORIC CENTRE OF PRAGUE
Inscribed: 1992
Built between the 11th and 18th centuries, the Old Town, the Lesser Town and the New Town – with their magnificent monuments, such as Hradcany Castle, St. Vitus Cathedral, Charles Bridge and numerous churches and palaces, built mostly in the 14th century under the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles IV. – speak of the great architectural and cultural influence enjoyed by this city since the Middle Ages.



HISTORIC CENTRE OF CESKY KRUMLOV
Inscribed: 1992
Situated on the banks of the Vltava river, the town was built around a 13th- century castle with Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque elements. It is an outstanding example of a small central European medieval town whose architectural heritage has remained intact thanks to its peaceful evolution over more than five centuries.
HISTORIC CENTRE OF TELC
Inscribed: 1992
The houses in Telc, which stands on a hilltop, were originally built of wood. After a fire in the late 14th century, the town was rebuilt in stone, surrounded by walls and further strengthened by a network of artificial ponds. The town's Gothic castle was reconstructed in High Gothic style in the late 15th century.
PILGRIMAGE CHURCH OF ST. JOHN OF NEPOMUK AT ZELENA HORA
Inscribed: 1994
This pilgrimage church, built in honour of St John of Nepomuk, stands at Zelena Hora, not far from Zdar nad Sazavou in Moravia. Constructed at the beginning of the 18th century on a star-shaped plan, it is the most unusual work by the great architect Jan Blazej Santini, whose highly original style falls between neo-Gothic and Baroque.



KUTNA HORA: HISTORICAL TOWN CENTRE WITH THE CHURCH OF ST. BARBARA AND THE CATHEDRAL OF OUR LADY AT SEDLEC
Inscribed: 1995
Kutná Hora developed as a result of the exploitation of the silver mines. In the 14th century it became a royal city endowed with monuments that symbolized its prosperity. The Church of St.Barbara, a jewel of the late Gothic period, and the Cathedral of Our Lady at Sedlec, which was restored in line with the Baroque taste of the early 18th century, were to influence the architecture of central Europe. These masterpieces today form part of a well-preserved medieval urban fabric with some particularly fine private dwellings.
LEDNICE-VALTICE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Inscribed: 1996
Between the 17th and 20th centuries, the ruling dukes of Liechtenstein transformed their domains in southern Moravia into a striking landscape. It married Baroque architecture (mainly the work of Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach) and the classical and neo-Gothic style of the castles of Lednice and Valtice with countryside fashioned according to English romantic principles of landscape architecture. At 200 sq. km, it is one of the largest artificial landscapes in Europe.
HOLASOVICE HISTORICAL VILLAGE RESERVATION
Inscribed: 1998
Holasovice is an exceptionally complete and well-preserved example of a traditional central European village. It has a large number of outstanding 18th- and 19th-century vernacular buildings in a style known as “South Bohemian folk Baroque”, and preserves a ground plan dating from the Middle Ages.
GARDENS AND CASTLE AT KROMERIZ
Inscribed: 1998
Kromeriz stands on the site of an earlier ford across the River Morava, at the foot of the Chriby mountain range which dominates the central part of Moravia. The gardens and castle of Kromeriz are an exceptionally complete and well-preserved example of a European Baroque princely residence and its gardens.
LITOMYSL CASTLE
Inscribed: 1999
Litomysl Castle was originally a Renaissance arcade-castle of the type first developed in Italy and then adopted and greatly developed in central Europe in the 16th century. Its design and decoration are particularly fine, including the later High-Baroque features added in the 18th century. It preserves intact the range of ancillary buildings associated with an aristocratic residence of this type.
HOLY TRINITY COLUMN IN OLOMOUC
Inscribed: 2000
This memorial column, erected in the early years of the 18th century, is the most outstanding example of a type of monument specific to central Europe. In the characteristic regional style known as Olomouc Baroque and rising to a height of 35 m, it is decorated with many fine religious sculptures, the work of the distinguished Moravian artist Ondrej Zahner.
TUGENDHAT VILLA IN BRNO
Inscribed: 2001
The Tugendhat Villa in Brno, designed by the architect Mies van der Rohe, is an outstanding example of the international style in the modern movement in architecture as it developed in Europe in the 1920s. Its particular value lies in the application of innovative spatial and aesthetic concepts that aim to satisfy new lifestyle needs by taking advantage of the opportunities afforded by modern industrial production.
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