Information & Pictures about Liberec - The picturesque Podještědí area |
| Center Babylon | Podještědí area | Theatre | Pictures | |
| Culture | Castle Frýdlant | Botanic garden | Ještěd | Map |
| Intro | Castle Sychrov | Square ground | Sport | |
| Spa & health | Swimming pool | Zoo |
| a |
The
Picturesque Podještědí Area |
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Click on the pictures to see the real size |
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![]() Spring in the Podještěd area |
The Podještěd area |
![]() Ještěd Ridge and Podještěd area |
![]() One of the gems of rural folk architecture |
Světlá pod Ještědem |
Between
1109 and 1115 Prince Vladislav I had a new castle, Vladislavice,
erected on a rather low sandstone headland, on the site now occupied by
the town of Český Dub. The name Vladislavice was then taken by the
whole domain, which the Prince granted in 1115 to the newly established
Benedictine monastery in Kladruby. From 1237 onwards the area developed
under the influence of the Johannite order of knights which obtained the
demesne from Lord Havel of Lemberk and his wife Zdislava, who was canonized
recently. The local picturesque and slightly undulating landscape, intersected by
the Mohelka stream with its manor tributaries and covered with the
remnants of the original virgin forest, is peppered with small villages
built during the reign of the first Přemysl Princess. In the 18th
century the original small, mostly wooden churches were replaced by
Baroque buildings made of brick, although many wooden sacred structures
have survived to this day. For example, the church of St. Catherine in
Vlastibořice, where a fortress stood in the Middle Ages, boast a 17th
century wooden belfry, while a beautiful wooden church and belfry from the
1700s form the dominant features of Kryštofovo Údolí. The pride of Mohelnice - the remarkably well-preserved and uniquely
designed Church of our Lady, featuring galleries - is the oldest example
of stone architecture in the local rural area. Erected between 1150 and
1175, it was one of the key buildings of the residence of the powerful
Markvartic family of Nobles which in the course of the 13th century split
into several branches, namely the Lords of Lemberk, Valdštejn (Waldstein),
Zvířetice and Vartemberk. Mohelnice thus became one of the
birthplaces of a family whose members were to help write the most
important chapters in the history of the Czech State in the subsequent
centuries. Nearby Chocnějovice boast the Mid 13th century, early
gothic Church of St. Gallus, a mute witness to events in the Middle Ages. A beautiful farm building made from timber and covered with wild vines can
be found in Letařovice. It stands near another medieval sacred
structure, the Church of St. James, and a morgue. The farm's entrance hall
has the date 1660 inscribed on the wall, recalling a time when the
devastated land of Bohemia was recovering from the hardship of the Thirty
Years' war. We recommend that you conclude your journey through the
picturesque area of Český Dub with a visit to the villages of Paseky,
Roystání, Jiříčkov and Světlá (where the Church of St.
Nicolas stands), all of them located at the southern slopes of the Hlubocký
mountain range and Ještěd Peak. Each of them boast a cluster of
timber farm buildings and small cottages inhabited by the local poor in
the 1800s. each of these modest homes - which the local people are rightly
proud of - boasts a history charted in the works of Karolína Světlá,
the founder of the Czech rural noval , who traveled there between 1853
and 1888. While there you can admire the stunning panorama of the Bohemian
countryside with its dominant features, the mysterious Ralsko Peak, the
proud silhouette of royal Bezděz castle, Kozákov abundant in
amethysts, the romantic ruins of Trosky, and weather permitting, the spire
of the tower of St Vitus' Cathedral in Prague. |
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PhDr. Tomáš Edel |
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