Valtice

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Valtice
Town
Valtice Palace
Valtice Palace
Flag of Valtice
Coat of arms of Valtice
Valtice is located in Czech Republic
Valtice
Valtice
Location in the Czech Republic
Coordinates: 48°44′27″N 16°45′18″E / 48.74083°N 16.75500°E / 48.74083; 16.75500Coordinates: 48°44′27″N 16°45′18″E / 48.74083°N 16.75500°E / 48.74083; 16.75500
Country Czech Republic
RegionSouth Moravian
DistrictBřeclav
First mentioned1192
Government
 • MayorPavel Trojan
Area
 • Total47.85 km2 (18.47 sq mi)
Elevation
192 m (630 ft)
Population
 (2020-01-01[1])
 • Total3,575
 • Density75/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
691 42
Websitewww.valtice.eu
Official nameLednice–Valtice Cultural Landscape
Criteriai, ii, iv
Reference763
Inscription1996 (20th Session)

Valtice (Czech pronunciation: [ˈvalcɪtsɛ]; German: Feldsberg) is a town in Břeclav District in the South Moravian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 3,600 inhabitants. It lies close to the Austrian border. It is known as part of Lednice–Valtice Cultural Landscape, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The centre of the town is historically significant and is protected by law as urban monument zone.

Administrative parts[]

Village of Úvaly is an administrative part of Valtice.

Geography[]

The town is located 265 kilometres (165 mi) south-east of Prague, on the railway line from Břeclav to Znojmo. In the south it borders on the Austrian municipality of Schrattenberg. Until 1919 Valtice likewise belonged to Lower Austria. The town is part of the European Centrope multinational region project established in 2003; all border controls were abolished when the Czech Republic implemented the Schengen Agreement in 2007.

Valtice lies in the Mikulovská wine subregion.

History[]

Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary

Feldsberg Castle in the Duchy of Austria was first mentioned in an 1192 deed; held by the Lords of Seefeld, it was located close to the border with Moravia.[2] In 1286 Duke Albert I vested the surrounding settlement with market rights. Feldsberg was elevated to the status of a town by Duke Albert III about 1383. The estates were acquired by the noble House of Liechtenstein, then Lords of neighbouring Mikulov (Nikolsburg), in 1394 and served as the dynasty's residence until 1939.[3]

The border town was devastated in the Hussite Wars in 1426, then again by the troops of the Bohemian king George of Poděbrady in 1458 as well as in the Austrian–Hungarian War by the forces of King Matthias Corvinus in 1480. The situation improved, when the Moravian lands in the north also became part of the Austrian Habsburg Monarchy in 1526. In the mid 16th century, the citizens converted to Protestantism; however they were subjected to the measures of the Counter-Reformation under the rule of Karl I of Liechtenstein, who himself had converted to Catholicism in 1599 and in 1605 established a convent of the Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of God in Feldsberg. During the Thirty Years' War the town was again plundered by the troops of Emperor Ferdinand II in 1619 and conquered by Swedish forces under General Lennart Torstensson in 1645.

Temple of Diana

After the war Prince Karl Eusebius of Liechtenstein had his domains rebuilt, including the 13th century castle according to plans designed by the Italian architect Giovanni Giacomo Tencalla with further Baroque extensions by Fischer von Erlach. Construction was supervised by Domenico Martinelli, who was employed as an on-site architect. The palace is surrounded by an English park with a colonnade and the Temple of Diana (1812) designed by Joseph Hardtmuth as well as other Neoclassical structures.

Until the end of World War I the town of Feldsberg belonged to Lower Austria. According to the 1919 Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye the town and its surroundings were annexed by newly established Czechoslovakia. The main reason was the requirement that the entire Znojmo-Břeclav railway line, a branch of the former Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway, remain inside Czechoslovak territory. The Liechtenstein princely family lost its privileges with the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the then newly established state of Czechoslovakia in 1918, the predecessor of the Czech Republic. The town was occupied by Nazi Germany upon the 1938 Munich Agreement and incorporated into the Reichsgau Niederdonau. After World War II the remaining German population was expelled and the castle was confiscated by the Czechoslovak government; all claims for restitution have been rejected.

Historic population[]

Town hall
Census year Population Ethnicity of inhabitants[4]
year German Czech other
1836 2,889 - - -
1869 2,424 - - -
1880 2,837 2,804 3 30
1890 3,009 2,830 133 36
1900 3,036 2,987 34 35
1910 3,402 3,291 34 57
1921 3,257 2,285 625 332
1930 3,393 1,924 1,102 367
1939 2,857 - - -

Sights[]

Valtice contains one of the most impressive Baroque residences of Central Europe. It was designed as the seat of the ruling princes of Liechtenstein by Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach in the early 18th century. Together with the neighbouring manor of Lednice, to which it is connected by a 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) long lime-tree avenue, Valtice forms the Lednice–Valtice Cultural Landscape, an UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Economy[]

The vineyards around Valtice are a centre of Mikulovská wine production, with notable wine tasting and trade at the "Wine Salon of the Czech Republic" in Valtice Chateau.

The town is known as a centre of wine making in Moravia. Both the National Wine Center and the Wine Salon of the Czech Republic reside in the Valtice Château.

Culture[]

The annual Valtice Wine Market wine exhibition is held in the château riding hall at the beginning of May.

Notable people[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Population of Municipalities – 1 January 2020". Czech Statistical Office. 2020-04-30.
  2. ^ "Historie města". valtice.eu (in Czech). Město Valtice. Retrieved 2020-09-30.
  3. ^ "Czech Republic: The former Liechtenstein possessions of Lednice-Valtice".
  4. ^ Historický místopis Moravy a Slezska v letech 1848–1960, vol.9. 1984

External links[]

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