History
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Czech Made: The Jawa motorcycle
Few Czechoslovak products have been as internationally successful as the Jawa motorcycle.
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Restitution law came into force 30 years ago. Property disputes continue to this day
Property restitution became one of the cornerstones of the transformation of the Czech economy after the fall of communism in 1989.
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No Night So Dark: Part Five
Rudolf Wels has qualified as an architect in Vienna and has been working in the office of the legendary Adolf Loos. But in 1914 war breaks out.
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Visit by Queen Elizabeth II to Czechia remembered 25 years on
This Saturday marks exactly 25 years since the visit of the British monarch to the Czech Republic.
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In memoriam: Marie Šupíková, one of the last survivors of the Lidice massacre
Marie Šupíková, one of the last survivors of the Lidice massacre, has died at the age of 88.
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Archaeologists excavate Prague labour camp for “political unreliables” who built giant Stalin statue
Conscipts of the infamous communist-era PTP army units helped build the Stalin monument in Letná Park overlooking Prague. A labour camp housing them has now been revealed.
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New project gives public opportunity to upload pictures of their Czechoslovak Legionary ancestors
A new online photo-database of Czechoslovak Legionaries gives viewers the chance to see the faces of thousands of legionaries, but also to upload their picture.
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No Night So Dark: Part Four
Welcome to Part Four of No Night So Dark. Trapped in wartime Prague, the architect Rudolf Wels takes us back to his happy childhood in Osek at the end of the 19th century.
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The Industrial Palace: a symbol of modern Prague turns 130
The Art Nouveau glass and steel building opened to visitors on March 15, 1891 on the occasion of the General State Exhibition.
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No Night So Dark: Part Three
In the third part of our serial No Night So Dark we join Colin Wels as he pieces together his family's past. We are taken to the village of Osek and to 1930s Prague.
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Police shelve investigation into mysterious death of Jan Masaryk
The state prosecutor’s office in Prague has shelved a new investigation into the death of Czechoslovak foreign minister Jan Masaryk in March 1948.
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Marie Tumlířová – a pioneering Czech agronomist, feminist and RFE journalist in exile
Marie Tumlířová was among the first women graduates of the Czech Technical University. Her doctoral thesis – on poultry farming – was an unlikely springboard into politics.
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