Ústí nad Labem
From Free net encyclopedia
| Statistics | |
|---|---|
| Area: | 93.9 km² |
| Population: | 94,204 (2003) |
| Map | |
| Image:Location of Czech city Usti nad Labem.png | |
Ústí nad Labem Template:Audio (-Czech, German: Aussig an der Elbe) is a city of the Czech Republic, in the Usti nad Labem Region. The city is the 9th-most populous in the country.
Ústí is situated in a mountainous district at the confluence of the Bílina and the Labe (Elbe), and, besides being an active river port, is an important railway junction. It is the birthplace of the painter Anton Raphael Mengs.
Ústí was mentioned as a trading centre as early as 993. The city was founded by Otakar II of Bohemia in the latter part of the 13th century. In 1423 it was pledged by King Sigismund to Elector Frederick I of Meißen, who occupied it with a Saxon garrison. In 1426 it was besieged by the Hussites, who on June 16, though only 25,000 strong, defeated with great slaughter a German army of 70,000 which had been sent to its relief; the town was stormed and sacked the next day. After lying waste for three years, it was rebuilt in 1429. It suffered much during the Thirty Years' War and Seven Years' War.
Not far from Ústí is the village of Chlumec, where, on August 29-30 1813, a battle took place between the French Empire under Vandamme and an allied army of Austrians, Prussians and Russians. The French were defeated and Vandamme surrendered with his army of 10,000 men.
During the 19th century the city became heavily industrialized. Mining, chemical industry and river transport were its most important assets.
Ústí was a center of early German National socialism. On November 15, 1903, the Deutsche Arbeiterpartei in Österreich was formed; it would become the basis for the Sudeten German National Socialist Party and Austrian National Socialism. Much of their literature and books were printed in Ústí.
Most of the German-speaking population fled before the Red Army during World War II. During April 17-19, 1945 the city was bombed and 500 people lost their lives. Shortly after the war the Ústí Massacre occurred. From 1946-48 over 53,000 ethnic Germans were expelled from the area. Many emigrants from the Soviet Union, Slovakia, and Romania settled in the city. During the Cold War the cultural and educational level of the area dropped. During the 1970-80s large numbers of paneláks were constructed in Ústí. After the fall of communism in Czechoslovakia in the Velvet Revolution in 1989, the city's heavy industry suffered economic troubles.
Twin towns
Reference
This entry is based on an article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
External link
- Municipal website (cs, de, en)cs:Ústí nad Labem
de:Ústí nad Labem eo:Ústí nad Labem nl:Ústí nad Labem pl:Ústí nad Labem sv:Ústí nad Labem