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EN
The subject matter of the study is the question regarding the establishment of the royal town of Uherský Brod and the paths from Moravia to Hungary which the town was supposed to guard. The author questions the assumption which has been applied so far and which exclusively identified the ford across the river Olšava with the site where the town was subsequently established since he considers this location less suitable for a river ford. He concludes that the site where the river Olšava was crossed and which was called Brod (Ford) was situated somewhere else and he documents his hypothesis by field research.
Studia Historica Nitriensia
|
2016
|
vol. 20
|
issue 2
432 – 458
EN
In Uherský Brod, whose district boundary was several tens of kilometres, together with Slovakia, lived at the beginning of the Protectorate of about 600 Jews. Although about 50 people, who managed to emigrate legally, even so the majority of them continue to live in the Jewish part of the city, which in year 1942 became a forcible refuge for forced nearly 3 thousand people benefiting Jewish faith in southeast Moravia. Some local Jews began from the spring of 1939 to work with the active resistance movement components, as with the defence of the nation at converting across the Slovak border, as well as with the illegal Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, which they provide financial means. Jewish cemetery was destroyed, and so was lit synagogue from the 18th century. In January 1943, pursuant to a subpoena 2,837 Jews arrived with 50 kg of luggage into the building of the local grammar school. From there the journey went in three groups after about 1,000 people on 23, 27 and 31. 1. 1943 by stairs to the nearby train station and then through Terezin to Auschwitz.
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