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Simple English; Slovenčina; ... In 1931 the Jewish community in Ostrava numbered 6,865 (5.4% of the population). ... −8.3 (17.1) −3.4 (25.9) 1.1 (34.0) 4.1 (39.4 ...
The tower is 85.6 meters high, the tallest for a town hall in the Czech Republic at the time. [3] Under the tower is placed a unique ribbed reinforced concrete slab. The tower clock weighs more than half a ton, and its dial is 3.5m in diameter. In the tower there is an information centre and a viewing terrace at 73 m. [4]
Svinov (German: Schönbrunn) is a borough and municipal part of Ostrava in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It was a separate town, but it merged with Ostrava on 20 March 1957. It lies on the bank of the Oder River, in the Silesian part of the city. As of 2011 census, Svinov had population of 4,301. [1]
Ostrava is the economic centre of the entire Moravian-Silesian Region. With only one exception, all the largest employers with headquarters in Ostrava-City District and at least 1,000 employees have their seat in Ostrava. The largest employers with headquarters in Ostrava and at least 1,500 employees are: [6]
The square is located in Ostrava-Jih, the most populous district of the Moravian-Silesian metropole. [1] Developed over the course of the 1950s, it is currently named after one of the most important historical events in Slovak history , the Slovak National Uprising (Czech: Slovenské národní povstání, Slovak : Slovenské národné povstanie).
The Katowice-Ostrava metropolitan area [3] [4] (also known as Upper Silesian-Moravian metropolitan area or Upper Silesian urban-industrial agglomeration [5]) is a polycentric metropolitan area in southern Poland and northeastern Czech Republic, centered on the cities of Katowice and Ostrava, and has around 5 million inhabitants. [1]
The population of the metropolitan area is 970,189 as of 2024. [1] An alternative definition, the Eurostat Larger Urban Zone, lists a population of 1,153,876. [4] The Ostrava metropolitan area is sometimes combined with the Katowice metropolitan area to form a wider metropolitan area [3] [5] with a population of 5,008,000 (2015). [5]
The Michal Mine (Czech: důl Michal) is a former coal mine and now a museum in Ostrava in the Czech Republic. It is a museum of mining located in the pit bank of a former hard coal mine. The museum is an Anchor point on the European Route of Industrial Heritage. [1] The buildings have been preserved as they looked at the turn of the 20th century.