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1 M Linette B Pera: 3 K Christian E Routliffe: 6: 6: 3 K Christian E Routliffe: w/o: Alt R Bhosale E Webley-Smith: 3 4 3 K Christian E Routliffe: 6: 6 A Blinkova M Doi: 6: 2 [13] V Heisen R Voráčová: 3 2 V Heisen R Voráčová: 1 6 [15] 3 K Christian E Routliffe: 3 2 O Kalashnikova M Kato: 6: 6: 2 S Mirza S Zhang: 6: 6 J Lohoff A Panova: 1 2 ...
The total population of the region was 1,203,292 (men 49.1%, women 50.9%) in 2019, which makes it the third most populous region in the Czech Republic; [4] 86.9% are Czechs, 3.3% Slovaks, 3.0% Poles, 2.3% Moravians, 0.8% Silesians, 0.3% Germans, and 0.2% Romani, though this last figure might be considerably higher, as Romani often do not ...
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]
Colours of Ostrava, or simply Colours, a multi-genre event, is the biggest international music festival in Czechia and one of the biggest in Central Europe, held every summer since 2002 in Ostrava, the third largest city in the country. Colours features 16 stages, including 4 big open-air stages (the main one with a capacity of 15,000), 6 ...
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]
After founding the town of Moravská Ostrava between 1268 and 1278 on Moravian side, the village left on the Silesian side was called in contrary Slavic and later Polish. [3] Since 1290 it belonged to the Duchy of Teschen , which in 1327 became a fee of Kingdom of Bohemia , which after 1526 became part of the Habsburg monarchy .
In November 2003, the arena was given the name ČEZ Aréna, [3] from July 2015 its name was Ostrava Aréna. [4] It was renamed OSTRAVAR Aréna after the local Ostravar Brewery in 2016. [1] In May 2011, Ostrava's Deputy Mayor for Investment, Jiří Srba, announced a plan to invest 10 million CZK in the stadium in the same year. [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.