Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pardubice Airport (Czech: Letiště Pardubice) (IATA: PED, ICAO: LKPD) is both military and civilian international airport in the city of Pardubice, Czech Republic. Apart from the military purpose, it is used for scheduled services, charter flights to Southern Europe during the summer season and cargo flights .
SK DFO Pardubice was a Czech women's football team from Pardubice, last played in the 2017–18 Czech Second Division. The club's best finish is 7th place in the First Division, which it achieved in the 2008–09 season. Team merged with FK Pardubice in 2018. [1] The club celebrated 20 years of existence in 2012. [2]
Leoš Janáček Airport Ostrava (IATA: OSR, ICAO: LKMT), formerly Ostrava-Mošnov International Airport, is the airport of the city of Ostrava in the Czech Republic, a major economic and industrial centre.
FK Pardubice is a Czech football club located in the city of Pardubice. It currently plays in the Czech First League. The club is the successor of TJ Tesla Pardubice, ...
FK Slovan Pardubice (Fotbalový klub Slovan Pardubice) was a Czech football club from the city of Pardubice which participated in the Czech 2. Liga , most recently in the 2005–06 season . Slovan Pardubice merged with AFK Atlantic Lázně Bohdaneč in the 2000–2001 season, becoming known as FK AS Pardubice and taking Bohdaneč's position in ...
Location of Pardubice in the Czech Republic Front view of station building Passenger hall Platforms as seen from the west. Pardubice main railway station (Czech Pardubice hlavní nádraží) is one of the largest railway stations in the Czech Republic, located about 1.8 kilometres (1.1 mi) west-south-west from city centre of Pardubice, and an important railway network hub.
The 2023–24 season is FK Pardubice's 16th season in existence and fourth consecutive in the Czech First League. They will also compete in the Czech Cup . Players
Smil Flaška spent his youth in the house of his uncle Arnošt of Pardubice. [1] Before 1367, he obtained a bachelor's degree at the University of Prague. [2] In the years 1384 and 1385 he was in a dispute with King Wenceslas IV, who declared his right to Pardubice as an escheat. The provincial court upheld Wenceslas's claim.