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Journal articles on the topic 'Moravia'

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1

Lebedeva, A. A. "Raffelstetten Customs Regulations as a Source of the Great Moravia Trade in the IX–X Centuries." Izvestiya of Saratov University. History. International Relations 12, no. 4 (2012): 3–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1819-4907-2012-12-4-3-6.

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The article describes the value of Raffelstetten customs regulations for history of Great Moravia. The Danube trading ways were an important component of Moravian economic development. The studied material led to the conclusion that the trade of Great Moravia was intensive and had a wide geographical area.
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2

Oliva, Martin. "Le Mesolithique en Moravie (The Mesolithic in Moravia)." Litikum 9 (2021): 27–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.23898/litikuma0029.

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3

Lacina, Adam. "Přirozené lesy v oblasti pramenů Javorné – malakozoologický ráj v Jeseníkách [The natural forests in the headwaters of the Javorná River – malacological Eden in the Hrubý Jeseník Mts (N Moravia, Czech Republic)]." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 9 (October 6, 2010): 16–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2010-9-16.

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The headwaters of the Javorná River is situated in the northern part of the Jeseníky Landscape Protected Area (N Moravia), north of the Rejvíz National Nature Reserve. A population of the endemic Vestia ranojevici moravica was found in this locality in 1968, cca 70 km far from its known distribution range in the N Moravia. During the recent inventory of this site 48 mollusc species were found including four rare dendrophilous clausilids: Bulgarica cana, Vestia ranojevici moravica, Cochlodina orthostoma and Clausilia cruciata. The beech and scree forests of this locality represent the most preserved malacological site in the Hrubý Jeseník Mts which should be strongly protected.
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4

Horal, David, and Vlasta ŠKorpíková. "Eurasian eagle owl (Bubo bubo) colonizing lowland floodplain forests in south Moravia (Czech Republic) and cases of its breeding in wooden nestboxes." Slovak Raptor Journal 5, no. 1 (January 1, 2011): 127–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10262-012-0059-6.

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Eurasian eagle owl (Bubo bubo) colonizing lowland floodplain forests in south Moravia (Czech Republic) and cases of its breeding in wooden nestboxes This paper presents data on the occurrence and breeding of Eurasian eagle owl (Bubo bubo) in south Moravia, Czech Republic (Břeclav and Znojmo districts), in the floodplains of the Morava and Dyje Rivers, since 1994, and the first cases of confirmed breeding from 2009 to 2011. In two cases, eagle owls bred successfully in large, wooden artificial nestboxes originally installed for saker falcon (Falco cherrug).
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5

Brázdil, Rudolf, and Hubert Valášek. "The Description of the Climate of Moravia by Kryštof Passy from the year 1797." Geografie 106, no. 4 (2001): 234–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.37040/geografie2001106040234.

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The manuscript of the "Introduction to the Knowledge on the Hereditary Markgraviate of Moravia" as an appendix to the lecture of political science at the Olomouc lyceum written in 1797 by Prof. Kryštof Passy deals also in several paragraphs with the description of the climate of Moravia. The author, departing from the meteorological observations by Josef Gaar in Olomouc, mentions the description of air pressure, temperature and moisture, evaporation and wind. Besides the description of regional peculiarities of the Moravian climate, Passy tries to explain their causes and deals in detail with the effect of eight basic wind directions on changes in air temperature, air moisture and the course of weather from January to July. Passy's description is verified with respect to the results of modern measurements and the present-day knowledge on Moravian climate.
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6

Chorvátová, Hana, and Matej Harvát. "Ženské a detské hroby s honosným šperkom v dlhom 9. storočí v Čechách, na Morave a na Slovensku (komparácia, identifikácia elít a pokus o novú historickú interpretáciu formovania veľkomoravského Nitrianska)." Musaica Archaeologica 5, no. 1 (2020): 51–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.46283/musarch.2020.1.04.

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The study primarily deals with the archeological findings of the women and children luxurious jewelry from the burial sites located at regions nort of the Danube of the so-called Great Moravia. The paper consists of two parts – surveys of archeological and textual evidence. The main goal is interdisciplinary evaluation and comparison of available and well–known sources which indicate a specific discrepancy in the general historiographic interpretation of the formation of the Great Moravian „state“. The discrepancy between archeological and historiographic interpretation is much more obvious in the case of the so-called Principality of Nitra and its assumed elite. The first part of the study contains a comparative analysis of the findings of luxurious jewelry from the regions of present-day Bohemia, Moravia and western Slovakia, where authors point out the qualitative and quantitative differences in the spatial distribution of these artifacts. In the second part, the authors propose the alternative explanatory model of the formation of the so-called core area of Great Moravia based on the different reading of some notorious textual evidence. In this section is critically examined a conventional and rather problematic historiographic explanation based on the notion of the unification of (old) Moravian principality and „Nitrava“ principality as a consequence of the expulsion of Priwina from Nitra by the Moravian dux Mojmír I around 833. Contrastingly, authors rather suggest the later incorporation of the Nitra region to the political unit ruled by the Moravian prince which may have happend as a result of Svätopluk expansion.
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7

Komzák, Petr, Luboš Beran, and Michal Horsák. "The first record of Corbicula fluminea (O. F. Müller, 1774) in Moravia (SE Czech Republic)." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 17 (November 13, 2018): 28–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2018-17-28.

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8

Beran, Luboš, and Michal Horsák. "Distribution of Bithynia leachii (Sheppard, 1823) and Bithynia troschelii (Paasch, 1842) (Gastropoda: Bithyniidae) in the Czech Republic." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 8 (April 29, 2009): 19–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2009-8-19.

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This paper summarises all known data about the occurrence and distribution of Bithynia leachii (Sheppard, 1823) and Bithynia troschelii (Paasch, 1842) in the Czech Republic. Both species were already recorded from the Czech Republic in the past, but they were not distinguished. Autochthonous occurrence of both species is restricted to South Moravia; in the floodplains along the Morava River and the Dyje River where both species are very rare. Bithynia troschelii was also found in other sites situated in Bohemia and northern Moravia but these occurrences are not indigenous.
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9

Valášková, Lucie. "Great Moravian jewellery and its presentation in exhibitions." Muzeológia a kultúrne dedičstvo 11, no. 4 (2023): 59–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.46284/mkd.2023.11.4.4.

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Ever since the first pieces of Great Moravian jewellery were found in early medieval burial grounds, which began to be intensively and extensively explored mainly in Moravia after 1948, it was clear that these were not only elite goods related to the highest social class in Great Moravia of that time, but also exhibition objects that bear the hallmark of exclusivity. Their artistic beauty, the expensive material from which they were made, as well as the craftsmanship with which they were created, were and still are a sure guarantee for the exhibitor that they will interest the public in some way. The paper focuses mainly on large exhibition events, which from the 1960s presented Great Moravian jewellery not only to the Czech, but also to the foreign audience. At the same time, it briefly outlines the future, which is connected with presentation of these exceptional archaeological finds, and which is in the hands of the Moravian Museum in Brno.
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10

Peterson (book author), Thomas Erling, and Corrado Federici (review author). "Alberto Moravia." Quaderni d'italianistica 19, no. 1 (April 1, 1998): 152–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/q.i..v19i1.9623.

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11

Kozma, Jan, and Thomas Erling Peterson. "Alberto Moravia." Italica 75, no. 2 (1998): 270. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/480143.

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12

Přichystal, Antonín. "Artefacts Made from Siliceous Rocks of Polish Origin on Prehistoric Sites in the Czech Republic." Archaeologia Polona 56 (January 1, 2018): 35–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.23858/apa56.2018.003.

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Compared with Poland, the territory of Bohemia and Moravia is not so rich in natural occurrences of high-quality siliceous rocks (silicites, ‘flints’). This contribution follows distribution of the four most attractive Polish chipped raw materials (silicite of the Cracow-Częstochowa Jurassic, ‘chocolate’ silicite, banded Krzemionki [striped] silicite and spotted Świeciechów [grey white-spotted] silicite) in the Czech Republic. Since the middle phase of Upper Palaeolithic (Gravettian) the Jurasssic-Cracow silicites had been transported to Moravia and since its late phase (Magdalenian) also to Bohemia. The first use of the ‘chocolate’ silicite has been ascertained at some Late Aurignacian (Epiaurignacian) sites of central Moravia similarly as an exceptional find attesting early use of Świeciechów spotted silicite (Late Szeletian?). No finds of the banded Krzemionki silicite have been registered in Pre-Neolithic flaked assemblages in the Czech Republic. Evidence of systematic and mass transport of silicites from the Cracow-Częstochowa Jurassic to northern/central Moravia and to eastern/central Bohemia has been found in some periods of the Neolithic (especially connected with the Linear Pottery culture). For the period of the earlier Eneolithic (Funnel Beaker culture) we can identify a small but systematic presence of raw materials from the northern foreland of the Świętokrzyskie (Holy Cross) Mountains, this comprises objects of banded Krzemionki silicite and spotted Świeciechów silicite. About 24 Moravian non-stratified finds of axes made of the banded Krzemionki silicite and polished over the whole surface can be probably connected with the Globular Amphora culture. Silicites from the Cracow-Częstochowa Jurassic appeared again in the late Eneolithic, especially as arrowheads of the Bell Beaker culture in Moravia. Only two pieces made from the Jurassic Cracow-Częstochowa silicite appeared in a collection of 1463 artefacts connected with the Early Bronze Age in Moravia
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13

Macháček, Jiří, Petr Dresler, and Renáta Přichystalová. "Das Ende Großmährens – Überlegungen zur relativen und absoluten Chronologie des ostmitteleuropäischen Frühmittelalters." Praehistorische Zeitschrift 93, no. 2 (April 8, 2019): 307–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/pz-2018-0010.

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Abstract The Fall of Great Moravia. Reflections on relative and absolute chronology of Early Middle Ages in the East-Central Europe. Dating the so-called Great Moravian jewelry and Great Moravian church graveyards is one of the crucial tasks of archaeology of the Early Middle Ages. The chronological systems developed based on the rich graves investigated over the past 60 years within the Czech Republic help in dating archaeological finds from the 9th to the 10th century all over Europe. This study addresses the question of how long the luxury jewelry existed as part of living culture and until when the earliest church graveyards with burials of people clad in the traditional Great Moravian costume existed in Moravia. The solution to this problem is supported by assessments of finds from graves excavated at Pohansko near Břeclav and, most importantly, by radiocarbon dating the application of which is still not common in archaeology of the Early Middle Ages. The result of the present research is a finding that in Great Moravian church graveyards burials continued consistently until the mid-10th century, occasionally probably even a little longer. People were interred there wearing the typical Great Moravian costume which included the luxury jewelry as its component. It is a significant correction of the previous opinions and a partial return to the original dating of Great Moravian material culture from the 1950s and 1960s.
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14

Formánková, Sylvie, Andrea Hrdličková, and Tomáš Grabec. "Corporate Social Responsibility of Public Administration through Eyes of Enterprises." Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis 65, no. 6 (2017): 1901–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.11118/actaun201765061901.

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The present paper focuses on corporate social responsibility in public administration. The subject of interest is the South Moravia Region and enterprises seated there. The subject of the present research includes overall awareness of the inquired enterprises about corporate social responsibility and activities of the South Moravian Region Authority related to corporate social responsibility of the institution. The research has brought conclusions testifying a certain level of knowledge of the CSR concept among enterprises, albeit on the basic level only. The awareness of socially responsible activities of the regional authority was very low and therefore further steps of this institution must be considered to improve communication of CSR activities and develop an environment for better cooperation of the public and the private sector in this area. The research was based on secondary data drawn from annual reports of the South Moravian Region Authority and on primary data obtained by questionnaire-based inquiry among 384 enterprises doing business in the South Moravia Region.
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15

Kelly, T. Mills. "Last Best Chance or Last Gasp? The Compromise of 1905 and Czech Politics in Moravia." Austrian History Yearbook 34 (January 2003): 279–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s006723780002052x.

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On November 27, 1905, leading members of the Czech and German communities in Moravia agreed to a political compromise that divided power in the provincial diet between Czechs, Germans, and members of the landowning and ecclesiastical aristocracy. Over the next few years, the Moravian agreement was used as a model for political compromises in Bukovina (1910) and Galicia (1914).1 For decades historians hailed the Moravian compromise and its successors as evidence that the feuding nations of the late Habsburg monarchy could indeed find sufficient common ground to live together in peace. Although in the past decade scholars generally have taken a more cautious approach to the results of these compromises, much of this work betrays a sense of disappointment over a missed opportunity. Somehow, the Czech-German compromise in Moravia might have become a model for ethnic cooperation, proof that the monarchy's contentious national communities could work out their differences and live together, or at least a sign
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16

Pernes, Jiří. "Moravia, Too Dangerous? Moravian Patriotism in Post-war Czechoslovakia, 1945-89." Soudobé dějiny 17, no. 3 (September 1, 2010): 392–420. http://dx.doi.org/10.51134/sod.2010.021.

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17

Grossmannová, Dagmar. "Finds of Byzantine Coins in the Collection of the Moravian Museum. A Contribution to the Completion of the Register of Byzantine Coins in Moravia / Znaleziska monet bizantyńskich w kolekcji Morawskiego Muzeum Krajowego. Przyczynek do uzupełnienia rejestru monet bizantyńskich na Morawach." Notae Numismaticae - Zapiski Numizmatyczne, no. 16 (May 20, 2022): 177–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/ajst.1.16.a8.

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Finds of Byzantine coins on the territory of Moravia are generally rare, and those kept in the numismatic collection of the Moravian Museum (Brno, Czech Republic) are far from numerous. The collection contains 11 individual finds and one small hoard from a period spanning the 5th to the 13th century. They were acquired mostly during the 1950s–1970s. Some of the finds have been already published in the past, others remain unpublished or only brief information without a detailed description has been published. The aim of this paper is the completion of the information on finds of Byzantine coins on the historical territory of Moravia or, as the case may be, a more precise determination of the discovered coins.
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18

Dvořáková, Žaneta. "Seznamy vězňů tzv. cikánských koncentračních táborů očima onomastiky." Onomastica 66 (2022): 65–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.17651/onomast.66.7.

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Two concentration camps were established for Roma people in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in 1942. Roma from Bohemia were deported to Lety and Roma from Moravia to the camp near Hodonín u Kunštátu, before most of them were murdered in the “Gypsy family camp” (Zigeunerlager)in Auschwitz II. Birkenau. The lists of prisoners are valuable not only for histori-ans (they were published previously by the historian Ctibor Nečas), but also for onomastics, as they allow us to analyse the naming practise of Czech and Moravian Roma in the pre-war period. There are 325 unique surnames on these lists, with most of them being Czech or German, and they thus demonstrate the connection with the territory and its language(s). The study discusses the most com-mon Roma surnames in Moravia (e.g. Daniel, Holomek, Burianský) and in Bohemia (e.g. Růžička, Janeček, Vrba) as well as the surnames of Sinti living in the Czech borderland regions (e.g. Winter). It is shown that the surnames of Roma from Bohemia and Moravia were different due to the his-torical and social reasons. They were mostly derived from personal names (e.g. Florián) and place names (e.g. Dubský), they were motivated by the occupation adopted (e.g. Kovář ‘smith’) or the character and appearance of the individual (e.g. Malík ‘small’). After the war, only 583 of the 4,870 Roma who had been imprisoned returned.
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Košulič, Ondřej. "Spiders (Arachnida: Araneae) from Forest Ecosystems of Třesín National Nature Monument (Litovelské Pomoraví, Czech Republic) with Suggestions to Conservation Management of the Locality." Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis 63, no. 3 (2015): 751–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.11118/actaun201563030751.

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This paper presents faunistic records of spiders in the forest ecosystems of the Třesín National Nature Monument. Spiders were surveyed from 29 April 2013 to 25 October 2013. A total of 1012 individual spiders were collected from eight sites by pitfall traps, individual collection, sweeping grasses and herb vegetation, beating shrubs and trees, and shifting leaf litters. Spiders were identified as 146 species from 94 genera and 27 families. The families Linyphiidae, Lycosidae, Gnaphosidae, and Thomisidae exhibited high species diversity. Three species listed on the Red List of Threatened Species in the Czech Republic were recorded: Dysdera moravica (Řezáč, Gasparo, Král & Heneberg, 2014), Megalepthyphantes pseudocollinus (Saaristo, 1997), and Nusoncus nasutus (Schenkel, 1925). The finding of N. nasutus is among the first reports of this spider in the Moravia region. Several findings represent the northernmost occurrences of rare thermophilous spiders in Moravia and even the Czech Republic. The great richness of araneofauna and the occurrence of rare and poorly known spider species confirm the high biotic value of Třesín within the agriculturally intensified landscape of Moravia.
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20

Soukopová, Jana, and Ivan Malý. "Competitive environment in waste management and its impact on municipal expenditures." Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis 61, no. 4 (2013): 1113–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.11118/actaun201361041113.

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This paper is based on the analysis of competitive environment in waste management in the South Moravian Region and its impact on current municipal expenditures. The paper presents the changes in the development of the municipal waste management and more specifically in the municipal solid waste expenditure per capita of the municipalities from South Moravia Region in the Czech Republic. The main goal of this paper is to examine the impact of competitive environment on the expenditure efficiency. We assume that spatial aspect of competitive environment has significant influence on the expenditure. This hypothesis was based on results of research rejected. The paper compares expenditure per capita for several municipality size groups and the data are also analysed separately for the each of the 7 districts of South Moravia Region in order to identify any significant differences in the development between the districts within the region. The period of the analysis covers 5 years from 2007 to 2011 and the sample consists of all 673 South Moravian municipalities.
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21

Capozzi (book editor), Rocco, Mario M. Mignone (book editor), and Corrado Federici (review author). "Homage to Moravia." Quaderni d'italianistica 14, no. 1 (April 1, 1993): 175–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/q.i..v14i1.10190.

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22

Signorelli-Pappas, Rita, Alberto Moravia, and Alain Elkann. "Vita di Moravia." World Literature Today 66, no. 1 (1992): 113. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40147923.

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23

Parisi, Luciano. "Moravia: un'ipotesi interpretativa." Italian Studies 65, no. 1 (March 2010): 46–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/016146210x12593180018065.

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24

Diane O'Donoghue. "Moses in Moravia." American Imago 67, no. 2 (2010): 157–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aim.2010.0007.

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25

Manica, Raffaele. "O jovem Moravia." Remate de Males 25, no. 1 (November 8, 2012): 91–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/remate.v25i1.8636115.

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26

Ricapito, Joseph V., Rocco Capozzi, and Mario B. Mignone. "Homage to Moravia." World Literature Today 68, no. 3 (1994): 546. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40150412.

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27

Nejedlá, Alena, Tomáš Vlasatý, and Jiří Hošek. "A new find of a Great Moravian decorated battle-axe head from Znojmo-Oblekovice." Archaeologia historica, no. 1 (2023): 209–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/ah2023-1-9.

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The article deals with a new find of a decorated battle-axe head, which can be dated with a high degree of certainty to the Great Moravian period. The axe head was found in the Oblekovice cadastre in Znojmo in 2021 during metal detecting and handed over to the South Moravian Museum. Subsequent prospection of the site surroundings did not reveal any other related finds. In Moravia, the Oblekovice axe head is unique for its decoration.
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Mahel, Richard. "„Stručná historie Literatury české“. K osudu nevydané učebnice rajhradského benediktina Bedy Dudíka k dějinám české literatury z roku 1847." Historia Scholastica 6, no. 2 (December 31, 2020): 56–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.15240/tul/006/2020-2-005.

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In the years 1841–1854 the Benedictine Beda Dudík (1815–1890) worked as a teacher at the Episcopal Institute of Philosophy in Brno and then at the Higher Grammar School in Brno. As a teacher and a supporter of a development of the Czech national movement in Moravia he strove for the introduction of teaching of the Czech language and literature in the Moravian church education. He succeeded in his efforts and the Court study commission and the Episcopal ordinariate in Brno permitted teaching of the Czech language within the school curriculum of the Institute of Philosophy. For the successful completion of the teaching, Dudik compiled a textbook for his students about history of the Czech language and book writing and he intended to publish it in print at “Matice česká” in Prague. The textbook was approved successfully in a censorship procedure; however, it was not finally published in print due to disagreements with the authors of the compiled works. Nevertheless, it was significant for the development of national efforts in Moravia and it, first and foremost, revealed the young Beda Dudík as a great supporter of the then minority Czech national movement in Moravia, which changed later when he left his pedagogical experience in favour of his better-known historiographical, official and diplomatic practice.
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Gluchman, Vasil. "Ethics and politics of Great Moravia of the 9th century." Ethics & Bioethics 8, no. 1-2 (June 1, 2018): 15–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ebce-2018-0007.

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Abstract The author studies the role of Christianity in two forms of 9th century political ethics in the history of Great Moravia, represented by the Great Moravian rulers Rastislav and Svatopluk. Rastislav’s conception predominantly uses the pre-Erasmian model of political ethics based on the pursuit of welfare for the country and its inhabitants by achieving the clerical-political independence of Great Moravia from the Frankish kingdom and, moreover, by utilising Christianity for the advancement of culture, education, literature, law and legality, as well as by spreading Christian ethics and morality in the form of the Christian code of ethics expressed in ethicallegal documents. Svatopluk’s political conception was a prototype of Machiavellian political ethics, according to which one is, in the interest of the country and its power and fame, allowed to be a lion and/or a fox. Svatopluk abused Christianity in the name of achieving his power-oriented goals. Great Moravia outlived Rastislav; it did not, however, outlive Svatopluk, as, shortly after his death, it broke up and ceased to exist. The author came to the conclusion that Rastislav’s conception was more viable, as its cultural heritage lives on in the form of works by Constantine and Methodius.
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Spáčilová, Libuše. "Der Allgemeine deutsche Sprachverein und seine Zweigvereine in Mähren." Acta Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Ostraviensis Studia Germanistica, no. 28 (September 2021): 73–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.15452/studiagermanistica.2021.28.0006.

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In the first part, the study presents a brief characteristics of the development of the Modern High German language after 1650 from the point of view how other languages influenced its vocabulary and analyses numerous loan words. The second part deals with the origins and the first activities of the General German Language Society (from 1885 on) which became the leader in the field of the institutionalised ideological fight against foreign words in the central German language area. The third part introduces the research results of the affiliate societies which were founded in Moravia, one of the part of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown. Both the information in the journal of the General German Language Society and archive documents in three Moravian archives (in Brno, Jihlava and Nový Jičín – the only Moravian cities where affiliate societies were founded) show that their existence was rather a peripheral issue in these cities. As opposed to this, affiliated societies were very active in the cities of northern Bohemia. At the end of the study, the author considers the reasons which caused this kind of situation in Moravia.
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Dominik, Petr, Alena Saláková, Hana Buchtová, and Ladislav Steinhauser. "Quality indicators of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus L.) venison from two different Czech regions." Acta Veterinaria Brno 82, no. 2 (2013): 175–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.2754/avb201382020175.

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This study focused on differences in the monitored quality indicators of roe deer venison depending on the region of the Czech Republic where roe deer are hunted. Quality of roe deer venison was evaluated based on pH values, colour (CIEL*a*b* system) and chemical composition (content of haem pigments, dry matter, pure protein, collagen and fat). Samples of muscle from the leg (m. gluteus medius) were taken from 22 female roe deer (Capreolus capreolus L.) from two hunting regions (Liberec and South Moravia) in the Czech Republic. In roe deer from Liberec, higher pH value (5.65, P < 0.001) was found; muscles were darker (L* = 36.03), contained higher redness (a* = 14.41, P < 0.001) and yellowness values (b* = 12.10) and higher chroma (C* = 18.86). In roe deer from South Moravia, higher (P < 0.05) hue (h°) values, and higher level of haem pigments (2.45 mg·g-1) were found. Muscles from roe deer from South Moravia contained higher amounts of dry matter (29.52%, P < 0.001), pure protein (23.84%, P < 0.001) and total collagen (0.86%), and lower amounts of intramuscular fat (0.48%). These results may provide an important source of information for consumers of roe deer meat because several differences in the quality (chemical composition) of muscles from South Moravian region and Liberec region were found. Presumably, the differences between muscles from animals living in two different Czech regions were due to the diet, form of land use (more agricultural land in Southern Moravia, and forests and mountains in Liberec) and climatic conditions (Liberec lies in the northern part of the Czech Republic). It is the first study of this topic in the Czech Republic.
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32

Čejka, Tomáš, Luboš Beran, Jaroslav Č. Hlaváč, Michal Horsák, Lucie Juřičková, Juraj Čačaný, Jana Buďová, et al. "Měkkýši Hostýnských vrchů [Molluscs of the Hostýnské vrchy Hills]." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 17 (March 14, 2018): 17–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2018-17-17.

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This study deals with the molluscan fauna of the Hostýnské vrchy Hills (Central Moravia, Czech Republic). The main goal was to make a systematic inventory of the molluscan fauna in this area. Snails were collected in September 2010 by hand picking and litter sampling at selected sites. Final database was pooled with earlier published and unpublished data. In total, 85 terrestrial and 20 freshwater mollusc species were recorded at 56 study sites across the area during 2000–2010. Terrestrial snails Monachoides incarnatus, Punctum pygmaeum, Vitrina pellucida, and freshwater molluscs Pisidium casertanum, and Radix labiata were the most frequently recorded species. The land snails Daudebardia brevipes, Eucobresia nivalis, Vitrea transsylvanica, and Chondrula tridens are notable species from the local viewpoint. The clausilid Vestia ranojevici moravica, an endemic subspecies that colonized some regions of Moravia during the Holocene climatic optimum, is an iconic mollusc species in the area, deserving high conservation priority.
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33

Costa Mendes, Rafael, and Mattia Delmondo. "Natividade, de Alberto Moravia." caleidoscópio: literatura e tradução 4, no. 1 (December 14, 2020): 135–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.26512/caleidoscopio.v4i1.27000.

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A existência mundana e entediante de Matteo é revolvida pela novidade que sua esposa, Maria, anuncia: eles logo teriam um bebê. Por meio de um olhar altivo de um homem que encarna todos os vícios da burguesia italiana durante o regime fascista, Moravia coloca em cena uma espetacular aparição noturna de Maria, em uma ambígua coabitação entre o real e o mágico. Escritura realista ou paródia do acontecimento religioso, “La Natavità ” é um dos primeiros contos de Alberto Moravia, que carrega consigo a veia surrealista e satírica em voga na produção narrativa italiana dos anos 40.
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34

Martino, Andrew. "Agostino by Alberto Moravia." World Literature Today 88, no. 6 (2014): 60–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/wlt.2014.0006.

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35

Föhl, Axel. "Industrial Heritage in Moravia." Industrial Archaeology Review 42, no. 1 (January 2, 2020): 95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03090728.2020.1743600.

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36

Licastro, Emanuele. "Review: Homage to Moravia." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 28, no. 1 (March 1994): 189–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001458589402800137.

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37

Crow, James F. "Our man in Moravia." Nature Genetics 12, no. 1 (January 1996): 15–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng0196-15.

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38

Michálková Slimáčková, Jana. "Alessandro Poglietti in Moravia." Musicologica Olomucensia 34, no. 2 (February 9, 2023): 53–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.5507/mo.2022.013.

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39

Cambi, Franco. "Ricordo di Sergio Moravia." Studi sulla Formazione/Open Journal of Education 26, no. 1 (July 18, 2023): 255–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/ssf-14638.

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40

Buzek, Frantisek, Bohuslava Cejkova, Ivana Jackova, and Zdenka Lnenickova. "The 18O/16O ratio of retail Moravian wines from the Czech Republic in comparison with European wines." Czech Journal of Food Sciences 35, No. 3 (June 28, 2017): 200–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/205/2016-cjfs.

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About 50 samples of retail Czech wines from the South of Moravia (vintage years 2008 to 2015) were measured for δ<sup>18</sup>O values in wine water together with more than 60 European wines. The aim of the study was to compare Moravian wines (not measured for δ<sup>18</sup>O up to date) with regional European wines and published data from the European wine databanks. The observed variability of δ<sup>18</sup>O values with vintage year corresponds to the variability of German wines from the Rhine region. We did not observe any significant admixture of must from other regions. The method of <sup>18</sup>O measurement appears to be very sensitive to small differences in the climate of the region (comparison of South Moravia and the near Malé Karpaty region).
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Dolák, Lukáš, Rudolf Brázdil, and Hubert Valášek. "Impacts of hydrometeorological extremes in the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands in 1706–1889 as derived from taxation records." Geografie 120, no. 4 (2015): 465–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.37040/geografie2015120040465.

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Taxation records related to tax relief for farmers whose livelihoods were affected by hydrometeorological extremes (HMEs) on seven estates in the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands (Moravia) in the 1706–1889 period are used to study the impacts of HMEs on the socio-economic situation of the farmers. The impacts of HMEs are here classified into agricultural production, material property and the socio-economic situation of individual farmers. Direct impacts took the form of losses of property, supplies and farming equipment, and also of bad yields, depletion of livestock and damage to fields and meadows. Simple lack of income, debt, impoverishment, reduction in livestock and deterioration in field fertility were among the longer-term effects. The impacts are discussed with respect to approaches to mitigation of the negative effects of HMEs and to the problems associated with obtaining support and in terms of a hierarchy of consequent impacts. The paper embodies a methodological approach for analysis of HMEs impacts in South Moravia in the 17th–19th centuries.
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Macháček, Jiří. "Disputes over Great Moravia: chiefdom or state? the Morava or the Tisza River?" Early Medieval Europe 17, no. 3 (July 21, 2009): 248–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0254.2009.00276.x.

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43

Vaishar, Antonín. "Small towns: an important part of the Moravian settlement system." Dela, no. 21 (December 1, 2004): 309–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/dela.21.309-317.

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The paper brings characteristics of Moravian towns with inhabitants below 15 thousand. The towns still play an important role in the settlement structure. Their share in the coun-try’s population remains stable. As compared with larger towns and cities, the parameters of their natural and social environments exhibit a number of advantages. The future of small towns in Moravia is discussed with impulses for the conservation of urban functions being seen in the provision of central services for rural hinterlands and in specialization. Main future significance of small Moravian towns consists in the insurance of sustainable development of Moravian countryside, in the provision of alternative life style offer for a part of the population, and in keeping up local and regional identities in the process of globalization.
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Brázdil, R., K. Chromá, L. Řezníčková, H. Valášek, L. Dolák, Z. Stachoň, E. Soukalová, and P. Dobrovolný. "The use of taxation records in assessing historical floods in South Moravia, Czech Republic." Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 18, no. 10 (October 1, 2014): 3873–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/hess-18-3873-2014.

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Abstract. Since the second half of the 17th century, tax relief has been available to farmers and landowners to offset flood damage to property (buildings) and land (fields, meadows, pastures, gardens) in South Moravia, Czech Republic. Historically, the written applications for this were supported by a relatively efficient bureaucratic process that left a clear data trail of documentation, preserved at several levels: in the communities affected, in regional offices, and in the Moravian Land Office, all of which are to be found in estate and family collections in the Moravian Land Archives in the city of Brno, the provincial capital. As well as detailed information about damage done and administrative responses to it, data are often preserved as to the flood event itself, the time of its occurrence and its impacts, sometimes together with causes and stages. The final flood database based on taxation records is used here to describe the temporal and spatial density of both flood events and the records themselves. The information derived is used to help create long-term flood chronologies for the rivers Dyje, Jihlava, Svratka and Morava, combining floods interpreted from taxation records with other documentary data and floods derived from later systematic hydrological measurements (water levels, discharges). Common periods of higher flood frequency appear largely in the periods 1821–1850 and 1921–1950, although this shifts to several other decades for individual rivers. A number of uncertainties are inseparable from flood data taxation records: their spatial and temporal incompleteness; the inevitable limitation to larger-scale damage and restriction to the summer half-year; and the different characters of rivers, including land-use changes and channel modifications. Taxation data have considerable potential for extending our knowledge of past floods for the rest of the Czech Republic, not to mention other European countries in which records have survived.
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45

Horsák, Michal. "Měkkýši „Ženklavského lesa“ u Štramberka (Severní Morava) [The molluscs of the “Ženklavský les” forest near the town of Štramberk (North Moravia)]." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 2 (July 10, 2003): 15–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2002-2-15.

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The molluscs of a previously unexplored site the “Ženklavský les” forest in North Moravia (Czech Republic) were investigated in 2002. Altogether 47 snail species were recorded (46 terrestrial and 1 aquatic). The molluscan fauna was dominated by woodland species including sensitive and endangered ones (e.g., Platyla polita, Sphyradium doliolum, Ruthenica filograna, Vitrea subrimata, and Daudebardia brevipes). The species Vertigo pusilla, and Vestia ranojevici moravica were encountered in the Štramberk environs for the first time and are of regional importance.
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46

Horsák, Michal. "Měkkýši „Ženklavského lesa“ u Štramberka (Severní Morava) [The molluscs of the “Ženklavský les” forest near the town of Štramberk (North Moravia)]." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 2 (July 10, 2003): 15–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2003-2-15.

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The molluscs of a previously unexplored site the “Ženklavský les” forest in North Moravia (Czech Republic) were investigated in 2002. Altogether 47 snail species were recorded (46 terrestrial and 1 aquatic). The molluscan fauna was dominated by woodland species including sensitive and endangered ones (e.g., Platyla polita, Sphyradium doliolum, Ruthenica filograna, Vitrea subrimata, and Daudebardia brevipes). The species Vertigo pusilla, and Vestia ranojevici moravica were encountered in the Štramberk environs for the first time and are of regional importance.
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Myšák, Jan. "Malakofauna navrhované NPR Obírka-Kopánky a okolí [Mollusc fauna of the proposed Obírka-Kopánky National Nature Reserve and its surroundings]." Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 16 (January 25, 2017): 7–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/mab2017-16-7.

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Altogether, 77 mollusc species were recorded in the proposed Obírka-Kopánky National Nature Reserve (North Moravia, Czech Republic) during 2010–2016. Mollusc species diversity in forest habitats was equal to that reported from the study area 85 years ago. The assemblages include endangered species of primeval forests as Macrogastra latestriata, Vestia ranojevici moravica, Bulgarica cana, and Daudebardia brevipes, being of prime conservation importance. The study area is also one of the westernmost locations of fully developed mollusc assemblages of Carpathian primeval forests.
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48

Panek, Jaroslav, and Josef Valka. "Morava reformace, renesance a baroka [Moravia in the Age of Reformation, Renaissance and Baroque]." Sixteenth Century Journal 28, no. 2 (1997): 611. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2543513.

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49

Zavadil, Vit, Lilian Klepsch, and Jaroslav Piálek. "Extension of the known range of Triturus dobrogicus: electrophoretic and morphological evidence for presence in the Czech Republic." Amphibia-Reptilia 15, no. 4 (1994): 329–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853894x00362.

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AbstractThree populations of the Triturus cristatus superspecies were studied using morphological and electrophoretic techniques. Two bivariate statistics - the ratio between the length of forelimbs and interlimb distances and that between head width and body length - and eleven allozyme loci revealed close similarity between a sample taken in Moravia (Czech Republic) and a sample of T. dobrogicus collected in Vienna (Austria). Accordingly, the Moravian population should be classified as T dobrogicus. Therewith, the northeastern limit of the known distribution of Triturus dobrogicus is extended into the Czech Republic.
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50

Matthews, David. "Deal Festival: Pavel Novák." Tempo 58, no. 227 (January 2004): 59–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204250057.

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In describing the performance of three extraordinary pieces by the Czech composer Pavel Novák, I have to begin by declaring an interest in my capacity as Artistic Director of the Deal Summer Music Festival, at which he was a featured composer. Novák was born in Brno in 1957, and has achieved a high reputation in Moravia, where he is now acknowledged to be the leading composer of his generation. He is not yet well known outside the Czech Republic, although the Schubert Ensemble have commissioned three pieces from him – Lord, We Seek the Song of the Chosen for piano trio (1991); Royal Funeral Procession to Iona for piano quintet (1995); St Mary Variations for piano quartet (2000) – and have played them in Britain and abroad. Novák's teacher, Miloslav IÎtvan, was a pupil of Janáček's pupil Jaroslav Kvapil, and Novák, more than any other composer in Moravia, seems the true inheritor of the Janáček tradition. That tradition remains a vital force in Brno, partly because Janáček is the most local of composers and his music still, and in a vital way, haunts his home town with its Janáček Academy (where Novak studied), and the Janáček Theatre (where Novak played the oboe for a number of years in the opera orchestra) at which Janáček's operas are performed as nowhere else, players and singers alike attuned to the Moravian dialect; partly through the continuing vitality of Moravian folksong, whose spirit and melodic contours inform Novák's music as they did Janáček's.
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