Charles University in Prague

Charles University in Prague
Univerzita Karlova v Praze
Latin: Universitas Carolina Pragensis
Established 1347 or 1348
Type Public
Rector Professor Václav Hampl
Students ~50,000
Location Prague, Czech Republic (EU)
Campus Urban
Affiliations Coimbra Group
EUA
Europaeum
Website http://www.cuni.cz/UKENG-1.html

Charles University in Prague (also simply Charles University; Czech: Univerzita Karlova v Praze; Latin: Universitas Carolina; German: Karls-Universität zu Prag) is the oldest and largest university in the Czech Republic. Founded in 1347, it was the first university in Central Europe and is also considered the earliest German university.[1] It is one of the oldest universities in Europe in continuous operation.

Its seal shows its protector, Emperor Charles IV, with his coats of arms as King of the Romans and King of Bohemia kneeling in front of St. Wenceslas, the patron saint of Bohemia. It is surrounded by the inscription, Sigillum Universitatis Scolarium Studii Pragensis (English: Seal of the Prague academia, Czech: Pečeť studentské obce pražského učení).[2]

According to the recent Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Charles University ranked as the leading university in the Czech Republic and the second one in Central and Eastern Europe after Moscow State University.

Contents

History

Medieval university (1349–1419)

Monument to the protector of the university, Emperor Charles IV

The establishment of a medieval university in Prague was inspired by Charles of Luxembourg.[3] He asked his friend and ally, Pope Clement VI, to do so. On 26 January 1347 the pope issued the bull establishing a university in Prague, modeled on the University of Paris, with the full (4) number of faculties, that is including theological. On 7 April 1348 Charles, the king of Bohemia, gave to the established university privileges and immunities from the secular power in a Golden Bull[4] and on 14 January 1349 he repeated that as the King of the Romans. Most Czech sources since the 19th century—encyclopedias, general histories, materials of the University itself—prefer to give 1348 as the year of the founding of the university, rather than 1347 or 1349. This was caused by an anticlerical shift in the 19th century, shared by both Czechs and Germans.

The university was actually opened in 1349. The university was sectioned into parts called nations: the Bohemian, Bavarian, Polish and Saxon. The Bohemian natio included Bohemians, Moravians, southern Slavs, and Hungarians; the Bavarian included Austrians, Swabians, natives of Franconia and of the Rhine provinces; the Polish included Silesians, Poles, Russians; the Saxon included inhabitants of the Margravate of Meissen, Thuringia, Upper and Lower Saxony, Denmark, and Sweden.[5] Ethnically Czech students made 16 – 20 % of all students.[6] Archbishop Arnošt of Pardubice took an active part in the foundation by obliging the clergy to contribute and became a chancellor of the university (i. e. director or manager).

The first graduate was promoted in 1359. The lectures were held in the colleges, of which the oldest was named for the king the Carolinum, established in 1366. In 1372 the Faculty of Law became an independent university.[7]

In 1402 Jerome of Prague in Oxford copied out the Dialogus and Trialogus of John Wycliffe. The dean of the philosophical faculty, Jan Hus, translated Trialogus into the Czech language. In 1403 the university forbade its members to follow the teachings of Wycliffe, but his doctrine continued to gain in popularity.

In Western Schism, the Bohemian natio took the side of king Wenceslaus and supported the Council of Pisa (1409). The other nationes of the university declared their support for the side of Pope Gregory XII, thus the vote was 1:3 against the Bohemians. Hus and other Bohemians, though, took advantage of Wenceslaus' opposition to Gregory. By the Decree of Kutná Hora (German: Kuttenberg) on 18 January 1409, the king subverted the university constitution by granting the Bohemian masters three votes. Only a single vote was left for all other three nationes combined, compared to one vote per each natio before. The result of this coup was the emigration of foreign (mostly German) professors and students, founding the University of Leipzig in May 1409. Before that, in 1408, the university had about 200 doctors and magisters, 500 bachelors, and 30,000 students; it now lost a large part of this number, accounts of the loss varying from 5000 to 20,000 including 46 professors.[5] In the autumn of 1409, Hus was elected rector of the now Czech-dominated rump university.

Thus, the Prague university lost the largest part of its students and faculty. From then on the university declined to a merely regional institution with a very low status.[8] Soon, in 1419, the faculties of theology and law disappeared, and only the faculty of arts remained in existence.

Protestant academy (1419–1622)

The faculty of arts became a centre of the Hussite movement, and the chief doctrinal authority of the Utraquists. No degrees were given in the years 1417–30; at times there were only eight or nine professors.[5] Emperor Sigismund, son of Charles IV, took what was left into his personal property and some progress was made. The emperor Ferdinand I called the Jesuits to Prague and in 1562 they opened an academy—the Clementinum. From 1541 till 1558 the Czech humanist Mattheus Collinus (1516–1566) was a professor of Greek language.[9] Some progress was made again when the emperor Rudolph II took up residence in Prague. In 1609 the obligatory celibacy of the professors was abolished.[10] In 1616 the Jesuit Academy became a university. (It could award academic degrees.)[10]

Jesuits were expelled 1618–1621 during the early stages of the Thirty Years' War, which was started in Prague by anti-Catholic and anti-Imperial Bohemians. By 1622 the Jesuits had a predominant influence over the emperor. An Imperial decree of 19 September 1622 gave the Jesuits supreme control over the entire school system of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia. The last four professors at the Carolinum resigned and all of the Carolinum and nine colleges went to the Jesuits. The right of handing out degrees, of holding chancellorships and of appointing the secular professors was also granted to the Jesuits.

Charles-Ferdinand University (1622–1882)

Façade of the aula of the university.

Cardinal Ernst Adalbert von Harrach actively opposed union of the university with another institution and the withdrawal of the archiepiscopal right to the chancellorship and prevented the drawing up of the Golden Bull for the confirmation of the grant to Jesuits. Cardinal Ernst funded the Collegium Adalbertinum and in 1638 emperor Ferdinand III limited the teaching monopoly enjoyed by the Jesuits. He took from them the rights, properties and archives of the Carolinum making the university once more independent under an imperial protector. During the last years of the Thirty Years' War the Charles Bridge in Prague was courageously defended by students of the Carolinum and Clementinum. Since 1650 those who received any degrees took an oath to maintain the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, renewed annually.

On 23 February 1654 emperor Ferdinand III merged Carolinum and Clementinum and created a single university with four faculties—Charles-Ferdinand University.[11] Carolinum had at that time only the faculty of arts, as the only faculty surviving the period of the Hussite Wars. Starting from this time the university designated itself Charles-Ferdinand University (Universitas Carolo Ferdinandea). The dilapidated Carolinum was rebuilt in 1718 at the expense of the state.

The rebuilding and the bureaucratic reforms of universities in the Habsburg monarchy in 1752 and 1754 deprived the university of many of its former privileges. In 1757 a Dominican and an Augustinian were appointed to give theological instruction. However, there was a gradual introduction of enlightened reforms, and this process culminated at the end of the century when even non-Catholics were granted the right to study. On 29 July 1784 German replaced Latin as the language of instruction.[12] For the first time Protestants were allowed, and soon after Jews. The university acknowledged the need of a Czech language and literature chair. Emperor Leopold II established it by a courtly decree on 28 October 1791. On 15 May 1792 Franz Martin Pelzel (1734–1801)[13] was named the professor of the chair. He started his lectures on 13 March 1793.[14]

In the revolution of 1848, German and Czech students fought for the addition of the Czech language at the Charles-Ferdinand University as a language of lectures. Due to the demographic changes of the 19th century, Prague ceased to have a German-language majority around 1860. By 1863, 22 lecture courses were held in Czech, the remainder (out of 187) in German. In 1864, Germans suggested the creation of a separate Czech university. Czech professors rejected this because they did not wish to lose the continuity of university traditions.

Split into Czech and German universities

Doctoral diploma of the astronomer Friedrich Hopfner, issued 1905 by the German Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague

The Czechs were not satisfied with bilingual status and proposed restitution of nationes, but on ethnic principle: German and Czech. Germans vetoed it and proposed a split of the University. After long negotiations the Carolo-Ferdinandea was divided into a German Charles-Ferdinand University and a Czech Charles-Ferdinand University when the Viennese parliament adopted the act and the emperor sanctioned it on 28 February 1882.[15] Each section was entirely independent of the other and enjoyed the same status. The two universities shared medical and scientific institutes, the old insignia, aula, library, and botanical garden, but common facilities were administrated by the German University. The first rector of the Czech University became Václav Vladivoj Tomek.

In 1890 Royal and Imperial Czech Charles Ferdinand University had 112 teachers and 2,191 students and the Royal and Imperial German Charles Ferdinand University had 146 teachers and 1,483 students. Both universities had three faculties and the Theological Faculty remained the common until 1891 when it was divided as well. In the winter semester of 1909-10 the German Charles-Ferdinand University (Karl-Ferdinands Universität) had 1778 students; these were divided into: 58 theological students, for both the secular priesthood and religious orders; 755 law students; 376 medical; 589 philosophical. Among the students were about 80 women. The professors were divided as follows: theology, 7 regular professors, 1 assistant professor, 1 docent; law, 12 regular professors, 2 assistant professors, 4 docents; medicine, 15 regular professors, 19 assistant, 30 docents; philosophy, 30 regular professors, 8 assistant, 19 docents, 7 lecturers. The Czech Charles-Ferdinand University (Universita Karlo-Ferdinandova) in the winter semester of 1909-10 included 4319 students; of these 131 were theological students belonging both to the secular and regular clergy; 1962 law students; 687 medical; 1539 philosophical; 256 students were women. The professors were divided as follows: theological faculty, 8 regular professors, 2 docents; law, 12 regular, 7 assistant professors, 12 docents; medicine, 16 regular professors, 22 assistant, 24 docents; philosophy, 29 regular, 16 assistant, 35 docents, 11 lecturers.[5]

The highpoint of the German University was the era preceding the First World War, when it was home to world-renowned scientists such as physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach, Moritz Winternitz, Albert Einstein. In addition, the German-language students included prominent individuals such as future writers Max Brod, Franz Kafka, and Johannes Urzidil.[16]

Even before the Austro-Hungarian Empire was abolished in late 1918, to be succeeded by Czechoslovakia, Czech politicians demanded that the insignia of 1348 were exclusively to be kept by the Czech university. The Act No. 197/1919 Sb. z. a n. established the Protestant theological faculty, but not as a part of the Charles University[17] which is since 10 May 1990 Charles University faculty.[18] In 1920 the so-called Lex Mareš (No. 135/1920 Sb. z. a n.) was issued, named for its initiator professor of physiology František Mareš, determining that the Czech university was to be the successor to the original university.[19] Dropping the Habsburg name Ferdinand, it designated itself Charles University, while the German university was not named.

In 1921 the Germans considered moving[20] their university to Liberec (German: Reichenberg) in northern Bohemia. In 1930, about 42,000 inhabitants of Prague spoke German as their native language, while millions lived in northern Bohemia near the border to Germany.

The insignia of the university; bone of contention between the universities

In October 1932, after Naegle's death, the Czechs started again a controversy over the insignia. Ethnic tensions intensified, although some professors of the German University were members of the Czechoslovak government. Any agreement to use the insignia for both the universities was rejected. On 21 November 1934, the German University had to hand over the insigniae to the Czechs. The German University senate sent a delegation to Minister of Education Krčmář to protest the writ. At noon on 24 November 1934 several thousand students of the Czech University protested before the German university building. The Czech rector Karel Domin gave a speech to urge the crowd to attack, while the outnumbered German students tried to resist. Under the threat of violence, on 25 November 1934 rector Otto Grosser (1873–1951) handed over the insigniae. These troubles of 1934 harmed relationship between the two universities and ethnics.

The tides turned in 1938, when following the Munich agreement, German troops entered the border areas of Czechoslovakia (the so-called Sudetenland), as did Polish and Hungarian troops elsewhere. On 15 March 1939 Germans forced Czecho-Slovakia to split apart and the Czech lands were occupied by Nazis as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Reichsprotektor Konstantin von Neurath handed the historical insigniae to the German University which was officially named as Deutsche Karls-Universität in Prag. Since 1 September 1939 the German University was subordinated to the Reichsministry of Education in Berlin and on 4 November 1939 it was proclaimed to be Reichsuniversität.[21]

On 28 October 1939 during a demonstration, Jan Opletal was shot. His burial on 15 November 1939 became a demonstration as well.[22] On 17 November 1939 (now marked as International Students' Day) the Czech University and all other Czech higher-education institutions were closed for 3 years, but remained closed until the end of the War. Nine student leaders were executed and about 1,200 Czech students were interned in Sachsenhausen and not released until 1943. About 20[23] or 35[24] interned students died in the camp. On 8 May 1940 the Czech University was officially renamed into Czech Charles University (Czech: Česká universita Karlova) by the government regulation 188/1940 Coll.

The World War II marks the end of the coexistence of the two universities in Prague. The remainders of the German University transferred to Munich and continues its existence as Collegium Carolinum.[25]

Present-day university (since 1945)

Seal of the 1st Faculty of Medicine

Although the university began to recover rapidly after 1945, it did not enjoy academic freedom for long. After the communist coup in 1948, the new regime started to arrange purges and repress all forms of disagreement with the official ideology, and continued to do so for the next four decades, with the second wave of purges during the "normalization" period in the beginning of the 1970s. Only in the late 1980s did the situation start to improve; students organized various activities and several peaceful demonstrations in the wake of the Revolutions of 1989 abroad. This initiated the "Velvet revolution" in 1989, in which both students and faculty of the university played a large role. Václav Havel—a writer, dramatist and philosopher—was recruited from the independent academic community and appointed president of the republic in December 1989.

Organisation

Seal of the Faculty of Evangelical Theology

Today, Charles University comprises 17 faculties:

Notable alumni

undivided before 1882 Czech University
(1882–1939 and 1945–present)
German University
(1882–1945)
  • Bernard Bolzano (1781–1848), mathematician and philosopher
  • Josef Dobrovský (1753–1829), philologist and historian
  • Jan Evangelista Purkyně (1787–1869), physiologist
  • Anton Gindely (1829–1892)
  • Jan Hus (1369–1415), religious thinker and reformer
  • Jan Marek Marci (1595–1677), physician
  • Agustín Stahl (1842–1917), scientist
  • Ferdinand Stoliczka (1838–1874), paleontologist
  • Nikola Tesla (1856–1943), inventor, physicist
  • Matthias of Trakai (c. 1370–1453), Bishop of Vilnius
  • Václav Bělohradský (b. 1944) philosopher
  • Edvard Beneš (1884–1948), sociologist, second president of Czechoslovakia
  • Adalbert Czerny (1863–1941), pediatrician
  • Vincenz Czerny
  • Karel Čapek (1890–1938), writer
  • Eduard Čech (1893–1960), mathematician
  • Karl Deutsch
  • Stanislav Grof (b. 1931), transpersonal psychologist
  • Karl I of Austria (1887–1922), last emperor of Austria and the last king of Bohemia
  • Jaroslav Heyrovský (1890–1967), chemist, Nobel laureate
  • Miroslav Holub (1923–1998), writer and immunologist
  • Bohumil Hrabal (1914–1997), writer
  • Jan Janský (1873–1921), discoverer of blood types
  • Jan Kavan (b. 1946), politician and diplomat
  • Luboš Kohoutek (b. 1935), astronomer
  • Henry Kucera (b. 1925), linguist/cognitive scientist
  • Milan Kundera (b. 1929), writer
  • Lyubomir Miletich (1863–1937), Bulgarian academician
  • George Placzek (1905–1955), physicist
  • Jan Stráský (b. 1940), politician
  • Ota Šik (1919–2004), economist
  • Peter Tomka (b. 1956), International Court of Justice Judge
  • Ivana Trump (b. 1949), Socialite and Entrepreneur.
  • Vladislav Vančura (1891–1942), writer
  • Max Brod (1884–1968), writer
  • Karl Deutsch
  • Viktor Fischl (1912–2006), poet and diplomat
  • Karl Hermann Frank
  • Franz Hofmeister
  • Felix Weltsch
  • Max Wertheimer (1880–1943), psychologist
  • Franz Kafka (1883–1924), writer
  • Egon Erwin Kisch (1885–1948), writer and journalist
  • Wilhelm Klein
  • Paul Kornfeld
  • Karel Hynek Mácha (1810–1836), poet and writer
  • Johannes Urzidil (1896–1970), writer and journalist
  • August Leopold von Reuss
  • Rainer Maria Rilke
  • Hermann Grab
  • Erich Heller
  • Friedrich Hopfner
  • Arthur Mahler
  • Karl I of Austria (1887–1922), last emperor of Austria, last king of Bohemia
  • Ferdinand Blumentritt
  • Johann Böhm
  • Carl Ferdinand Cori (1896–1984), biochemist, Nobel laureate
  • Gerty Cori (1896–1957), biochemist, Nobel laureate
  • Carl Friedrich Heinrich Credner

Notable academics

undivided before 1882 Czech University
(1882–1939 and 1945–present)
German University
(1882–1945)
  • Jan Gebauer
  • Anton Gindely
  • Jan Hus – religious thinker and reformer
  • František Josef Studnička
  • Johannes Vodnianus Campanus – author, playwright
  • Stanislav Vydra
  • Bohuslav Balcar
  • Václav Bělohradský
  • Edvard Beneš
  • Eduard Čech
  • Karel Domin
  • Miroslav Fiedler
  • Jan Gebauer
  • František Graus
  • Eva Hajičová
  • Václav Hampl
  • Miroslav Hroch
  • Bedřich Hrozný
  • Vojtěch Jarník – mathematician
  • Konstantin Josef Jireček
  • Erazim Kohák
  • Karel Kosík
  • Jan Blahoslav Lášek
  • Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk – philosopher, politician, 1st president of Czechoslovakia
  • Vilém Mathesius
  • Josef Matoušek
  • Jan Mukařovský – literary theorist, linguist
  • Alois Musil – orientalist
  • Milan Nakonečný
  • Jan Patočka – philosopher
  • Josef Ladislav Píč
  • Antonín Rezek
  • Stanislav Segert
  • Petr Sgall
  • František Josef Studnička
  • Vojtěch Šafařík
  • František Šmahel
  • Pavel Tichý
  • Dušan Třeštík
  • Petr Vopěnka
  • Ivan Wilhelm
  • Friedrich Adler
  • Alfred Amonn
  • Gustav Becking
  • Albert Einstein – theoretical physicist
  • Gerhard Gentzen
  • Felix Haurowitz - biochemist
  • Heinrich Hilgenreiner
  • Otto Kahler
  • Gustav Karl Laube
  • Ernst Mach – theoretical physicist
  • Günther von Mannagetta und Lërchenau Beck
  • Hans Petersson
  • Josef Pfitzner
  • Ernst Pringsheim
  • Ernst Pringsheim, Jr.
  • Zdenko Stary - biochemist
  • Samuel Friedrich Stein
  • Moritz Winternitz
  • Alfred Woltmann

Leadership

See also

Footnotes

  1. Joachim W. Stieber: "Pope Eugenius IV, the Council of Basel and the secular and ecclesiastical authorities in the Empire: the conflict over supreme authority and power in the church", Studies in the history of Christian thought, Vol. 13, Brill, 1978, ISBN 9004052402, p.82; Gustav Stolper: "German Realities", Read Books, 2007, ISBN 1406708399, p. 228; George Henry Danton: "Germany ten years after", Ayer Publishing, 1928, ISBN 0836956931, p. 210; Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius: "The German Myth of the East: 1800 to the Present", Oxford Studies in Modern European History Series, Oxford University Press, 2009, ISBN 0199546312, p. 109; Levi Seeley: "History of Education", BiblioBazaar, ISBN 1103391968, p. 141
  2. "Decription of the Charles University seal". Measuring Health and Disability in Europe. http://www.mhadie.it/html/descriptions/CU.html. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  3. Charles was since 11 July 1346 antiking of Romans, since 26 August 1346 king of Bohemia, since 17 June 1349 lawful king of Romans as Charles IV and from 5 April 1355 Holy Roman Emperor.
  4. "Littera fundationis Universitatis Carolinae Pragensis" (in Latin). 7 April 1348. http://www.cuni.cz/UK-145.html. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3  "University of Prague". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. 
  6. Chyský, Václav (March 2005). "Sedmdesátileté výročí insigniády z jiného pohledu" (in Czech). CS Magazin. http://www.cs-magazin.com/2005-03/view.php?article=articles/cs050334.htm. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  7. (in Latin) Album, seu Matricula Facultatis juridicae, 1372–1418, e codice membranaceo illius aetatis nunc primum luce donatum: Codex diplomaticus universitatis ejusdem. 1834. http://books.google.com/books?id=EEABAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage. 
  8. Lexikon des Mittelalters: "Prag. Universität", J.B. Metzler, Vol. 7, cols 163-164
  9. "KOLÍN (Kalina) z CHOTĚŘINY Matouš (Mattheus Collinus a Choterina)" (in Czech). KDO BYL KDO v našich dějinách do roku 1918. http://libri.cz/databaze/kdo18/search.php?zp=6&name=KOL%CDN. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Timeline of Charles University in Prague". Charles University. 12 June 2006. http://www.cuni.cz/UKENG-3.html. 
  11. Čapka, František (1999). "VII. Vláda Habsburků a protireformace" (in Czech). Dějiny zemí Koruny české v datech. Prague: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-67-2. http://libri.cz/databaze/dejiny/text/t45.html. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  12. "History of Charles University" (DOC). Charles University. 18 May 2004. http://www.cuni.cz/UK-1584-version1-history_of_UK.doc. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  13. "Představitelé Královské České společnosti nauk" (in Czech). Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. http://www.avcr.cz/ostatni.php?m=2-02&ID=2-02-02-00. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  14. Čapka, František (1999). "VIII. Od osvícenského absolutismu k národnímu obrození" (in Czech). Dějiny zemí Koruny české v datech. Prague: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-67-2. http://libri.cz/databaze/dejiny/text/t57.html. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  15. Čapka, František (1999). "X. Směřování k samostatnému státu" (in Czech). Dějiny zemí Koruny české v datech. Prague: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-67-2. http://libri.cz/databaze/dejiny/text/t73.html. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  16. "Johannes Urzidil – život – chronologie" (in Czech). Společnost Johannese Urzidila. http://www.johannes-urzidil.cz/zivot.html. Retrieved 21 June 2009. 
  17. "Národní shromáždění československé 1918-1920, 43. schůze, část 2/10" (in Czech). Společná česko-slovenská digitální parlamentní knihovna. 8 April 1919. http://psp.cz/eknih/1918ns/ps/stenprot/043schuz/s043002.htm. 
  18. "A brief history of the Protestant Theological Faculty of Charles University". Protestant Theological Faculty of Charles University. 12 March 2009. http://web.etf.cuni.cz/ETFENG-24.html. 
  19. "Národní shromáždění československé 1918-1920, 105. schůze, část 3/8" (in Czech). Společná česko-slovenská digitální parlamentní knihovna. 1 January 1920. http://psp.cz/eknih/1918ns/ps/stenprot/105schuz/s105003.htm. 
  20. "Zákon o přeložení sídla německé university v Praze" (in Czech). Senát Národního shromáždění. 16 December 1921. http://senat.cz/zajimavosti/tisky/1vo/tisky/T1174_00.htm. 
  21. Hlaváčková, Ludmila (December 1994). "Německá lékařská fakulta v Praze (1883–1945)" (in Czech). Vesmír (73). http://vesmir.cz/clanek.php3?CID=3894. 
  22. Čapka, František (1999). "XI. Léta první i druhé republiky a protektorátu" (in Czech). Dějiny zemí Koruny české v datech. Prague: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-67-2. http://libri.cz/databaze/dejiny/text/t94.html. Retrieved 27 June 2009. 
  23. Svoboda, Petr (2005). "17. listopad 1939 je opředen mýty, říká historik Petr Koura" (in Czech). IForum (Charles University). ISSN 1214-5726. http://www.cuni.cz/IFORUM-2430.html. 
  24. Chalupský, Josef (December 2002). "17. listopad 1939" (in Czech). Zprávy ČPS (Česká Parazitologická Společnost) (4/10). http://www.parazitologie.cz/zpravy/10-4/cl-10.html. 
  25. "Collegium Carolinum München, the Research Center for the Bohemian Lands". http://www.collegium-carolinum.de/. 

References

Further reading

External links