Sedlec-Prčice
Sedlec-Prčice | |||
Town | |||
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Country | Czech Republic | ||
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Region | Central Bohemian | ||
District | Příbram | ||
Commune | Sedlčany | ||
Elevation | 407 m (1,335 ft) | ||
Coordinates | 49°34′03″N 14°31′50″E / 49.56750°N 14.53056°ECoordinates: 49°34′03″N 14°31′50″E / 49.56750°N 14.53056°E | ||
Area | 64.11 km2 (24.75 sq mi) | ||
Population | 2,819 (2006) | ||
Density | 44/km2 (114/sq mi) | ||
First mentioned | 11th century | ||
Mayor | Marie Kovalová | ||
Timezone | CET (UTC+1) | ||
- summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | ||
Postal code | 257 91 | ||
Location in the Czech Republic | |||
Wikimedia Commons: Sedlec-Prčice | |||
Statistics: statnisprava.cz | |||
Sedlec-Prčice is a town in the Czech Republic. The town is sixty kilometers south of Prague.
There is an old synagogue on the town square that now hosts a small factory that makes sporting equipment.[1]
Located in a field somewhere beyond the town is the old Jewish cemetery, founded in 1867.[1] There are still said to be a small number of gravestones hidden in the overgrowth. The cemetery is owned by the local Jewish community.[2]
With all the Jews gone, a centuries-old interdependent community slowly built up and enriched by diverse connections, perspectives and a wholeness and continuity between the physical and the spiritual is gone along with them. That was destroyed one September morning in 1942 when eight families, twenty-six Jews, were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
References
- 1 2 Kuča, Karel (2004). Města a městečka v Čechách, na Moravě a ve Slezsku 6 (Pro-Sto) (in Czech). Prague: Libri. pp. 592–600. ISBN 80-7277-040-3.
- ↑ GemeindeView:Prcice, The Web Encyclopedia of Jewish Communities In Bohemia and Moravia, accessed April, 2009
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sedlec-Prčice. |