Opava (; , ) is a city in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 55,000 inhabitants. It lies on the Opava River, near the border with Poland. It is a regional centre of education and culture, known for the Silesian University in Opava and the Silesian Museum.
Opava became a town in 1224. It is one of the historical centres of Silesia and was a historical capital of Czech Silesia. The most important monuments, protected as national cultural monuments of the Czech Republic, are the Co-Cathedral of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, the Chapel of the Holy Cross from the year 1394, and the Petr Bezruč City House of Culture.
Administrative division
thumb|City parts of Opava (shown in color)
Opava consists of eight self-governing city parts in the suburbs and the central part that is directly administered. In addition, Opava consists of 15 municipal parts, whose borders do not respect the boundaries of the city parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
- undivided Opava
- Město (3,485)
- Předměstí (22,212)
- Kateřinky (12,795)
- Kylešovice (7,311)
- Jaktař (2,182)
- Komárov (1,323)
- Komárov (1,323)
- Malé Hoštice (1,710)
- Malé Hoštice (1,654)
- Pusté Jakartice (56)
- Milostovice (305)
- Milostovice (305)
- Podvihov (754)
- Komárovské Chaloupky (155)
- Podvihov (599)
- Suché Lazce (1,034)
- Suché Lazce (1,034)
- Vávrovice (1,317)
- Vávrovice (1,036)
- Předměstí (237)
- Jaktař (44)
- Vlaštovičky (385)
- Vlaštovičky (385)
- Zlatníky (333)
- Zlatníky (333)
Etymology
The city is named after the Opava River. The name of the river arose from the old Celtic words apa, opa, i.e. 'water'.
Geography
Opava is located about northwest of Ostrava. Most of its territory lies in the Opava Hilly Land within the Silesian Lowlands, but it also extends to the Nízký Jeseník range in the southeast and northwest. The highest point of the municipal territory is Hůrka at above sea level.
Opava is situated at the confluence of the Opava and Moravice rivers. The Opava River flows through the city centre.
Lake Stříbrné jezero is an artificial lake on the outskirts of the city created by the flooding of the former gypsum quarry. It is used for recreational purposes.
Climate
History
thumb|Opava in 1900
thumb|160px|City hall
The first written mention of Opava is from 1195. In 1224, Opava received town privileges. After the Duchy of Troppau was established, Opava became its capital.
In 1427–1431, the duchy was ruled by the Hussites. In 1485, it was acquired by Matthias Corvinus and ruled by the Hungarians until 1526. In 1613, Karl I of Liechtenstein became Duke of Opava and merged the duchy with the Duchy of Krnov.
After the defeat of Austria-Hungary in World War I, Opava became part of Czechoslovakia in 1919.
In 1938, Opava was ceded to Nazi Germany as a result of the Munich Agreement. It was administered as a part of Reichsgau Sudetenland. On 22 April 1945, Opava was liberated by the Soviet Red Army at the cost of enormous war damage. In 1945–1946, the German population was expelled under terms of Beneš decrees and the city was resettled with Czechs. On 1 January 1946, the municipalities of Jaktař, Kateřinky and Kylešovice were joined to Opava. After the war, entire new residential areas and industrial plants were built.
Economy
Opava is home especially to the engineering, food, paper and pharmaceutical industries.
The largest non-industrial employers are the hospital and the psychiatric hospital.
Culture
thumb|Silesian Theatre and Co-Cathedral of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary
Opava is an important cultural centre of Opavian Silesia. The Silesian Theatre in Opava was founded in 1805.
Education
thumb|Silesian Museum
Opava is home to the Silesian University, the only public university in the country not situated in a regional capital. It was established in 1991. A one-storey city hall and the tower were built in 1614–1618. However, the less representative town hall building around the tower was demolished in 1902 and replaced with a new one in the Neo-Renaissance style.
The second main landmark is the Co-Cathedral of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. It is the largest building in the Czech Republic built in the so-called Silesian Brick Gothic style. A solid prismatic tower was built in the late 13th century and a higher south tower was built in the early 14th century, both towers were originally intended as part of a city hall. The church building between the towers dates from the mid-14th century. In 1996, the church became the second Episcopal church of the Ostrava-Opava diocese, and therefore a co-cathedral. With , the southern church tower is the highest tower in Silesia.
There are three monuments, protected as national cultural monuments. Besides the co-cathedral, there is the Chapel of the Holy Cross, which dates from 1394, and the Petr Bezruč City House of Culture; a Neo-Renaissance house, built in 1908–1910 according to the design by Leopold Bauer.
The Silesian Museum, founded in 1814, is the oldest public museum in the Czech Republic. It has about 2,400,000 exhibition items and is the third largest museum in the country.
Notable people
- Martin of Opava (?–1278) historian and cleric
- Johann Palisa (1848–1925), Austrian astronomer
- Eduard von Böhm-Ermolli (1856–1941), Austrian field marshal
- Felix Woyrsch (1860–1944), German composer
- Joseph Maria Olbrich (1867–1908), Austrian architect
- Petr Bezruč (1867–1958), poet
- Max Eschig (1872–1927), French music publisher
- Franz Bardon (1909–1958), occultist
- Joy Adamson (1910–1980), naturalist and author
- Helmut Niedermeyer (1926–2014), Austrian businessman
- Josef Gebauer (1942–2004), historian
- Boris Rösner (1951–2006), actor
- Pavel Složil (born 1955), tennis player
- Bohdan Sláma (born 1967), film director
- Kamil Mrůzek (born 1977), kayaker
- Nataša Novotná (born 1977), dancer and choreographer
- Zdeněk Pospěch (born 1978), footballer
- Zuzana Ondrášková (born 1980), tennis player
- Lukáš Vondráček (born 1986), pianist
- Libor Kozák (born 1989), footballer
- Esther Hoffe (born 1906), secretary to Max Brod, writer and friend of Franz Kafka
Twin towns – sister cities
Opava is twinned with:
- Katowice, Poland <!--confirmed-->
- Kearney, United States
- Liptovský Mikuláš, Slovakia
- Racibórz, Poland
- Roth, Germany
- Zugló (Budapest), Hungary
- Żywiec, Poland
References
External links
- Regional news
- Old postcards
