Brünn (Brno)

  • Translation

Article ID EUT5231

Title

Brünn (Brno)

Description

Collector's sheet of the city of Brno in the Czech Republic with 14 marginal views such as the railway station of the state and northern railway, the Augustinian church, ‘Nowyhrad Tunnel’, monument at Franzensberg, etc.

Year

ca. 1851

Artist

Kunstanstalt d. Oestr. Lloyd

Historical Description

Brno is the second largest city in the Czech Republic after Prague. The early historical settlement of Eburodunum, mentioned in the work of Ptolemy, was probably located in the present-day city area. Brno Castle was built between 1021 and 1034, and from 1349 Brno was the seat of the Margraves of Moravia. In 1641, Brno replaced Olomouc as the capital of Moravia, and during the Thirty Years' War, Brno was unsuccessfully besieged by the Swedish General Lennart Torstensson in 1643. About a hundred years later, in 1742, the First Silesian War brought Prussian troops to the city. In 1805, the Battle of Austerlitz between the Austrian and Russian armies on the one hand and the army of French Emperor Napoleon I on the other took place near the town. On Napoleon's orders, Brno's fortifications lost their function as fortresses, but were preserved as buildings. Around 1900, Brno's population was predominantly German-speaking, but life in Brno was bilingual, and “Brünnerisch” can be understood as a mixture of the two languages.

Place of Publication Trieste and Vienna
Dimensions (cm)22 x 26 cm
ConditionStains outer margins
Coloringcolored
TechniqueSteel engraving

Reproduction:

19.50 €

( A reproduction can be ordered individually on request. )