Bohemian Switzerland National Park
Established on 1 January 2000 as the Czech Republic's fourth national park, Bohemian Switzerland (České Švýcarsko) reframed the Elbe sandstone gorge at the German border as a cross-border natural heritage corridor adjoining Saxon Switzerland National Park. The park's sandstone formations, deep gorges, and forested plateaus had been a romantic-tourism destination since the 18th century (the name 'Saxon Switzerland' was coined by 18th-century artists), but the national park designation created a new institutional framework for heritage tourism, seasonal visitor patterns, and guided nature programs. Hřensko at the Elbe gorge serves as the park's gateway. Anchor modes: custodian;signal;network_route | Search hooks: Bohemian Switzerland National Park;České Švýcarsko;Hřensko;sandstone gorge;cross-border heritage;Elbe corridor
Hike the marked trails through sandstone gorges and forested plateaus, visit the Pravčická brána (largest natural sandstone arch in Europe), take the Elbe gorge boat ride from Hřensko, and follow the cross-border trail into Saxon Switzerland National Park in Germany.
Krupka Mining Landscape
Krupka is the oldest tin-mining site in Central Europe, with 800 years of documented extraction. The medieval town plan, accommodating the steep Ore Mountains terrain, is completely preserved. Inscribed as part of the Erzgebirge/Krušnohoří Mining Cultural Landscape on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2019, Krupka now anchors the Czech side's mining-heritage revival—though this revival is institutional (UNESCO-driven) rather than organic community continuity, as the St. Joachim Foundation acknowledges that old mining customs largely disappeared with the expelled German-speaking population. The late-medieval to early-modern mining works are exceptional in their density and preservation. Anchor modes: custodian;material_layer | Search hooks: Krupka Mining Landscape;hornická krajina Krupka;tin mining;UNESCO Krušnohoří;miners' parade;hornický průvod
Visit the preserved medieval town center with its steep mining-adapted street plan, tour the mining heritage sites documented by the Montanregion Erzgebirge/Krušnohoří UNESCO program, and look for revived miners' parades and mining-heritage events promoted through the UNESCO designation.
Lake Milada
Lake Milada is the Czech Republic's first major reclaimed brown-coal-mine lake, created by flooding the former Chabařovice Mine pit near Ústí nad Labem. As the third-largest lake in the country, it opened for recreation in 2015 and has a dedicated website (jezeromilada.cz) listing activities and events. Lake Milada represents the post-industrial reclamation that is converting North Bohemia's open-pit mining wounds into recreational landscapes—the same process planned for the ČSA mine near Jezeří Chateau and the former Most mine (now Lake Most). These reclaimed lakes are creating a new kind of seasonal calendar: swimming, sailing, and beach events replacing the mining and industrial cycles that preceded them. Anchor modes: signal;material_layer | Search hooks: Lake Milada;Jezero Milada;Chabařovice Mine;reclaimed mine lake;reclamation;recreation
Swim, sail, or walk the recreational trails around the reclaimed lake near Ústí nad Labem, observe the transition from industrial mining pit to recreational landscape, and visit the official website for current events and seasonal activities.
Teplice
Teplice preserves the strongest institutional continuity in the region: the annual Zahájení lázeňské sezóny (spa season opening) is now in its 872nd year (2026), a calendar-driven ritual that has survived complete population replacement across the Habsburg, interwar, Nazi, Communist, and post-1989 eras. The Pravřídlo thermal spring vanished on 12 February 1879 due to mining operations but was rediscovered through deep drilling; continuous pumping has maintained the springs ever since. The spa houses, colonnades, and seasonal concert calendar structure Teplice's year from June through September. This is institution- and calendar-driven continuity rather than community-driven—the institution (lázně) outlives every population that has tended it. Anchor modes: living_ritual;signal;material_layer | Search hooks: Teplice;Zahájení lázeňské sezóny;Pravřídlo;spa season opening;lázně;Kurort
Attend the ceremonial 872nd spa season opening in May/June 2026, walk the Spa Alley (Lázeňská ulice) past the Pravřídlo spring outlet with its ceramic pig's-head relief, promenade through the colonnades, and follow the spa events calendar of concerts and social events from June through September.
Terezín
The Terezín (Theresienstadt) Memorial is the most visited memorial in the Czech Republic, with approximately 260,000 visitors annually. The site comprises the Small Fortress (Gestapo prison 1940–45), the Ghetto Museum (opened 1991), the Magdeburg Barracks, the Crematorium (over 30,000 victims), the Memorial at the Ohře (where ashes of 22,000 were dumped), and the National Cemetery. Annual commemoration ceremonies—including the Day of Remembrance for Victims of the Holocaust—have developed their own ritual calendar, participant communities, and ceremonial practices. While these commemorate destruction rather than preserve pre-war Jewish ritual life (Litoměřice had 425 Jews in 1930; Jablonec had a community), the annual ceremonies are themselves a living tradition. Anchor modes: custodian;living_ritual;signal | Search hooks: Terezín;Terezín Memorial;Den památky obětí holokaustu;commemoration;Ghetto Museum;Small Fortress
Tour the Small Fortress with its cells, execution place, and 500m corridor, visit the Ghetto Museum with its Memorial Hall of Children's drawings and poems, see the Crematorium with original furnaces, attend the annual commemoration ceremonies, and walk the Memorial at the Ohře where 22,000 urns of ashes were dumped into the river.
Ústí nad Labem
Ústí nad Labem (Aussig) is the region's largest city and its most concentrated site of contested memory. The 31 July 1945 violence against ethnic Germans (estimated 80–100 deaths) was suppressed under Communism and acknowledged only in 2005 with a bilingual Czech-German memorial plaque on the Dr. Edvard Beneš bridge. The city also hosts a significant Roma community—largely descended from eastern Slovak Roma relocated to the depopulated borderlands after 1948—whose cultural visibility is minimal despite the 1999 Matiční Street wall becoming an international symbol of Czech racial segregation. The Elbe river port and chemical industry made Ústí an industrial powerhouse, but post-industrial decline and the Roma marginalization make this a minority_hinge: a place where the region's unresolved memory conflicts are physically visible. Anchor modes: material_layer;network_route | Search hooks: Ústí nad Labem;Aussig;Matiční Street wall;1945 memorial plaque;Elbe port;commemoration
See the bilingual memorial plaque on the Dr. Edvard Beneš bridge, visit the city museum, walk the Elbe embankment past the industrial port, and observe the Matiční Street area where the segregation wall stood until its removal in 1999.
Železný Brod
Železný Brod's Mini Museum of Glass Nativity Scenes (Minimuzeum skleněných betlémů), run by Alena Kortanová with ~80 exhibits, is the custodian of a locally invented 20th-century tradition: glass nativity scenes (skleněné betlémy) first appeared here approximately 80 years ago and became a devotional-craft hybrid connecting the glass-making economy to the Christmas liturgical calendar. This is NOT an ancient folk ritual but a modern craft innovation that achieved traditional status through institutional adoption—the Secondary Glass Art School and local workshops maintain it. The museum includes a creative bead workshop and live glass-making demonstrations, making it a living workshop rather than just a display. The Trávníky historical conservation area houses the museum. Anchor modes: custodian;living_ritual | Search hooks: Železný Brod;skleněný betlém;Mini Museum of Glass Nativity Scenes;glass nativity;Advent;glass workshop
Visit the Mini Museum of Glass Nativity Scenes in the Trávníky conservation area (~80 nativity scenes in figurine, bead, painted, engraved, and furnace-worked glass), participate in the creative bead workshop, watch live glass-making demonstrations, and shop for typical Železný Brod glass products at the entrance.