Chapter

Vítkovci Patrimonial Network & Přemyslid Royal Foundations

The Vítkovci clan transformed South Bohemia from a Přemyslid frontier into a network of competing patrimonial estates. Around 1220, Jindřich Vítkovec founded 'Novum castrum' (Jindřichův Hradec), while kinsmen erected Rožmberk Castle and, in 1253, the first Gothic castle at Český Krumlov. Each Vítkovci branch bore a different-colored five-petalled rose on its coat of arms—an emblem still visible on buildings across the region. King Přemysl Otakar II countered Vítkovci power by founding royal towns (České Budějovice 1265) and Cistercian monasteries: Zlatá Koruna (1263) as a royal bulwark against the Vítkovci, and Vyšší Brod (1259, founded by Vok I of Rožmberk inviting Cistercians from Wilhering). The Vyšší Brod library, with its Codex Vyssebrodensis and Annales Hohenfurtenses, would survive every subsequent political rupture.

1220 - 1302
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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

political

Český Krumlov Castle – Gothic Hrádek

The original Vítkovci castle built in 1253, the Gothic Hrádek is where South Bohemia's most powerful dynasty began its inscriptions on the landscape. The five-petalled rose emblem on the castle walls launched a heraldic tradition that still marks buildings across the region—material continuity of symbol surviving the Rosenberg extinction in 1611 and four centuries of political change. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Český Krumlov Castle Gothic Hrádek; Vítkovci castle 1253; Rosenberg five-petalled rose; pětilistá růže heraldry; castle tower Krumlov

Climb the castle tower for panoramic views, see the Rosenberg five-petalled rose carved into Gothic stonework, and walk the Lower Castle where the Vítkovci began their regional inscriptions.

political

Rožmberk Castle

The original seat of the Vítkovci/Rosenberg dynasty, Rožmberk Castle gives the family its name (Rožmberk = Rosenberg = rose mountain). The castle's five-petalled rose emblem is the ur-source of the heraldic inscription that spreads across South Bohemia's built landscape—the material anchor for a symbol that would later be reactivated by the Five-Petalled Rose Festival as the basis for invented tradition. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Rožmberk Castle; Vítkovci Rosenberg seat; five-petalled rose origin; pětilistá růže; rose mountain; Rosenberg dynasty

Tour the castle interiors with Rosenberg heraldry, climb the tower, and see the five-petalled rose emblem that gave its name to the entire dynasty and its modern festival reactivations.

spiritual

Vyšší Brod Monastery

Founded in 1259 by Vok I of Rožmberk who invited Cistercians from Wilhering, the monastery preserves over 200 medieval manuscripts including the Codex Vyssebrodensis (c.1310–1320, containing the Annales Hohenfurtenses chronicle) and the Vyšší Brod Cantionale (1410, oldest comprehensive collection of strophic sacred songs from pre-Hussite Bohemia). The Cistercian community was expelled by Nazis in 1941, prevented from returning by Communists in 1948, and restituted in 1995—restoring the monastic liturgical calendar using surviving manuscripts and institutional memory. This is a documented revival based on internal sources, not an invented tradition. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual | Search hooks: Vyšší Brod Monastery; Cistercian abbey 1259; Annales Hohenfurtenses; Codex Vyssebrodensis; monastic liturgical calendar; opus Dei; Cistercian restoration 1995

Visit the monastic library with its medieval manuscripts, the Gothic church, and the Baroque interior. Since 1995, the Cistercian community again maintains the daily office (opus Dei), and the monastery occasionally opens for liturgical events.

spiritual

Zlatá Koruna Monastery

Founded by King Přemysl Otakar II in 1263 as a royal Cistercian bulwark against the powerful Vítkovci family, Zlatá Koruna encodes the political tension between royal and patrimonial power in South Bohemia. Named after a Crown of Thorns relic from King Louis IX of France, the monastery was raided and burnt by Hussites in 1420, its estates seized by Rosenberg Ulrich II, and later abolished by Joseph II in 1785 before being bought by the Schwarzenbergs for industrial use. The surviving Gothic convent church and Baroque chapel of the Angels let you read both the Cistercian foundation and its subsequent ruptures. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual | Search hooks: Zlatá Koruna Monastery; Přemysl Otakar II foundation 1263; Cistercian nunnery; Hussite raid 1420; pilgrimage site; Sancta Corona Spinea

Visit the Gothic convent church with its original 13th-century structure, the Baroque Chapel of the Angels, and exhibitions on monastic life and the Hussite destruction. The site occasionally hosts concerts and cultural events.

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More chapters in South Bohemia

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Chapter

Přemyslid Frontier Christianization & Slavic Settlement

900 - 1220

Přemyslid dynasty consolidation pushed South Bohemia from a Slavic frontier into an administered province. A network of hillforts (hradská soustava) anchored Přemyslid authority—archaeological evidence documents a 10th-century Slavic fortified settlement at the site of today's Jindřichův Hradec Castle, one of the border forts defending the Czech principality. Christianization arrived with Přemyslid administration, overlaying earlier Slavic ritual landscapes with chapel sites, though pre-Christian calendar customs (Masopust, midsummer bonfires) persisted in rural Prácheňsko long after official conversion. This era's material traces are fragmentary—look for them in castle foundations and museum cases rather than standing architecture.

Chapter

Rosenberg Hegemony & Late Gothic Salt Trade Networks

1302 - 1420

When the Vítkovci line of Krumlov died out in 1302, the Rosenberg branch absorbed their estates and made Český Krumlov their seat, beginning three centuries of near-regional dominance. The Rosenbergs controlled the Golden Trail (Zlatá stezka)—the medieval salt trade route connecting Passau to South Bohemia through three branches (Prachatice, Vimperk, Kašperské Hory), operated by German-speaking merchants carrying Alpine salt over the Bohem Forest by packhorse caravan. The salt trade funded Prachatice's later Renaissance architecture and made České Budějovice a commercial hub. The Kájov pilgrimage site, one of Bohemia's oldest Marian shrines with Gothic church foundations from the 14th century, drew devotees under Rosenberg patronage. Walk Prachatice's square and you stand where salt caravans unloaded; the Rosenberg red rose still marks doorways throughout the region.

Chapter

Hussite Revolution & Radical Communal Experiment

1420 - 1452

The Hussite Revolution shattered Rosenberg-dominated South Bohemia. In spring 1420, radical Hussites founded Tábor on a defensible promontory, naming it after the biblical Mount Tabor and establishing a communal experiment in religious equality and shared property. The town's street layout—narrow lanes converging on Žižkovo náměstí designed for defense—and its underground cellar labyrinth still encode the Taborite vision. Both the national-hero and the religious-extremist framings of this era are later constructions; the Hussite Museum, housed in the Old Town Hall since 1960, models a critical approach by documenting 'the evolution of historical memory' rather than simply celebrating. The revolution devastated monastic South Bohemia: Zlatá Koruna was raided and burnt in 1420, its Cistercian nuns expelled, and Rosenberg Ulrich II seized monastic estates that were never fully returned.

Chapter

Rosenberg Restoration & Renaissance Estate Culture

1452 - 1611

The Rosenberg restoration after the Hussite wars produced South Bohemia's most visible heritage layer. Under William of Rosenberg, Český Krumlov became a Renaissance cultural center; under his brother Peter Vok (the last Rosenberg, d. 1611), the fishpond system reached its apex. Estate manager Jakub Krčín built Rožmberk Pond (1584–1590)—the largest pond in Central Europe at 4.89 km²—initiating an annual carp harvest that has continued without interruption through every subsequent regime, making it the region's strongest candidate for genuinely continuous ritual tradition. The Lords of Hradec transformed Jindřichův Hradec Castle with Italian architects, adding Adam's Building, the Spanish Wing, and the Rondel music pavilion. Třeboň Chateau became a Rosenberg Renaissance residence. This era's architecture and aquaculture calendar anchor the region's modern heritage identity—yet the architecture is often attributed to generic 'Bohemian' culture, obscuring the German-speaking Eggenberg and Schwarzenberg communities who later transformed it.