Chapter

Hussite Revolution & Frontier War

The Hussite Revolution shattered western Bohemia's monastic network and turned its frontier towns into battlegrounds. Hussite forces burned Kladruby Monastery in 1421, destroying its movable art and scattering its community — the scars of that destruction are still visible in the rebuilt fabric. But at Domažlice in 1431, Hussite defenders routed a crusading army — a battle still celebrated in Chodsko memory. The Chodové, loyal to their royal privileges, navigated between Hussite and Catholic forces while maintaining their border-guard role. The war remade the religious landscape: monastic lands were seized, pilgrimage traditions disrupted, and Catholic authority dramatically weakened — a rupture whose memory the Counter-Reformation would later attempt to overwrite through architecture and ritual. At Bečov, the castle changed hands during the upheaval, acquiring new defensive features.

1419 - 1471
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Places connected to this chapter

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continuity vault

Bečov nad Teplou Castle

A Gothic castle (first mentioned 1349) whose layers record every subsequent era: the medieval bergfried, Renaissance Pluh Houses, Baroque tower, and the dramatic 1985 discovery of the Romanesque Shrine of St. Maurus hidden under the chapel floor — a reliquary described as 'the finding of the century.' The castle preserves material evidence of how West Bohemian noble families navigated regime change from the 14th century through WWII confiscation and communist-era school use to post-1989 reconstruction. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Bečov nad Teplou Castle; Shrine of St. Maurus; relikviář svatého Maura; castle tour; Gothic fortress; treasure discovery

Tour the Gothic castle with its 1360 al secco wall paintings, see the Shrine of St. Maurus (one of the most significant Romanesque reliquaries in Europe), and walk through the Baroque chateau rooms opened to the public since 1996.

frontier

Domažlice Old Town

The frontier town that served as the administrative seat of the Chodové border-guard community and the site of the pivotal 1431 Battle of Domažlice where Hussite forces routed a crusading army. The well-preserved historic center (protected as an urban monument reservation) still shows the medieval street plan and the Chodský zámek (Chod Castle) where the Chodové court met every four weeks. The town square hosts the Chodské slavnosti a Vavřinecká pouť every August — the largest ethnographic festival in West Bohemia, layered with church pilgrimage (since 1685), communist secularization (since 1955), and post-1989 restoration. The 72nd edition in 2026 counts from the 1955 relaunch, not from the centuries-old pilgrimage. Anchor modes: living_ritual; material_layer; network_route | Search hooks: Domažlice Old Town; Chodské slavnosti; Vavřinecká pouť; Chodský zámek; Hussite battle 1431; pilgrimage procession; bagpipe parade

Walk the medieval street plan of a protected urban monument reservation, see the Chodský zámek (Chod Castle), and experience the Chodské slavnosti a Vavřinecká pouť in August — a festival where folk parade and church pilgrimage coexist in a single weekend.

Celebrations and traditions

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More chapters in West Bohemia

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

Holy Roman Empire & Royal Town Network

1295 - 1419

Under the Holy Roman Empire and the Luxembourg dynasty, western Bohemia's frontier zone crystallized into a network of royal towns, mining settlements, and castle strongholds. Stříbro (literally 'Silver') grew from 12th-century mining roots into a royal town whose silver financed Bohemian kings. Loket Castle — called 'the Impregnable Castle of Bohemia' — guarded the Ohře river valley. Domažlice became the administrative seat of the Chodové, whose 24 royal privileges (1325–1612) gave them self-government, exemption from serf labor, and the right to bear arms under their own banner bearing a dog's head. Bečov nad Teplou Castle rose as a Gothic fortress (first mentioned 1349) controlling the trade route through the Teplá river valley. The Czech-German border was not yet an ethnic boundary — German and Czech speakers coexisted in these towns, and the frontier was defined by royal privilege, not nationality.

Chapter

Habsburg Integration & Renaissance Confessionalization

1471 - 1618

The Jagiellonian and early Habsburg rulers reintegrated western Bohemia into a centralizing kingdom while the Reformation and Counter-Reformation began pulling communities in opposite directions. Plzeň's Cathedral of St. Bartholomew received its towering spire (completed c. 1525), making it the tallest church in Bohemia and a visual assertion of Catholic continuity. Loket Castle passed to the Šlik family, who added Renaissance modifications to the Gothic stronghold. The Chodové received their final royal privileges in 1612, just six years before the system would be upended by the Thirty Years' War. German colonization of the borderlands accelerated, creating bilingual towns where Czech and German communities lived side by side — a coexistence that the national narratives of later centuries would either romanticize or deny.

Chapter

Přemyslid Monastic Colonization & Christianization

800 - 1295

Přemyslid dynastic expansion and monastic foundations drove the Christianization and settlement of western Bohemia from the 9th century onward. Prince Vladislav I founded Kladruby Monastery in 1115 as a Benedictine house, and the nobleman Hroznata established Teplá Abbey in 1193 with Premonstratensian monks from Strahov. These monasteries became the region's first centers of literacy, agriculture, and spiritual authority — the Romanesque church at Teplá is one of the oldest standing churches in Bohemia. The Přemyslid kings also formalized the Chodové border-guard system, granting free farmers along the Bavarian frontier the privilege of armed border patrol in exchange for personal freedom and direct royal subordination. Stand in the Romanesque nave at Teplá and you stand where monks first imposed the Latin liturgical calendar on a landscape that would, for centuries, also sustain pre-Christian seasonal rituals at its margins.

Chapter

Habsburg Counter-Reformation & Baroque Transformation

1618 - 1740

The Catholic victory in the Thirty Years' War transformed western Bohemia through a deliberate program of Counter-Reformation memory assertion. The Jesuits arrived in Klatovy (1656–76), building their church and catacombs as instruments of re-Catholicization — the mummified bodies in the crypt were visible proof that the Catholic dead were sanctified. At Kladruby, Jan Blažej Santini-Aichel rebuilt the conventual church (1712–26) in his signature Baroque-Gothic fusion: Gothic forms claimed continuity with the pre-Hussite medieval church, while Baroque dynamism asserted Counter-Reformation authority. The Plague Column on Plzeň's Republic Square (1681) proclaimed divine intercession. And on Veselá hora near Domažlice, a chapel built in 1685 anchored the svatovavřinecká pouť — the St. Lawrence pilgrimage that would become the region's most important annual ritual, surviving even communist attempts to suppress it. The Chodové lost their privileges; Jan Sladký Kozina was executed in Plzeň in 1695 after leading the Chod uprising against the Lamminger nobles. Read the architecture: Baroque vaults over Gothic foundations, pilgrimage chapels on signal hills — the landscape itself was rewritten to assert that the Catholic past had never been broken.