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Current AffairsUnearthing Bohemia's Celtic heritage ahead of Samhain, the 'New Year'

29-10-2004 | Brian Kenety

The first recorded name for Bohemia has its roots in the Celtic word 'Boiohaemum', meaning home of the Boii people, a Celtic tribe which settled in Central Europe centuries before the Slavic peoples arrived. Ahead of the Celtic New Year, Brian Kenety takes a look at efforts to celebrate and promote the Czech lands' ancient heritage.  More

Czechs in HistoryCreatures of the Night

27-10-2004 | Jan Velinger

October 31st - Halloween - is just around the corner, a date that historically marks the end of the harvest and the slow ushering in of long dark winter. A time of year humans long believed saw the fading of the boundary between the living and the dead, so that shades again walked the earth, among them - Vampyres - stalking the living for their blood. More

Czech ScienceArchaeologists carry out rescue excavations on building sites

20-04-2004 | Pavla Horáková

Archeological locality at Otrokovice, photo: CTK The current boom of the construction industry in the Czech Republic is keeping Czech archaeologists busy.  More

Czech ScienceCzech Egyptology - Part III

20-01-2004 | Pavla Horáková

Photo: http://egypt.cuni.cz/ The history of Ancient Egypt has been studied in the Czech lands for more than 100 years and Czechs have been actively involved in excavations in Egypt for over four decades. In today's programme we'll be looking at the most significant achievements of Czech Egyptologists. Jaromir Krejci of the Czech Institute of Egyptology.  More

Czech ScienceCzech Egyptology - Part II

13-01-2004 | Pavla Horáková

Last week we started a short series on Czech Egyptology, probably the best-known branch of Czech archaeology. Jaromir Krejci of the Czech Institute of Egyptology took us to Abusir, one of the most important archaeological sites in Egypt, where the Czech expedition has been working since 1960. To be able to excavate at the site, the Czech Egyptologists need their concession renewed every year. But also vital for the Czech experts is good cooperation with locals who assist in the excavations.  More

Current AffairsPrague Castle older than presumed

06-01-2004 | Dita Asiedu

Prague Castle Since 1925, a team from the Czech Academy of Science's Institute of Archaeology has been accompanying all building activities at Prague Castle with excavation work to find important objects and clues that point to the castle's historical development. Now, almost eighty years later, they have drawn a surprising conclusion from recent discoveries, which will soon require text books to be re-written. Dita Asiedu has the story:  More

Czech ScienceCzech Egyptology - Part I

06-01-2004 | Pavla Horáková

In the last four weeks, we discussed the history and achievements of Czech archaeology. Perhaps the best-known branch of Czech archaeology on an international scale is Czech Egyptology. This week we talk to Egyptologist Jaromir Krejci from Prague's Charles University who first takes us back to the 19th century when Jan Kminek-Szedlo, as the first Czech ever, started his Egyptology studies in Italy.  More

Czech ScienceCzech archaeologists abroad

30-12-2003 | Pavla Horáková

Hittite script Welcome to Czech Science. For the last time today, Charles University Professor Jan Bouzek will talk about Czech archaeology, focusing this time on its achievements outside this country.  More

Czech ScienceExcavation sites in Czech Republic

23-12-2003 | Pavla Horáková

Traces of Celtic fortified settlement in Zbraslav Welcome to Czech Science. Today we'll hear the third instalment in our short series on Czech archaeology. Over the last millennia, many peoples lived and left their mark on what is now the Czech Republic. Charles University Professor Jan Bouzek will tell us about interesting sites and excavations in this country and also about recent cases in which insensitive construction work destroyed priceless monuments forever.  More

Czech ScienceHistory of archaeology in Czech lands (1939-1966)

16-12-2003 | Pavla Horáková

The Ceramic Venus of Dolni Vestonice Welcome to Czech Science. Today we'll hear the second part in our short series dedicated to Czech archaeology. Last week, Charles University Professor Jan Bouzek told us about the history of archaeology in the Czech lands from its early days in the 16th century until the end of the 1930s. At that time archaeology was already a well-established science in the then Czechoslovakia but the pace of development was interrupted by the outbreak of the Second World War. In today's episode Professor Jan Bouzek talks about Czech archaeology under the Nazi occupation, and later under the communist regime.  More

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