Community functions were called in the streets of Prague, Stalin Jr.
A number of prominent street streets, cities and cities have changed their name over the years and several times. The most common reason for this was political motivation, because Prague was only a part of the monarchy during the last century and the newly formed republic, and in addition, it went through a period of Nazi and communist totalitarianism, and freedom was not revived.
The first during the forty years of communism was a named street of propaganda, and this agenda was firmly in the hands of the regime. Only in the last years of the last century, when political conditions eased, this power was briefly reversed without the intervention of party authorities.
Only during the period of normalization in the seventies and eighties did the presidium of the KS Municipal Committee have a decisive say.
The result of this procedure was an excessive ideologisation of nomenclature and a completely one-sided preference, according to the often insignificant representatives of the labor and communist movement and the KS innovators in the local and neutral names or the proposal of the citizens of the localities concerned. .
The main names were both in the new buildings, especially on the streets, and first and foremost in the old quarters in the city center. This is also the case of Sokolsk, Wilsonova and Mezibransk streets in the New Town in Prague 2, which at the end of the seven hundred years became a bite of Severojin magistrla. And that is why they changed to the Great Wall to commemorate the state coup in Czechoslovakia in 1948. Legerova’s neighbor was again called Lidovch milicka Street.
In the same way, the European Union in Prague 6, which wants to fly, was named Leninova due to its importance due to its importance. Towards the center, it is directly connected to the Vtzn nmst, which has undergone a number of changes in the past. And that’s just because he shared the general army there. While the Protectorate was named after the Brann Power, under Communism it was the new revolution.
Stalin Jr. in Prague DV Street
In the past, Stalinova Street existed in two cities in the metropolis. At first it was called Vinohradsk until 1962, but due to the fall of this dictator’s cult, the name changed.
The interesting thing is that in 1971 the street of the same name was created quite inconspicuously in the town of Starochodovsk Street in Prague 11. And even the revolution was abrupt, when it disappeared and on December 20, 1989. It thus became one of the last block of streets in the Soviet bloc, which it was named after Stalin.
As the streets of Prague were called thirty years ago
Source: Prask ulink |
Other streets, on the other hand, were named after relatively unknown representatives of the previous regime, such as Famrova, Jodasova or Krkova.
It is one of the most prestigious places for long-term naming, which is why it has changed so many times in the past. Thirty years ago, Prague had, for example, Gottwald’s name, Masaryk’s day, Karl Marx’s name (Podolsk) and Bedich Engels’s name (Ranovo).
A fundamental change, of course, saw with the November Revolution of 1989. However, the original names and completely new names did not appear immediately. First, an independent group of solid experts from the state for the Czech language or Charles University was formed, who prepared a new directive for the selection and approval of the so-called
And in 1991, she transformed into the history commission of the council of the capital, which gradually proposed a post-November evening.
The whole process lasted for about half a ninety years. On the one hand, it has not always been easy to find a new suitable name, and on the other hand, it was a large administrative network, which means that people have to change all their documents, explains Marek Laovka, who is the head of a separate modern funds fund in the Capital City Archive.
According to him, only the most famous cases, such as Stalin’s or Dan’s street, which was called by Soviet politics, changed quickly after the coup.
However, there were also a number of controversial cases, for example, the public could remove all the names associated with people who professed communist ideology. However, the local commission recommended that the names of the communists who perished during the Second World of the Wolves and had nothing to do with the regime at the time remained on the enamelled tablets. This is one of the reasons why, in the end, after 1989, about a hundred streets were woven.