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BRUNN (Czech Brno)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 685 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRUNN (Czech Brno)  , the capital of the
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Austrian margraviate and crownland of Moravia, 89 m . N. of Vienna by
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rail . Pop . (1900) 108,944, of whom 70% are Germans and 30% are Czechs . Briinn is situated for the most
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part between two hills at the confluence of the Schwarzawa and the Zwittawa, and consists of the old
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town and extensive suburbs . On one of the hills, known as the Spielberg (945 ft.), stands a castle which has long been used as a prison, famous for its connexion with Silvio Pellico, who was confined within its walls from 1822 to 1830 . The fortifications of the old town have now been entirely removed, giving place to handsome gardens and well-built streets, which put it in communication with its adjoining suburbs . The old town, although comparatively small, with narrow and crooked but well-paved streets, contains the most important buildings in the city . The Rathaus, which
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dates from 1511, has a
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fine
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Gothic portal, and contains several interesting antiquities . The ecclesiastical buildings comprise the
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cathedral of St Peter, situated on the
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lower hill; the fine Gothic church of St Jacob, built in the 15th century, with its iron tower added in 1845, and a remarkable collection of early prints; the church of the Augustinian friars, dating from the 14th century; and that of the Minorites, with its frescoes, its
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holy stair and its Loretto-house . Amongst the new buildings are the hall of the provincial
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diet, opened in 1881; a handsome new synagogue; the
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national museum of Moravia and
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Silesia and several high educational establishments, including a technical academy and a theological seminary, which are the remnants of the former university of Brunn . It is the seat of a
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Roman Catholic bishop and of a
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Protestant consistory .

Brunn, which is sometimes styled "the Austrian

Manchester," is one of the most
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industrial towns of Austria and the chief seat of the
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cloth industry
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ill the whole
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empire . Other important branches of industry are: the manufacture of various woollen, cotton and
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silk goods, leather, the machinery required in the textile factories,
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brewing, distilling and milling, and the production of
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sugar, oil, gloves and hardware . It is also an important railway junction and carries on a very active trade . Brunn probably dates from the 9th century . In the 11th century it was bestowed by Duke Wratislas II. on his son
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Otto . A place of
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great strength, it held out successfully against sieges —in 1428 by the
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Hussites, in 1467 by King George of Bohemia, in 1645 by the
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Swedish general Torstenson, and in 1742 by the Prussians . In 1805 it was the headquarters of
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Napoleon before the
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battle of Austerlitz . See Trautenberger, Die Chronik der Landeshauptstadt Brunn (Minn, 1893–1897, 5 vols.) .

End of Article: BRUNN (Czech Brno)
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LEONARDO BRUNI (1369-1444)
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HENRY BRUNNER (184o– )

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