Ore mountains - social and economic conditions: Difference between revisions

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[[File:CSA2.jpg|800px|thumb|right|Czechoslovak Army Mine below Jezeří Castle]]
[[File:CSA2.jpg|800px|thumb|right|Czechoslovak Army Mine below Jezeří Castle (left: petrochemical company in Záluží), 2008]]
==Post WWII culture and society==
==Post WWII culture and society==
[[File:Jezeri jezero.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Jezeri lake]]
[[File:Jezeri jezero.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Jezeří castle with Komořany lake in 1882]]
After the Second World War the vast majority of the original German population was expelled from the land where they had their roots. They were replaced by newcomers from other regions who preyed upon the land as the property of the ousted “enemy” as if it did not deserve protection; it was perceived instead as a conquered territory to eradicate. Contributing factors to this perception was the combination of communist ideology with tense postwar Czech nationalism and the general situation in postwar Europe (see more on the [http://www.czp.cuni.cz/vcsewiki/index.php/Ore_mountains_-_region_and_history#Social_and_national_conflicts VCSE wiki]).  
After the Second World War the vast majority of the original German population was expelled from the land where they had their roots. They were replaced by newcomers from other regions who preyed upon the land as the property of the ousted “enemy” as if it did not deserve protection; it was perceived instead as a conquered territory to eradicate. Contributing factors to this perception was the combination of communist ideology with tense postwar Czech nationalism and the general situation in postwar Europe (see more on the [http://www.czp.cuni.cz/vcsewiki/index.php/Ore_mountains_-_region_and_history#Social_and_national_conflicts VCSE wiki]).  


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