Bohuà ¡ovice nad Ohà Âà() is a town in LitomÃÂà Âice District in the ÃÂstànad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 2,400 inhabitants.
Bohuà ¡ovice nad Ohà Âàconsists of two municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
The initial name of the settlement was BÃºà ¡ovice. The name was derived from the personal name BÃºà ¡, meaning "the village of BÃºà ¡'s people". Because BÃºà ¡ was a shortened form of the name Bohuà ¡, the name of the settlement was distorted to its present form in the 14th century.
Bohuà ¡ovice nad Ohà Âàis located about south of LitomÃÂà Âice and southeast of ÃÂstànad Labem. It lies in a flat agricultural landscape of the Lower Ohà Âe Table. The town proper lies on the left bank of the Ohà Âe River.
The first written mention of Bohuà ¡ovice nad Ohà Âàis from 993, when Duke Boleslaus II donated the village to the Bà Âevnov Monastery. The village often changed hands. In 1384, the monastery in Doksany had built the Church of St. Procopius. From 1436 to 1460, Bohuà ¡ovice was owned by the town of LitomÃÂà Âice, then it was acquired by Vilému of Kounice, who sold it to the KaplÃÂà  of Sulejovice family. But after the court process, the village returned to the property of the Doksany Monastery.
During the Thirty Years' War, Bohuà ¡ovice was repeatedly looted and damaged by Saxons and Swedes. After the partial restoration of the village, it was once again plundered, this time by the Prussians in the Seven Years' War.
The economic development of the village started with the construction of the railway from Prague to Dresden, which was put into operation in 1850. In 1920, Bohuà ¡ovice was promoted to a town. After it ceased to be a town during World War II, the status of the town was restored in 1998.
Bohuà ¡ovice nad Ohà Âàis located on the railway line PragueâÂÂDÃÂÃÂÃÂn.
The main landmark of the town is the Church of Saints Procopius and Nicholas. It is a Baroque church of high artistic level from 1716 with an originally Gothic tower.
Other sights are the Chapel of Saint Anne, built in the Empire style in the first half of the 19th century, and a stone Empire bridge over the Ohà Âe from 1848.