Brno Central Cemetery (alternatively called Central Cemetery of Brno; ) is a graveyard in Brno, Czech Republic. It is the second largest cemetery in the Czech Republic with an area of . It was opened in 1883.
Location and organisation
The Brno Central Cemetery has an area of , making it the second largest graveyard in the Czech Republic after OlÃ
¡any Cemetery in Prague. It is located in the Ã
 týÃ
Âice district of Brno in the southern part of Brno. The cemetery is divided into 113 sections and also includes the Circle of Honour and the Alley of Honour for the funerals of important figures of the city of Brno, and a military cemetery.
The Brno Central Cemetery consists of about 70,000 grave sites, and about 400,000 deceased are buried there. There are also three scattering meadows.
History
The Brno Central Cemetery was established in 1882âÂÂ1883 according to the project of the architect Alois Prastorfer, originally on an area of . The Ceremonial Hall was built according to the design by Bohuslav Fuchs and Josef PoláÃ
¡ek in 1926âÂÂ1927.
Since 1958, the entire cemetery is protected as a cultural monument. Since 1989, the Honorary Burial Place of Allied Troops and Participants in the Domestic Resistance from World War II is protected as a national cultural monument. Since 2017, the crematorium, which was built by Ernst Wiesner in the Functionalist style in 1926âÂÂ1929, is also protected as a national cultural monument.
Notable interments
Notable people buried at Brno Central Cemetery include:
Politics and military
- EvÃ
¾en Erban (1912âÂÂ1994), politician
- Jan Helcelet (1812âÂÂ1878), politician, naturalist and journalist
- Josef HybeÃ
¡ (1850âÂÂ1921), labour leader, politician and journalist
- Kurt Knispel (1921âÂÂ1945), German tank commander
- Leopold Lojka (1886âÂÂ1926), chauffeur and soldier
- Pavel Andreyevich Mironov (1919âÂÂ1945), Russian soldier
- Carl Friedrich von Pückler-Burghauss (1886âÂÂ1945), German military officer
- TomáÃ
¡ Eduard Ã
 ilinger (1866âÂÂ1913), politician and journalist
- Rudolf Singule (1883âÂÂ1945), military leader
- Josef Urválek (1910âÂÂ1979), judge and prosecutor
- ZdeÃ
Âka Wiedermannová-MotyÃÂková (1868âÂÂ1915), women's rights activist
- FrantiÃ
¡ek Zach (1807âÂÂ1892), military leader and military theorist
Science and academia
- Karel Absolon (1877âÂÂ1960), archaeologist, paleontologist and speleologist
- Inocenc ArnoÃ
¡t Bláha (1879âÂÂ1960), sociologist and philosopher
- Otakar BorÃ
¯vka (1899âÂÂ1995), mathematician
- Josef Dobrovský (1753âÂÂ1829), philologist and historian
- LeoÃ
¡ FirkuÃ
¡ný (1905âÂÂ1950), musicologist
- AntonÃÂn Fleischer (1850âÂÂ1934), entomologist and physician
- Václav Holek (1886âÂÂ1954), firearm engineer
- Albert Kutal (1904âÂÂ1976), art historian
- VladimÃÂr List (1877âÂÂ1971), electrical engineer and scientist
- Leopold Melichar (1856âÂÂ1924), entomologist
- Gregor Mendel (1822âÂÂ1884), Austrian biologist, meteorologist and mathematician
- Cyril Napp (1792âÂÂ1867), abbot and scholar
- Arne Novák (1880âÂÂ1939), literary historian
- FrantiÃ
¡ek TrávnÃÂÃÂek (1888âÂÂ1961), Slavist and Bohemist
- Václav Vondrák (1859âÂÂ1925), Slavist
- FrantiÃ
¡ek Vymazal (1841âÂÂ1917), polyglot and linguist
- Heinrich Wawra von Fernsee (1831âÂÂ1887), botanist, physician and explorer
- Jan ZavÃ
Âel (1879âÂÂ1946), zoologist and entomologist
Arts
- JiÃ
ÂàBaborovský (1875âÂÂ1946), physical chemist
- BÃ
Âetislav Bakala (1897âÂÂ1958), conductor, pianist and composer
- Josef Berg (1927âÂÂ1971), composer and musicologist
- Ivan Blatný (1919âÂÂ1990), poet
- Lev Blatný (1894âÂÂ1930), poet and writer
- Helena BochoÃ
Âáková-Dittrichová (1894âÂÂ1980), illustrator and painter
- Gustav Brom (1921âÂÂ1995), musician and composer
- Osvald Chlubna (1893âÂÂ1971), composer
- Vlasta Fialová (1928âÂÂ1998), actress
- Rudolf FirkuÃ
¡ný (1912âÂÂ1994), pianist
- VladimÃÂr Fischer (1870âÂÂ1947), architect
- Bohuslav Fuchs (1895âÂÂ1972), architect
- BedÃ
Âich Golombek (1901âÂÂ1961), journalist and writer
- Miloslav IÃ
¡tvan (1928âÂÂ1990), composer
- LeoÃ
¡ JanáÃÂek (1854âÂÂ1928), composer and folklorist
- Hana JankÃ
¯ (1940âÂÂ1995), opera singer
- FrantiÃ
¡ek JÃÂlek (1913âÂÂ1993), conductor
- Václav Kaprál (1889âÂÂ1947), composer and pianist
- VÃÂtÃÂzslava Kaprálová (1915âÂÂ1940), composer and conductor
- Václav Kosmák (1843âÂÂ1898), writer, humorist and satirist
- Pavel KÃ
ÂÃÂÃ
¾kovský (1820âÂÂ1885), choral composer and conductor
- JiÃ
ÂàKroha (1893âÂÂ1974), architect, painter and designer
- Jaroslav Kvapil (1892âÂÂ1958), composer, conductor and pianist
- JiÃ
ÂàMahen (1882âÂÂ1939), writer and playwright
- Jan Novák (1921âÂÂ1984), composer
- Vilém PetrÃ
¾elka (1889âÂÂ1967), composer and conductor
- AntonÃÂn PÃ
Âidal (1935âÂÂ2017), translator, writer and journalist
- AntonÃÂn Procházka (1882âÂÂ1945), painter and graphic artist
- Marie Rafajová (1896âÂÂ1978), writer, journalist and translator
- ZdenÃÂk Ã
Âihák (1924âÂÂ2006), architect
- ZdenÃÂk Rotrekl (1920âÂÂ2013), poet, literary historian and writer
- Theodor Schaefer (1904âÂÂ1969), composer and pedagogue
- Jan Skácel (1922âÂÂ1989), poet
- VladimÃÂr Ã
 Ã
Â¥astný (1841âÂÂ1910), poet
- FrantiÃ
¡ka Stránecká (1839âÂÂ1888), writer and folklorist
- FrantiÃ
¡ek SuÃ
¡il (1804âÂÂ1868), folk-song collector and translator
- Vilém Tauský (1910âÂÂ2004), conductor and composer
- Rudolf TÃÂsnohlÃÂdek (1882âÂÂ1928), writer, poet and translator
- Jan Trefulka (1929âÂÂ2012), writer, translator and publicist
- Josef Zelený (1824âÂÂ1886), painter
Sports and other
References
External links