HluÃÂÃÂn (; ; ) is a town in Opava District the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 13,000 inhabitants. It was the centre of the historic HluÃÂÃÂn Region. The historic town centre is well preserved and is protected as an urban monument zone.
HluÃÂÃÂn consists of three municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
HluÃÂÃÂn is located about north of Ostrava and east of Opava. The northern part of the municipal territory lies in the Opava Hilly Land within the Silesian Lowlands. The southern part extends into the eastern tip of the NÃÂzký JesenÃÂk range.
HluÃÂÃÂnské Lake is an artificial lake on the outskirts of the town. The Opava River forms the southeastern municipal border.
The first written mention of HluÃÂÃÂn is from 1303, when it was part of the Duchy of Opava. The town was probably founded by King Ottokar II in 1256 to ensure peace on the border between Margraviate of Moravia and Duchy of Opole.
Until 1521, HluÃÂÃÂn belonged to the Landek estate within the Duchy of Opava. In 1521, it was acquired by the Piast Dukes of Opole. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the town burned down several times. In 1694 it was liberated of its serfdom. In 1742, after the First Silesian War, the town was given to the Kingdom of Prussia by the Treaty of Berlin. In 1845, the HluÃÂÃÂn estate was bought by the Rothschild family. Four annual fairs were held in the town in the late 19th century.
The town was administered by the Prussian Province of Silesia until 1920, when it became part of Czechoslovakia after World War I. The transferral of the HluÃÂÃÂn Region sparked controversy between Germans, Czechs and Poles. By a biased interpretation of the law, the new Czechoslovak authorities banned schooling in German even though that was the language spoken by the majority in the town.
After the Munich Agreement in 1938, HluÃÂÃÂn was annexed by Nazi Germany and was again made part of the Province of Silesia, and its Germanized name Hultschin was restored. During World War II, the Germans sent prisoners from the military prison in KÃ Âodzko to forced labour in the town. HluÃÂÃÂn was restored to Czechoslovakia in 1945. People identified as German-speaking at the census in 1930 were expelled in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement, some Germans left voluntarily. People who were labeled Czechs, even though they were actually Czech-speaking Germans, were spared expulsion.
The I/56 road from Ostrava to Opava passes through the town.
HluÃÂÃÂn is the terminus of a railway line of regional importance heading from Opava.
The historic town centre is formed by the MÃÂrové Square and its surroundings. The centre was delimited by town fortifications, built in 1534âÂÂ1535. Most of the town walls were demolished by 1829. Several fragments and seven bastions have been preserved to this day.
HluÃÂÃÂn Castle was built in the late Gothic style in 1526. It is a two-storey building with an irregular floor plan, and includes a small castle park. Today it houses the HluÃÂÃÂn Region Museum.
The second landmark is the parish Church of Saint John the Baptist. It was first mentioned in 1378 and was rebuilt several times in Renaissance, Baroque and pseudo-Gothic styles. The bell tower, high, was built in 1791.
In DarkoviÃÂky is the HluÃÂÃÂn-DarkoviÃÂky Czechoslovak Fortification Complex. It is an exhibition of a unique military technology from the 1930s.
HluÃÂÃÂn is twinned with: