Liblice is a municipality and village in MÃÂlnÃÂk District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 500 inhabitants.
The village was originally called ýubice. The name was derived from the personal name ýuba, meaning "the village of ýuba's people". The name then gradually changed to its current form.
Liblice is located southeast of MÃÂlnÃÂk and north of Prague. It lies mostly in the Jizera Table, only the southern part of the municipality extends into the Central Elbe Table. The stream Koà ¡Ã¡tecký potok flows through the southern part of the municipality.
The first written mention of Liblice is from 1254.
The I/16 road, which connects the D10 motorway with MÃÂlnÃÂk, passes through the municipality.
The main sight of Liblice is a Baroque castle built in 1699âÂÂ1706, designed by Giovanni Battista Alliprandi for Count Arnoà ¡t Josef Pachta of Rájov. The castle serves since 1952 as a conference and recreational facility of Czech Academy of Sciences and was not accessible to the public until 2007. An extensive reconstruction of the castle was completed in 2007, changing the premises into a conference and culturally-educational centre, a castle hotel with restaurants and a relaxing wellness centre.
The Church of Saint Wenceslaus was originally a Gothic medieval church. It was rebuilt in the Baroque style around 1710.