Nezabudice is a municipality and village in RakovnÃÂk District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 90 inhabitants.
The name is derived from the personal name Nezabud, meaning "the village of Nezabud's people".
Nezabudice is located about southeast of RakovnÃÂk and west of Prague. It lies in the Kà Âivoklát Highlands. The highest point is a nameless hill at above sea level. The municipality is situated on the left bank of the Berounka River and entirely within the Kà Âivoklátsko Protected Landscape Area.
Nezabudice was probably founded around 1108. The first written mention of Nezabudice is from 1115, when Duke Vladislaus I donated the village to the monastery in Kladruby. However, in 1250, the village was listed as a property of the monastery in Plasy. After the exchange of properties between the nobility and the monastery in 1332, Nezabudice became part of the Kà Âivoklát estate.
In the first half of the 16th century, Nezabudice experienced its greatest boom. After the plague epidemic in 1568 and the Thirty Years' War, the population decreased. Further plague epidemics affected the village in 1680 and 1713. At the end of the 17th century, Nezabudice was acquired by the Waldstein family. In 1756, the entire Kà Âivoklát estate was inherited by the Fürstenberg family.
There are no railways or major roads passing through the municipality.
The main landmark of Nezabudice is the Church of Saint Lawrence. It was originally a Gothic church from the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries. In 1708, it was rebuilt in the Baroque style and the tower was added. The current appearance of the church is a result of Empire modifications from the year 1800.