Postoloprty (; ) is a town in Louny District in the ÃÂstÃÂ nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 4,700 inhabitants.
Postoloprty consists of 13 municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
Dolejà ¡Ã Hà ¯rky forms an exclave of the municipal territory.
The town's name was probably derived from the Latin name of the monastery, Porta Apostolorum. Another theory says the name was derived from Old Czech prtati postole, meaning "to repair shoes". The first written mention of Postoloprty was under the name Postolopirth.
Postoloprty is located about west of Louny and southwest of ÃÂstànad Labem. It lies mostly in the Most Basin, in an agricultural landscape. The eastern part of the municipal territory with the Bà Âezno village lies in the Lower Ohà Âe Table. The town is situated at the confluence of the rivers Ohà Âe and Chomutovka, on the left bank of the Ohà Âe and on the right bank of the Chomutovka.
A distinctive geologic outcrop of the Cretaceous period called Bà Âezenské souvrstvàis located near the village of Bà Âezno. Today, it is protected as a nature monument.
The settlement was first mentioned in the Chronica Boemorum, written in 1119âÂÂ1125 by Cosmas of Prague. A Benedictine monastery with the Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary was founded here probably at the end of the 11th century. It was built near the site where a former Slavic gord called DrahÃºà ¡ on the Ohà Âe river had been erected at the behest of the Pà Âemyslid dukes. The monastery's premises were devastated during the Hussite Wars in 1420 and not rebuilt.
In 1454, the Bohemian King George of PodÃÂbrady enfeoffed his sons with the Postoloprty estates. The lands were leased to the noble Veitmile (Weitmühl) family in 1480. During their rule, the settlement prospered, and in 1510, it obtained town privileges by King Vladislaus II. In 1611, the owners had a castle erected at the site of the former monastery. The lordship had passed to the noble House of Schwarzenberg in 1692, the family held the premises until 1945.
Upon the 1938 Munich Agreement, the area was annexed by Nazi Germany and incorporated into the Reichsgau Sudetenland. When the region returned to the Czechoslovak Republic at the end of World War II, the remaining 'Sudeten German' population was expelled according to the Beneà ¡ decrees. Outrages culminated in a massacre on 3âÂÂ7 June 1945, when about 800 German civilians, mainly men who had been deported to Postoloprty from nearby à ½atec, were tortured and shot. The incidents were inquired by a committee of the Czechoslovak parliament in 1947. It is the largest known killing of ethnic Germans by Czechs after World War II. 763 bodies were exhumed but other death toll estimates are higher. The Postoloprty citizens disagreed whether to build a memorial or to not acknowledge the massacre; a memorial plaque, which does not name the perpetrators or the victims, nor the number of victims, was unveiled on 3 June 2010.
A section of the D7 motorway passes through the town.
Postoloprty lies on the à ½atecâÂÂMost railway line and is the terminus and starting point of the ÃÂeská LÃÂpa â Postoloprty line.
The main landmark of Postoloprty is the Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. This Baroque church was built in 1746âÂÂ1753.
The Postoloprty Castle was rebuilt in the Baroque style in 1706âÂÂ1718. Its present appearance is the result of the reconstruction in 1772âÂÂ1790, after it was damaged by a fire. It is surrounded by a castle garden. Today the castle is unused and fell into desrepair.
Postoloprty is twinned with: