Turistická kolonizace Moravského krasu ve světle epigrafických památek Býčí skály = Touristic colonization of the Moravian Karst in the light of epigraphic relics of the cave Býčí skála.
Autor: | Čermáková, Eva, 1980- |
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Další autoři: |
Golec, Martin, 1975-
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Jazyk: | čeština |
Předmět: | |
Druh dokumentu: | Non-fiction |
ISSN: | 0009-0794 |
Abstrakt: | Abstract: The study focuses on analysis of the collection of historical graffiti preserved in the cave Býčí skála (Moravian Karst). Epigraphic relics preserved here, started to be produced around 1796, when the cave was an integral part of the Lichtenstein romantic landscape park. The research proved several touristic “waves of colonization” that manifested themselves in different character of the graffiti and their varied spatial distribution in the cave. The first wave of touristic presence in the place is connected with German elites, often affiliated to the Lichtenstein court. The authors call it the Swiss-Alpine period of tourism development in “Moravian Switzerland”, as the region was called in this period. The second wave of tourism was associated with Czech population, which appears in the course of the second half of the 19th century, according to graffiti. At the end of this century (he Czech patriots renamed the area “Moravian Karst”. The model of “Arcadia” is found again, but no more in the Alpine mountains, but in the North America - land of the Indians and pioneers. This change found its expression in the specific graffiti of this period. During the first half of the 20th century both phases developed in parallel. After the displacement of Germans after the World War II the first stage ended definitively, while the second one continues almost until today. |
Databáze: | Katalog Knihovny AV ČR |
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