České Budějovice District Explained

České Budějovice District
Native Name:Okres České Budějovice
Settlement Type:District
Coordinates:49°N 46°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:South Bohemian
Subdivision Type2:Capital
Subdivision Name2:České Budějovice
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:1638.49
Population As Of:2024
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:201926
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone1:CET
Utc Offset1:+1
Timezone1 Dst:CEST
Utc Offset1 Dst:+2
Blank Name:Municipalities
Blank Info:109
Blank1 Name:
  • Cities and towns
Blank1 Info:9
Blank2 Name:
  • Market towns
Blank2 Info:3

České Budějovice District (Czech: okres České Budějovice) is a district in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. Its capital is the city of České Budějovice.

Administrative division

České Budějovice District is divided into three administrative districts of municipalities with extended competence: České Budějovice, Trhové Sviny and Týn nad Vltavou.

List of municipalities

Cities and towns are marked in bold and market towns in italics:

Adamov -Bečice -Borek -Borovany -Borovnice -Boršov nad Vltavou -Bošilec -Branišov -Břehov -Čakov -Čejkovice -Čenkov u Bechyně -České Budějovice -Chotýčany -Chrášťany -Čížkrajice -Dasný -Dívčice -Dobrá Voda u Českých Budějovic -Dobšice -Dolní Bukovsko -Doubravice -Doudleby -Drahotěšice -Dražíč -Dříteň -Dubičné -Dubné -Dynín -Habří -Hartmanice -Heřmaň -Hlavatce -Hlincová Hora -Hluboká nad Vltavou -Homole -Horní Kněžeklady -Horní Stropnice -Hosín -Hosty -Hradce -Hranice -Hrdějovice -Hůry -Hvozdec -Jankov -Jílovice -Jivno -Kamenná -Kamenný Újezd -Komařice -Kvítkovice -Ledenice -Libín -Libníč -Lipí -Lišov -Litvínovice -Ločenice -Mazelov -Mladošovice -Modrá Hůrka -Mokrý Lom -Mydlovary -Nákří -Nedabyle -Neplachov -Nová Ves -Nové Hrady -Olešnice -Olešník -Ostrolovský Újezd -Petříkov -Pištín -Planá -Plav -Radošovice -Římov -Roudné -Rudolfov -Sedlec -Ševětín -Slavče -Srubec -Staré Hodějovice -Štěpánovice -Strážkovice -Střížov -Strýčice -Svatý Jan nad Malší -Temelín -Trhové Sviny -Týn nad Vltavou -Úsilné -Včelná -Vidov -Vitín -Vlkov -Vrábče -Vráto -Všemyslice -Záboří -Žabovřesky -Zahájí -Žár -Závraty -Žimutice -Zliv -Zvíkov

Geography

České Budějovice District is the third largest Czech district with an area of 1638km2. It borders Austria in the southeast. The majority of the territory is hilly with a slightly undulating landscape, the central part of the district consists of a relatively flat landscape, which in the southeast passes into the foothills. The territory extends into five geomorphological mesoregions: Tábor Uplands (north), Třeboň Basin (east), České Budějovice Basin (east), Gratzen Mountains Foothills (south) and Gratzen Mountains (southeast). The highest point of the district is the mountain Vysoká in Horní Stropnice with an elevation of 1034m (3,392feet), the lowest point is the river bed of the Vltava in Dražíč at 350m (1,150feet).

From the total district area of, agricultural land occupies, forests occupy, and water area occupies . Forests cover 32.4% of the district's area.[1]

The most important river is the Vltava, which flows from southwest to north. Another significant rivers are the Malše (tributary of the Vltava) and Stropnice (tributary of the Malše). The area of the České Budějovice and Třeboň basins is known for its fishponds, which includes some of the large ponds in the country. An important body of water is also Římov Reservoir.

Small parts of the Třeboňsko Protected Landscape Area extends into the district in the east.

Demographics

Most populated municipalities

NamePopulationArea (km2)
97,377 56
7,850 43
5,597 91
5,284 53
4,687 94
4,178 42
3,499 14
2,977 6
2,761 6
2,682 29

Economy

České Budějovice is the economic centre of the entire South Bohemian Region. All the largest employees with headquarters in České Budějovice District and at least 500 employers have their seat in České Budějovice. The largest of these companies with at least 1,000 employees are:[3]

Economic entityNumber of employeesMain activity
České Budějovice Hospital 4,000–4,999 Health care
3,000–3,999 Retail sale
3,000–3,999 Automotive industry
2,000–2,499 Education
ČEVAK 1,000–1,499 Operation of water management infrastructure
1,000–1,499 Distributor of electricity and natural gas
Jednota 1,000–1,499 Retail sale
1,000–1,499 Manufacture of tools for the textile industry
Madeta 1,000–1,499 Dairy
Swietelsky stavební 1,000–1,499 Construction

The city of České Budějovice is also well-known for Budweiser Budvar Brewery.

A facility of national importance is the Temelín Nuclear Power Station, one of two nuclear power stations in the country.

Transport

The D3 motorway (part of European route E55) leads from Prague to České Budějovice and further continues as the I/3 road to the Czech-Austrian border.

Sights

The village of Holašovice was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1998 because of its exceptional preservation of a traditional Baroque-era village.[4]

The most important monuments in the district, protected as national cultural monuments, are:[5]

The best-preserved settlements and landscapes, protected as monument reservations and monument zones, are:[6]

The most visited tourist destinations are the Ohrada Zoo in Hluboká nad Vltavou, Hluboká Castle, and Dvorec Zoo in Borovany.[7]

Notable people

See main article: category.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Land use (as at 31 December). Public database. Czech Statistical Office. 2023-05-18.
  2. Web site: Population of Municipalities – 1 January 2024. Czech Statistical Office. 2024-05-17.
  3. Web site: Registr ekonomických subjektů. Business Register. Czech Statistical Office. cs. 2023-02-07.
  4. Web site: Holašovice Historic Village. UNESCO. 2023-02-07.
  5. Web site: Výsledky vyhledávání: Národní kulturní památky, okres České Budějovice. Ústřední seznam kulturních památek. National Heritage Institute. cs. 2024-06-19.
  6. Web site: Výsledky vyhledávání: Památkové rezervace, Památkové zóny, okres České Budějovice. Ústřední seznam kulturních památek. National Heritage Institute. cs. 2024-06-19.
  7. Web site: Turisté mají v České republice nejraději zoologické zahrady, technické památky, koupání a Pražský hrad. CzechTourism. cs. 2022-06-24. 2023-02-07.