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THE
EARLY PERIOD
The foundation of the city.
For thousands of years that portion of the Vltava's course where
Prague was to rise was crossed by trade routes linking northern
and southern Europe. The region is replete with Paleolithic relics,
and Neolithic farmers inhabited the region from around 5000 to
2700 BC. Celts had settlements in the region from about 500 to
200 BC, including the fortified Zavist, to the south of Prague.
From the 4th to the 6th century AD, Slavs appeared on the Vltava
banks, followed by the Avars. The first settlement at what is
now Prague has been traced to the second half of the 9th century.
The oldest building was Vysehrad (hrad, "castle"), set on a commanding
right-bank hill. It was followed by what was to become Hradcany,
set on an equally commanding left-bank site a little downstream.
Legend (stirringly told in Smetana's opera Libuse) ascribes the
foundation of Prague to a Princess Libuse and her husband, Premysl,
founder of the Premyslid dynasty; legend notwithstanding, the
Premyslids, in power from about 800 to 1306, consolidated a political
base centred on Prague that was to be the nucleus of the Bohemian
state and that enabled the natural trade advantages of the city
site to develop under defensive protection. The dynasty included
St. Wenceslas (Vaclav), who was murdered by his brother Boleslav
in about 939 and whose statue now looks down upon the square to
which his name has been given; and Boleslav I, whose reign (c.
936-967) witnessed the consolidation of power against a German
threat. The little community flourished, and in 965 the Jewish
merchant and traveller Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub was able to describe
it as a "busy trading centre." In 973 the bishopric of Prague
was founded. >>
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