Pardubice Region
Encyclopedia : P : PA : PAR : Pardubice Region
| Statistics | |
|---|---|
| Capital: | Pardubice |
| Area: | 4,519 km² (10th) |
| Population: | 506,534 (2002) |
| Map | |
Contents
Districts of the Pardubice Region
Cities of the Pardubice Region
Villages of the Pardubice Region
- Chrtníky
Population
Total population of the Pardubice Region is 506,534 (Dec 31, 2002 - acc. [Czech Statistical Office] Český statistický úřad in Czech). There is 17 municipalities over 5000 inhabitants, 453 municipalities total in the Pardubice Region. The largest town of the region is Pardubice (aprox. 91,000 inhabitants, in 2001).Geography
lowest point: the Elbe River near Kojice, 200 mhighest point: Králický Sněžník, 1,423 m
Economy
The region's GDP has risen the most in the industrial section. Small, yet noticeable figures of GDP have also increased in transportation, building, real estate, agriculture and tourism..Industry
Industry and commercial public services are the basis of Pardubice's economy. General engineering, textiles, clothing, and leather processing are the strongest industrial branches.Transportation
"As far as transport in the region is concerned, there are 500 kilometres of train lines. The most important one is part of the international train line E040 (Paris - Nurnberg - Prague - Vienna) and also of the E061 (Berlin - Prague - Brno - Vienna)."[link] The public international airport in Pardubice is significant. Operating for both public and military flights, its listed in the category of the top 5 airports in the Czech Republic. Road networks make up over 3,600 km that transverse throughout the region. The I/37 connection to the I/17 is noted as the most important.Agriculture
Agriculture plays a huge role covering about 60% of the land.Tourism
Attractions from natural tourist spots (such as the Železné mountains and the Orlické mountains) to historical monuments, mostly of medieval castles established since the 13th century all encourage tourism to the region. "The most significant historical monuments in the region are connected with the noble Pernštejn family, from Moravia, who had two huge castles built, at Litice on the Orlice and on Kunětická hora near Pardubice." [link]Unemployment
Registered unemployment as of 2002 reached nearly 9% of the population. About 52% of those are women, and 44% are skilled workers.External links
| Regions of the Czech Republic |
|
|---|---|
| Carlsbad | Central Bohemia | Hradec Králové | Liberec | Moravia-Silesia | Olomouc | Pardubice | Plzeň | Prague | South Bohemia | South Moravia | Ústí nad Labem | Vysočina | Zlín | |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
