Okres: Difference between revisions
this is a word, not a place |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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*[[ |
* [[Districts of Slovakia]] (okres) |
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*[[Districts |
* [[Districts of the Czech Republic]] (okres) |
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*[[Powiat]] |
* [[Powiat]] |
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*[[Raion]] |
* [[Raion]] |
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===Upper-level division=== |
===Upper-level division=== |
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*[[Krai]] |
* [[Krai]] |
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*[[Districts of Germany|Kreis]] |
* [[Districts of Germany|Kreis]] |
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*[[Regions of Slovakia]] ([[kraj]]) |
* [[Regions of Slovakia]] ([[kraj]]) |
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*[[Regions of the Czech Republic]] (kraj) |
* [[Regions of the Czech Republic]] (kraj) |
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===Lower-level division=== |
===Lower-level division=== |
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*[[Obec]] (subdivisions of an okres) |
* [[Obec]] (subdivisions of an okres) |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 19:10, 17 November 2015
Okres (Czech and Slovak term meaning "County" in English; from Old Slavic окрьсть - around) refers to administrative entities in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. It can be compared to the Template:Lang-ru - okrestnost and the Template:Lang-pl, meaning bordering area(s).
The first counties, both in the Czech lands and Slovakia, developed from domains in 1850 by the decision of the Imperial government of Austria (they've also been called processus (slúžnovský okres) in Slovakia since the 1860s). The organisation and functions of the counties started to diverge in the course of the following decades, and were finally unified only in 1918 with the creation of Czechoslovakia. After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the county system was taken over by the two current successor states.
Equivalents
See also
- Districts of Slovakia (okres)
- Districts of the Czech Republic (okres)
- Powiat
- Raion
Upper-level division
Lower-level division
- Obec (subdivisions of an okres)
External links