The villages of Dušníky and Semilkovice are administrative parts of Obříství.
Geography
Obříství is located about 6 kilometres (4 mi) south of Mělník and 19 km (12 mi) north of Prague. It lies in a flat landscape in the Central Elbe Table. The municipality is situated on the left bank of the Elbe River. The Vltava River forms the northern municipal border and the confluence of the Elbe and Vltava is located just outside the municipality.
History
The first written mention of Obříství is from 1290. Before 1420, the village was acquired by Mikuláš Chudý, the founder of the Lobkowicz family. The family owned Obříství until 1542. After the village changed hands several times, in 1618 it was bought by the knight Václav Pětipeský, but his properties were confiscated after the Battle of White Mountain, and in 1623 Obříství was bought by Polyxena of Lobkowicz. In 1623, Obříství was described as a market town, but during the Thirty Years' War it was badly damaged and became a village again. In 1654, the village was sold and often changed hands again.[2]
The railway line Kralupy nad Vltavou–Neratovice briefly crosses the municipal territory in the south, but there is no train station.
Sights
The main landmarks are the Obříství Castle and the Church of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist next to the castle. The church is a Gothic building from the 14th century, first mentioned in 1384. Next to the church is a separate Renaissance wooden bell tower. The castle was built on the site of the old fortress in the late Neoclassical style in 1824–1826.[2][6]
Notable people
Bedřich Smetana (1824–1884), composer; lived and married here
Svatopluk Čech (1846–1908), writer and poet; lived here in 1895–1903