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  2. Cinema of Slovakia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_of_Slovakia

    History Early 20th century US Film company (defunct in 1922) poster. A Slovak-themed drama, Snowdrop from the Tatras (Sněženka z Tatier, dir. Olaf Larus-Racek, 1919), about a maturing girl looking for her place in a city appeared within months of the creation of Czechoslovakia.

  3. Seznam.cz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seznam.cz

    Seznam.cz. Seznam.cz (or Seznam, list in Czech) is a web portal and search engine in the Czech Republic. Founded in 1996 by Ivo Lukačovič in Prague as the first web portal in the Czech Republic. Seznam started with a search engine and an internet version of yellow pages. Today, Seznam runs almost 30 different web services and associated brands.

  4. List of online map services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_online_map_services

    Apple Maps - covers the whole country. Bing Maps – covers the whole country. Google Maps - covers the whole country. Libre Map Project. MapQuest - covers the whole country. The National Map by the United States Geological Survey. Roadtrippers - covers the whole country. TerraServer-USA - covers the whole country.

  5. Slovakia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovakia

    Slovakia's mostly mountainous territory spans about 49,000 square kilometres (19,000 sq mi), hosting a population exceeding 5.4 million. The capital and largest city is Bratislava, while the second largest city is Košice . The Slavs arrived in the territory of the present-day Slovakia in the 5th and 6th centuries.

  6. Martin, Slovakia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin,_Slovakia

    Martin (Slovak pronunciation: ⓘ; until 1951 Turčiansky Svätý Martin, Hungarian: Turócszentmárton, German: Turz-Sankt Martin, Latin: Sanctus Martinus / Martinopolis) is a city in northern Slovakia, situated on the Turiec river, between the Malá Fatra and Veľká Fatra mountains, near the city of Žilina.

  7. Rača, Bratislava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rača,_Bratislava

    The name probably comes from the Slavic personal name Radša / Radoslav or the Slavic stem vorč- / vrača (a fence). [1] [a] The name was adopted by Germans as Rechesdorf (literally Rača's village, 1390). The Germanized form had been used even by the Slovaks themselves, e.g., Račissdorf (1914), Račištorf (1920-1946) except for a short ...

  8. Kežmarok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kežmarok

    Website. www.kezmarok.sk. Sources: [4] [5] Kežmarok ( German: Kesmark or Käsmark; Hungarian: Késmárk, Yiddish: קעזמאַרק, romanized : Kezmark, Polish: Kieżmark) is a town in the Spiš region of eastern Slovakia (population 16,000), on the Poprad River. Prior to World War I, it was in Szepes county in the Kingdom of Hungary .

  9. Banská Štiavnica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banská_Štiavnica

    Banská Štiavnica (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈbanskaː ˈʂcɪɐʋɲitsa] ⓘ; German: Schemnitz; Hungarian: Selmecbánya (Selmec), pronounced [ˈʃɛlmɛd͡zbaːɲɒ]) is a town in central Slovakia, in the middle of an immense caldera created by the collapse of an ancient volcano.