How the City Moved

People: The Masters of the Earth

Humans are the masters of the earth. They reshape the planet in their own way—creating new seas, building cities, and, if necessary, like mythical giants, moving them from place to place.

When the ancestors of modern Czechs and Slovaks founded the town of Ervenice 700 years ago, they believed it would stand forever on the banks of the Bilina River, and that the river would flow eternally in its natural course.

But life had other plans. Czechoslovak geologists, while uncovering underground secrets, discovered that beneath the town lay a rich treasure of black gold. They even calculated that under each room in Ervenice rested about 60 freight cars of coal, desperately needed by the country’s growing industry.

Thus, it was decided to relocate the ancient town to a new site. Now, not far from Ervenice, a new city with modern architecture has been built, where the residents of the old town have been resettled. The planners also took care of the Bilina River. It will flow through a new channel, carved by human hands, and will remain connected to the relocated town.

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