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Čáslav (Czech pronunciation: [ˈtʃaːslaf]; German: Tschaslau) is a town in Kutná Hora
District in the
Central Bohemian Region of the
Czech Republic. It...
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Časlav is a
Slavic given name,
which has
several spelling variants:
Časlav (Cyrillic: Часлав) in Serbian,
Čáslav or Čéslav in Czech, and Czasław or Czesław...
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Časlav (Serbian Cyrillic: Часлав, Gr****: Τζεέσθλαβος, also
transcribed as
Chaslav and Tzeeslav; c. 890s – 943/960) was
Prince of the
Serbs from c. 933...
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Čáslav is a town in the
Czech Republic. It may also
refer to: FK
Čáslav,
football club in
Čáslav Časlav (name) Čáslavsko, a muni****lity and
village in...
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Časlav Brukner (born July 9, 1967 in Novi Sad, Serbia, Yugoslavia) is a Serbian-Austrian
quantum physicist and
university professor.
Brukner had studied...
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Bulgarian army led by
Časlav Klonimirović, the
second cousin,
ravaged Serbia,
forcing Zaharija to flee.
Instead of
instating Časlav,
however the Bulgarians...
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Časlav Grubić (Serbian Cyrillic: Часлав Грубић; born 20 June 1952) is a
Serbian former handball player.
After starting out at Železničar Niš, Grubić pla****...
- FK
Čáslav is a
Czech football club from
Čáslav. It
plays in the
Czech Fourth Division. The
first football team in
Čáslav was
founded in 1902 when the...
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Simeon I and
subjected to
Bulgarian rule
until 933 when
Serbian prince Časlav was
established as
ruler of the
Serbian land,
becoming the most powerful...
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formerly known as FC
Zenit Chelyabinsk FK
Čáslav, a
Czech football club
formerly known as FC
Zenit Čáslav Zenit (disambiguation) This disambiguation...