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On October 11, 1424, Hussite commander Jan Žižka breathed his last breath near the castle in Přibyslav. With a little exaggeration, it can be said that he never actually died, as he immediately entered national mythology as the prototype of a brilliant military leader and a true Czech. The revolutionary events then took a slightly different course than he would have liked, but his legacy remained ever-present among the Hussites. To this day, Žižka lives on in our society, with books written and films made about him. But even after 600 years of uninterrupted interest, a significant question mark remains over the Trocnov warrior: What was he really like? A deeply religious warrior of God, or just an ordinary medieval cutthroat? Leading Czech historians, headed by Professor Petr Čornej, are attempting to answer this question.

La magia del sonido en el cine

Love, Gilda

Donald Rumsfeld, certezas desconocidas

La historia no contada de los Estados Unidos

Visions of Light

Red Army

Padre, soldado, hijo

City of Ghosts

El celuloide oculto

The War on Democracy

Alone in the Wilderness

The War Room

La pasión de Juana de Arco

Andrei Rublev

Campanadas a medianoche
Cid
Maryla

1492: La conquista del paraíso

Musa: The Warrior

Enrique V

Der Richter von Zalamea

Corazón de león (Flecha negra)

Die Tochter des Papstes – Lucrezia Borgia

Guillermo Tell