Skály (Písek District)


Skály is a village and municipality in Písek District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of, and has a population of 273.
The village is situated in the southern part of the Písek District, approximately south of Písek, north-west of the region capital České Budějovice, and south of Prague. It lies on the railway no. 190 that connects two Czech towns of beer Plzeň and České Budějovice, the third and closest brewery of Protivín being some to the northwest.

South Bohemian Folk or Rural Baroque style

There are quite a few vernacular buildings constructed in the South Bohemian Folk or Rural Baroque style in Skály, whose gable ends are facing a central village green, with a fish pond and a chapel. The buildings date from the 18th to 20th century, with most of them built in the second half of the 19th century. Therefore the village has been designated as a Czech heritage site.

The village lies in a fairly downy landscape, some 387 meters above the sea level, with a brook flowing along it on its way to the nearby Blanice river. There are plenty of fishponds in the area too.

History

Skály is first mentioned in 1365, when the Rosenbergs sold it. In 1397 a certain John from Skály is mentioned in another document. By the end of the 16th century the village belonged to the town of Písek. In 1800 Skály became the property of the prince of Schwarzenberg and it remained in the family hands until the land reform in 1923.

Notable people

Konstancie Hrubecká - grandmother of Dr. Paul Charles Zamecnik
Kateřina Hrubecká - mother of composer John Stepan Zamecnik

Budičovice

With Skály is affiliated a small village named Budičovice, first mentioned in 1399.