There was a close relationship between the patron of Czech science and the arts and the founder and first president of Czech Academy of Science and the Arts, Josef Hlávka, and one of the most famous Czech composers, Antonín Dvořák. and Tereza Kibicová.
The article presents two likely and so far unknown compilers of the third edition of Koniáš’s Key from 1770. Their names have been revealed by a handwritten note in a copy that was originally a part of the library of the private collector Josef Bartsch (1731-1803). Concerning the first figure, the Jesuit Josef Kögler, the treatise describes his career in the Jesuit Order and the posts that he held. In the case of his co-worker Jan Kohout, the text outlines the possible connections that might help identify him precisely. and David Mach.
On March 11th, 2008 one hundred years will have passed since the death of Josef Hlavka, one of the most successful entrepreneurs of the 19th century in former Austro-Hungarian Empire. He was a prominent architect and the most distinguished patron of Czech science and the arts and founder and first president of Czech Academy of Science and the Arts, the predecessor of today´s Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. The 100th anniversary of the death of Josef Hlávka has been cited by UNESCO as a World Cultural Anniversary. and Josef Pechar.
Recenze oceňuje, že autor líčí politickou kariéru Rudolfa Berana (1887–1954), od poloviny třicátých let vůdce agrární strany a za druhé republiky předsedy československé vlády, ve vzájemném propojení s osudy jeho strany a že se do hloubky zabývá řadou ožehavých problémů a témat, jimž se historici většinou spíše vyhýbali. Na druhé straně podle něj autor příliš podléhá subjektivnímu pohledu a svým sympatiím vůči Beranovi, přichází s těžko obhájitelným pojetím třetí republiky (1945–1948) jako nedemokratického režimu a se zjevnou zaujatostí líčí poválečný soudní proces s Beranem. and [autor recenze] Petr Anev.