village, Stredocesk kraj (region), Czech Republic, just northwest of Prague. Before World War II it was a mining settlement of the Kladno coal basin and had a population of about 450. On June 10, 1942, it was liquidated by German armed forces as part of a massive reprisal for the assassination by Czech underground fighters of Reinhard Heydrich (Heydrich the Hangman), deputy leader of the SS. On June 9, five days after Heydrich died of bomb injuries, the SS rounded up Lidice's inhabitants. The 172 men were shot the next day. The women, except for 7 who were shot on the spot or who had been shot earlier trying to flee, were transported to the Ravensbrck concentration camp, where 49 died (7 by gas) and 3 disappeared. The 90 children, after one had been shot running away, were screened and found racially pure and were dispersed through Germany to be renamed and raised as Germans. Local miners (19 men) who were missed on the first round were executed later in Prague. When the massacre and deportation were complete, the SS burned Lidice, dynamited what was left standing, and leveled the debris. A similar devastationalbeit on a larger scaleoccurred two years to the day after the Lidice massacre at the French village of Oradour-sur-Glane. In 1947 a new village site was designated nearby. A museum, with a monument and an international rose garden, marks the site of the original village. Pop. (1970 prelim.) 505.
LIDICE
Meaning of LIDICE in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012