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of a fan. It is found in villages situated on the border of the ca-dastre. They, too, are of ancient origin;
c) the parallel typeis entirely the type of the coloni-zation-village. The hides do not broaden and they run parallel with the botmdaries of the cadastre. This type includes villages situated in the centre or on the border of the cadastre or running through the whole cadastre. They are much younger than the preceding types. The hides have been divided repeatedly into small lots;
d) the winged type is either 1. one-winged, in villages situated on the border, or 2. t w o - w i n g e d, in villages in a central site. The hides do not broaden or they may also broaden from the village towards the boundary of the cadastre.
4. After the roads:
A. Villages with one main-road, leading into and out of the village and continuing outside the village between the fields as parish „track", „cattle drive" (of ancient date) or leading to a neighbouring village;
B. Villages with several roads running into the street or square. In this case we distinguish a) villages with two roads (along the river), b) with a trellis of roads, and c) with a network of roads. In the last two cases the village is either recent, in the neighbourhood of a town, or it is an old Slav village much altered.
5. After the arrangement of the farm-buil-dings. A. Yards surrounded by the farm-buil-dings prevail.. B. Open farms with a linear arrangement of the farm-buildings prevail.
Besides the different types according to the ground-plan of the village as well as according to the division of the land described above there are still mixed types due to the changes in the social and economic structure of our villages.
Annexed to the study (third part) are a sketch of the village Lilbochoviöky in 1779 and specially valuable plans of 1727. They were drawn up by order of the Governors, at Prague, to ascertain the distance of the Jewish dwellings from the Catholic church, so that they might not disturb by their proximity the divine Service (villages Holešovice, Děkov and Oráčov).
The most interesting of them is the pian of Velká Chyška, showing with great accuracy the whole charakter of the village green (common) with its buildings and their site, so that it represents a documentary picture of village architecture more than 200 years ago. By the following pictures we wish to demonstrate the conti-nuity of the earlier and later buildings with regard to their site (1829) and to the present form of the Czech village (1935).