

The first railway in what is now the Czech Republic was built in the 1820s; in 1827 the first horse-drawn line was opened, connecting Linz with České Budějovice. In the late 1830s the Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway Company, owned by Salomon Mayer Rothschild, began building railways for steam trains. The rail line from Olomouc to Prague was built by the engineer Jan Perner (1815–1845), who worked for the Austrian state. Although Perner is now a renowned figure in Pardubice’s history (a street, a square, and a faculty of the city’s university are named after him, and there is also a statue of him), he was not born in Pardubice, but in Bratčice near Čáslav. However, his parents lived in Pardubice, and they owned a mill in the city (on today’s Pernerova Street), where Perner also died.