There are 19 high school codes in Czech Republic today, according to the ACT. The full list is shown below by city, with name of each high school and the city where the school is located (based on the ACT official site). You can search a school code by pressing “Ctrl” + “F” and then type school name or 6-digit school code.
Map of Czech Republic
High School Codes by City
- High School Code
- 719018
- High School Code
- 719008
- High School Code
- 719026
- High School Code
- 719014
- High School Code
- 719016
- High School Code
- 719009
- High School Code
- 719005
- High School Code
- 719019
- High School Code
- 719020
- High School Code
- 719029
- High School Code
- 719015
- High School Code
- 719023
- High School Code
- 719013
- High School Code
- 719024
- High School Code
- 719021
- High School Code
- 719028
- High School Code
- 719004
- High School Code
- 719022
- High School Code
- 719017
The above lists CEEB codes (College Entrance Examination Board) for all accredited Czech Republic high schools. Please be informed that the list of high school codes in Czech Republic may change throughout the year. If you can’t find codes for the high schools of your interest, please write to us or come back at a later time. We will update our database soon after a new high school code is added to the country of Czech Republic.
Country Abbreviations
CZE is the three-letter country code of Czech Republic, and CZ is the two-letter country code of Czech Republic. The two-letter suffix is used in top-level domains on the Internet as .cz.
Czech Republic, Czech Česko [ t ʃ εsk ɔ ], officially Česká republika [ t ʃ εska ː -], German Czech Republic, abbreviation ČR [t ʃ e.epsilon..sub.R], country in Central Europe with the historical areas of Bohemia (Czech Čechy) and Moravia as well as a small part of Silesia (Moravia and Silesia, Czech Morava a Slezsko), summarized under the name Bohemian Lands (České země) with (2018) 10.6 million residents; The capital is Prague.
Geography
The Czech Republic borders Germany (Bavaria and Saxony) to the west and north-west, Poland to the north and north- east, the Slovak Republic to the south-east and Austria (Upper and Lower Austria) to the south.
The major forms of the relief are mainly determined by the hills and mountains, basin landscapes and plateaus of the Bohemian massif; only the easternmost edge areas of the Czech territory belong to the alpine folded western Carpathians. The Bohemian massif is framed on all sides by wooded low mountain ranges: in the southwest on the border with Bavaria the Bohemian Forest (Plöckenstein at the Dreiländereck 1,378 m above sea level), the Upper Palatinate Forest and the Fichtel Mountains; in the north-west on the border with Saxony Elster and Ore Mountains (up to 1 244 m above sea level), with sub-basins (Eger, Falkenauer, Brüzer basins) of the Egergraben depression in front of them to the south.
The Egergraben borders the Kaiserwald, Tepler Hochland and the volcanic Duppau Mountains to the north. The Bohemian Central Uplands lie on both sides of the Elbe, which, with its tributary Vltava, drains large parts of the Czech Republic to the North Sea.
In the north and north-east on the border with Poland form the Elbe Sandstone Mountains and the Sudetes with the Lusatian, Jizera, Giant Mountains (up to 1 602 m above sea level; National Park), Eagle Mountains, Glatzer Schneegebirge, Reichensteiner Gebirge, Hohem Gesenke (Jeseníky Mountains) and Niederem Gesenke, in the southeast the wide threshold of the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands (along the historical border between Bohemia and Moravia), to which the Saar and Drahaner Bergland with the Moravian Karst belong, the adjacent mountain ranges. In the south, the Bohemian massif points around Pilsen, České Budějovice and Třeboň basin landscapes. The eastern edge of the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands gradually descends to the Extra-Carpathian Basin, which is formed (from north to south) by the Ostrava Basin, the Moravian Gate and the Moravian Basin (divided into the North Moravian and South Moravian Basin) open to the south to the Danube. East of these basins and depressions on the border with the Slovak Republic rises the outer flysch zone of the Western Carpathians with the White Carpathians (up to 970 m above sea level), Javornik Mountains (up to 1,071 m above sea level) and the Moravian-Silesian Beskids (Lysá hora 1 323 m above sea level). The Thaya-Schwarzawa lowland south of Brno belongs to the Vienna Basin.