Bohemian
Bohemians are inhabitants of
Bohemia,
Czech Republic. The term used to designate inhabitants of the former
kingdom of Bohemia, located in the west of the modern day
Czech Republic. The name derived from the
Latin term for the
Celtic tribe (
Boii) inhabiting that area (Tacitus: Boiohaemum). The word "Bohemians" was never used by the local Czech population. In Czech, the region was since early Middle Ages called only "Čechy" - Bohemia or "Království české" - Kingdom of Bohemia, and its mainly Czech-speaking inhabitants "Češi".
In other European vernaculars and in Latin (Bohemi) the word "Bohemian" or its derivates was used to designate all inhabitants of Bohemia. If the Czech ethnic origin was to be stressed, combinations like "Bohemian of Bohemian language", "a real Bohemian" etc. were used.
It was not until the 19th century when other European languages started to use the word "Czechs" (in English), "Tschechen" (in German) or tchèques (in French) in a deliberate (and successful) attempt to distinguish between ethnic Czechs and other inhabitants of Bohemia. Nowadays "Bohemians" is still used when there is need to distinguish between inhabitants of the western part of the Czech Republic (Bohemia) and the eastern part (
Moravia).
It is not clear how the word acquired its secondary meaning (see
Bohemianism or
Bohemian (disambiguation)), but it is believed that it comes from the French idea that
Gypsies originated from Bohemia (while they were travelling from there).
In modern usage, a bohemian can describe any person who lives an unconventional artistic life, where self-expression is the highest value — that art (acting, poetry, writing, singing, dancing, painting etc) is a serious and main focus of their life. The term was applied particularly to the
Bloomsbury Group in the first half of the 20th century, and, early in the 21st century, to a style of female fashion ("
boho-chic").
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History of the Czechs*
Bohemian Rhapsody