Mladá Vožice (German: Jung Woschitz) is a town in Tábor District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.
The southeastern part of the municipal territory extends into the Křemešník Highlands and includes the highest point of Mladá Vožice, the hill Bušová at 669 m (2,195 ft) above sea level.
[4] Mladá Vožice goods were probably owned by the royal chamber but were frequently pawned or lent to feudal lords for services to the king.
[4] In March 1420, after the Battle of Sudoměř, Mladá Vožice was occupied by about 2,000 horse riders led by Mikeš Divůček of Jemniště, the master of the Kutná Hora mint.
On Great Friday morning 1420, Jan Žižka attacked the town and set it on fire.
[5] The town and neighbourhood of Mladá Vožice was a purely agricultural area until 1945, and the change towards industrialization only began after the liberation.
Since 1949, after the change in the political and state system, Mladá Vožice was included in the newly established district of Votice in Prague Region.
After the land reorganization of 1960, Mladá Vožice fell under the Tábor District in the South Bohemian Region.
[9] Next to the church is a separate bell tower, built in 1425 and rebuilt in the pseudo-Gothic style at the beginning of the 20th century.
[9][11] The Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary is situated on top of a hill above the town, on the site of the former castle.
It was built by Krištof Karel Přehořovský of Kvasejovice, the owner of the Vožice estate.