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Tomáš Petráček (* 1972 Hořice v Podkrkonoší) is a Czech public intellectual, Roman Catholic priest, and scholar. He is considered one of country's leading church and social historians. He works at the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies at the Faculty of Education, University of Hradec Králové (East Bohemia) and at the Institute for the History of Christian Art at the Catholic Theological Faculty of Charles University (Prague). He is the author of six monographs and more than seventy articles, studies and papers. He is an active member of the editorial board for the estimated Czech journal Salve, which deals with theological, historical, philosophical and cultural themes. As a Roman Catholic priest he serves as chaplain of the academic community in Hradec Králové. In 2010, he was appointed Canon of the Chapter of All Saints at Prague Castle, founded in 1339 by Emperor and King Charles IV for professors of the Charles University.

Education
From 1986-1990 he attended grammar school in his hometown of Horice (in Eastern Bohemia). From 1990 to 1992 and from 1996-1999 he studied at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague with a specialization in History and Ethnology. In 1999, he graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Master's degree. Following his Master's degree, he went on to pursue his doctorate at the same university, at the Institute of Economic and Social History, Faculty of Arts. In March 2002, he successfully defended his doctoral dissertation entitled, “The Phenomenon of Donated People in 11th -12th century Przemyslite Territories” and was awarded a Ph.D. in the field of economic and social history. Petráček was greatly influenced by his doctoral supervisor Prof. Jaroslav Čechura, and by two Czech social historians Prof. Eduard Maur and Prof. Jiří Štaif.

From 1999 to 2002 he studied at the Catholic Theological Faculty of Charles University in Prague. In 2000, he joined a seminary. From 2002 to 2005 he continued theological studies at the Theological Faculty of the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, where in 2005 he passed the final examination and received the title Licentia In Sacra Theologia (insigni cum laude). His supervisor was Prof. OP Guy Bedouelle and Prof. Mariano Delgado also had a considerable influence on him. From 2006-2008, he studied in the St. Cyril and Methodius Faculty of Theology in Olomouc (Moravia, Czech Republic) doctoral program, where he specialized in Church History. In February 2008, he successfully defended his dissertation and received the title Doctor of Theology (Th.D.). In June 2012, he achieved habilitation in the field of Czech history at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague. His habilitation thesis was entitled “The Bible and the Historical-Critical Method: the Czech and World Progressive Exegesis in the Vortex of the (Anti-)Modernist Crisis”.

In addition to the above-mentioned education, Petráček has also completed short study stays at Friedrich Wilhelm University in Bonn (1997), L'Institute Catholique in Paris (2002), the Faculty of Divinity at Yale University (2013), a five-month internship at Collegio Teutonico in Rome/Vatican City (2007) in which he studied archives of the Secret Vatican archives, and a two month study residency at the Philosophische und theologische Hochschule ST. Georgen Frankfurt am Main (2010, 2011).

Work
The first topic that Petráček chose to investigate in his scientific work was the social and economic history of the early Middle Ages in the Czech lands, focusing on the lower strata of society in particular. This work resulted in the 2003 publication of the monograph The Phenomenon of Donated People in the Czech Lands in the 11th - 12th Centuries: On the Knowledge of Economic and Social History of the Czech Lands at the Time of Dukes. A second, revised and expanded version of the book was published in 2012 by the prestigious publishing house Argo under the title Serfs and Freemen, Dukes and Manorial Estates: the Phenomenon of Donated People in Premyslid Bohemia in the 10th-12th Centuries. (Nevolníci a svobodní, kníže a velkostatek. Fenomén darovaných lidí přemyslovských zemí 10.–12. Století). Petráček has also published numerous other studies and articles concerning social, economic and religious history.

While studying theology, Petráček began to concern himself with issues in the history of Catholic exegesis during the modernist crisis. One of the key figures in Fribourg was the Old Testament Exegesis Professor Vincent Zapletal (1867-1938) of the Dominican Order, who worked at the Theological Faculty of the University from 1893-1928. Zapletal was among the most significant figures in progressive Catholic exegesis, along with the French biblical scholar Marie Joseph Lagrange OP and German Jesuit Franz von Hummelauer. Zapletal sought a scientific interpretation of the Bible and employed a historical-critical method, and became a victim of the anti-modernist crisis in the Catholic Church in the years 1904-1914. Petráček completed a critical biography entitled Bible Science in the Period of the (Anti-)Modernist Crisis: The Life and Work of Vincent Zapletal OP (1897-1938). It was published in 2006 in the Czech Republic (Výklad Bible v církvi v době (anti-)modernistické krize. Život a dílo Vincenta Zapletala OP (1897-1938)). There was also an abridged French version, Le Pere Vincent Zapletal O.P. (1867-1938). Portrait d´un exegete catholique. Studia friburgensia - Series historica 6, Fribourg 2007, which dealt with the life of Zapletal before the appearance of the anti-modernist crisis and its aftermath. Petráček has also published numerous studies and articles appearing in the academic journals such as Revue Biblique or Memoire Dominicaine and most of them in the Czech journal Salve. The culmination of his research work is The Bible and Modern Criticism: Progressive Czech and World Exegesis in the Vortex of the (Anti-)Modernist Crisis, which was published by the prestigious publishing house Vyšehrad in 2011 (Česká a světová progresivní exegeze ve víru (anti-)modernistické krize). It went on to become a bestseller even outside academic circles, so much so that there had to be a reprint. Other scholarly interests of Petráček include historical anthropology and issues related to cross-cultural communication, adaptation, and the diversity and dynamics of society and culture in European history, particularly in the area of Church, social and religious history. Petráček has examined the question of the causes and roots of the dynamic secularization of the Czech lands and in 2013 published Secularization and Catholicism in the Czech lands: Specific Aspects of the Czech Route from National Church to the Most Atheist Country in the World. (Sekularizace a katolicismus v českých zemích. Specifické rysy české cesty od lidové církve k nejateističtější zemi světa). In investigating the underlying causes of secularization trends, Petráček has looked into the overall adaptive ability of Christianity, publishing articles and studies concerning this issue as well as a monograph in 2013 entitled Adaptation, Resistance, Resignation: The Church, Society and Changes in Modern History (Adaptace, resistence, rezignace. Církev, společnost a změna v novověkých dějinách).

Teaching
Since 2005, Petráček has worked at the Institute of Christian Art History at the Catholic Theological Faculty of Charles University, where he gives lectures on church, culture and social history in undergraduate and graduate programs of theology and the history of Christian art. He also leads a group of Ph.D. students in the doctoral program Church and General History at the same Faculty. In 2007, he was appointed head of the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies at the Faculty of Education at the University of Hradec Kralove. Under Petráček's guidance the department has come to distinguish itself as one this university's most prolific departments for publications, and offers a very engaging study program in Transcultural Communication studies, which also includes an English language study option. Conferences and other activities organized by the department have included such guests as Templeton prize winner Prof. Tomáš Halík, Hinduism specialist Prof. Julius Lipner of Cambridge and Italian professor and philosopher Umberto Gallimberti.

Church Activities
Since being ordained a priest in 2005, Petráček has worked in Hradec Králové as a university chaplain, where he focuses on students and the academic staff of local universities. Since 2007, he has been in charge of Academic spiritual services. He serves as preacher and priest at the Church of the Virgin Mary in Hradec Králové. In 2010, he was appointed Canon of the Chapter of All Saints at Prague castle, which was founded in 1339 by Emperor and King Charles IV for professors at Charles University. From 2013, he has been leading the beatification efforts for Czech priest Josef Toufar, who was tortured to death by the Communist state police in 1950.