Wikipedia
Kaliště is a village and municipality of the Pelhřimov District in the Vysočina Region, Czech Republic. It is located at the watershed of the Želivka and Sázava rivers, about northwest of Humpolec. The population is about 330. The village in Bohemia was mentioned for the first time as a property of the Sts Peter and Paul Chapter at Vyšehrad in a 1318 deed. Its name means "wallow" in English. After the devastation of the Vyšehrad chapter during the Hussite Wars in 1420, the Bohemian King Sigismund of Luxembourg seized the property and in 1436 pledged it to the Trčka noble family at Lipnice and Světlá. It was purchased by the Harrach dynasty in 1698 and passed to the Austrian Trautson noble family in 1707.
Kaliště is name of several locations in the Czech Republic:
- Village Kaliště in Central Bohemian Region ( Prague-East District)
- Village Kaliště u Humpolce in Vysočina Region ( Pelhřimov District) - birthplace of Gustav Mahler
- Village Kaliště in Vysočina Region ( Jihlava District)
''' Kaliště (Prague-East District) ''' is a village and municipality in Prague-East District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.
Kaliště is a village and municipality ( obec) in Jihlava District in the Vysočina Region of the Czech Republic.
The municipality covers an area of , and has a population of 152 (as at 2 October 2006).
Kaliště lies approximately south-west of Jihlava and south-east of Prague.
'''Kalište ''' is a village in the municipality of Malo Crniće, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 478 people.
Kalište was a former village in the Banská Bystrica district in the Slovak Republic. It was destroyed by the Nazis during the Second World War. Its remains are now managed by the Museum of the Slovak National Uprising.