; 1873–1918,
Schönbach,
Austria-Hungary At the initiative of
Richard Dotzauer (1816–1887), the
K.K. Music School in Schönbach launched on 1 August 1873. Initially, students received instruction in homes, and beginning 1882, at the Schönbach Town Hall. The school was founded exclusively to train musicians. But in October 1903, under professor Josef Anton Pfluger (1874–1914), the school launched a curriculum in string instrument making: violins, guitars, and sheet music publishing. By 1908, the school was predominately filled with students learning the art of violin and guitar making. On 24 June 1911 the foundation stone was laid for the school's first building on Bahnhofstrasse and teaching in that building commenced at the start of 1912. ; 1918–1938, Schönbach,
Czechoslovakia The musical instrument region, which included Schönbach, had been part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which collapsed after the end of
World War I in 1918. ; 1938–1945, Schönbach,
Nazi Germany In 1938, following the
Great Depression,
Germany took possession of the western region of Czechoslovakia known as the
Sudetenland, and occupied it until the end of
World War II. During this period, there was a sharp decline in the production of musical instruments from the region. ; 1946–1992,
Luby, Czechoslovakia In 1946, right after
World War II, Czechoslovakia restored the pre-1938 border and, among other things, changed the German town name of Schönbach to "Luby". In 1949, residents with German ethnicity, which included many violin-makers, were
expelled from Czechoslovakia. About 1,600 Schönbach instrument makers settled in
Bubenreuth of Erlangen, which before then had only about 500 residents. Bubenreuth was, at that time, in the
American zone of what became
West Germany. Bubenreuth eventually became known as the second Schönbach and even erected a replica of the Luthier statue of Schönbach. Since 1946, Bubenreuth became the third largest center in Germany (behind
Mittenwald in
Bavaria and
Markneukirchen in
Vogtland) for the construction of stringed and plucked instruments and accessories. Following the
1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état, Czechoslovakia fell under communist rule and the remaining violin making industry in Luby, supported by the Violin Making School, was nationalized under the name
Cremona. ; 1993–2005
Luby,
Czech Republic The Violin Making School continued to train
luthiers from around the globe. ; 2005–present,
Cheb, Czech Republic In 2005, the Violin Making School moved to Cheb. == The Schönbach School ==