The first written mention of Rumburk is from 1298. In 1377 it is already referred to as a town. In 1566, a Renaissance castle replaced an old keep and Rumburk became the centre of the
Tolštejn estate. Between 1713 and 1764, English merchants settled here and foreign capital has contributed to long-term development of the town. In 1869, the railway was built. During the
Paris Peace Conference after World War I, American, British, and Italian diplomats agreed that the Rumburk corner should be given to Germany for economic and ethnographic reasons. Eventually, the Conference followed the Czechs' demand based on alleged indivisibility of Bohemia. In 1938, it was occupied by
Nazi Germany and administered as part of the
Reichsgau Sudetenland. After World War II, the German-speaking population was
expelled and replaced by
Czech settlers. ==Demographics==