Prague Chronicle Reflections on the Conference “A Hundred Student (R)Evolutions” Jana Wohlmuth Markupová Last year, it was exactly 30 years since the events of November and December 1989, which we usually call the Velvet Revolution. 1 The key role in the revolution was played by the then university students. Their gathering, initially allowed by the authorities, developed into a protest movement of the entire society, eventually culminating in a change of the political regime. Several years after the revolution, university students also became the focus of the first Czech oral history project, carried out by Milan Otáhal and Miroslav Vaněk. In 1999, the authors released the conclusions of their research in a publication entitled Sto studentských revolucí [A hundred student revolutions]. 2 1 The text was written with the financial support of the Grant Agency of the Czech Repub- lic within the project Student generation of 1989 in longitudinal perspective: Biographical interviews after 20 years (2017–2019, GA0/GA), project No. GA ČR 410/17-14167S. The conference was broadcast live on the Czech TV. The recording is available at: https://www. ceskatelevize.cz/porady/10000000362-100-studentskych-r-evoluci/ 2 OTÁHAL, Milan – VANĚK, Miroslav: Sto studentských revolucí: Studenti v období pádu ko- munismu. Životopisná vyprávění [A hundred student revolutions: Students during the collapse of communism. Biographical narrations]. Praha, Nakladatelství Lidové noviny 1999. VANĚK, Miroslav et al.: Sto studentských revolucí: Studenti v období pádu komunismu. Životopisná vyprávění [A hundred student revolutions: Students during the collapse of com- munism. Biographical narrations]. Praha, Karolinum 2019.