Častotice

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Častotice
Častotice does not have a coat of arms
Častotice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Kraj Vysočina
District : Třebíč
Municipality : Zahrádka
Area : 283 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 14 '  N , 16 ° 5'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 14 '1 "  N , 16 ° 5' 29"  E
Height: 420  m nm
Residents : 50 (2011)
Postal code : 675 71
License plate : J
traffic
Street: Zahrádka - Koněšín
Town center
Chapel of the Virgin Mary
Dubovec pond

Častotice (German Czastotitz , 1939–45 Tschastotitz ) is a district of the municipality of Zahrádka in the Czech Republic . It is located six kilometers northwest of Náměšť nad Oslavou and belongs to the Okres Třebíč .

geography

Častotice is located on a plateau of the Jevišovická pahorkatina ( Jaispitzer Hills ) in the south of the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands . The Častotický stream flows through the village. There are several larger ponds in the vicinity of the village: northeast of Nový rybník (5.7 ha), south of Dubovec (31 ha) and Stejskal (12 ha) and west of Hranečník. The Havary (501 m nm) rises to the northwest.

Neighboring towns are Vaneč in the north, Zahrádka in the northeast, Ocmanice in the east, Náměšť nad Oslavou , Padrtův Mlýn and Placký Dvůr in the southeast, Okarec in the south, Studenec and U Nádraží in the southwest, Pozďatín in the west and Pyšel in the northwest.

history

Častotice was probably named after a person Čistota or Častohošť . The first written record of the festivals Eywanč associated village took place in 1353 when Přibka of Eywanč her Wittum in Častotice and Zahrádka gave their sons Tobias and Sezema. After the death of the brothers Sezema and Tobias von Eywanč, their estates Eywanč, Ocmanice , Častotice, Studnice and Zahrádka fell back to the sovereign around 1360. Margrave Johann Heinrich gave the fallen property in 1366 to Johann von Meziříč, who pledged Častotice to Peter von Častotice. The latter bought a farm in Jinošov from Kuneš von Tasov in 1369 , which he sold to Zbyněk von Újezd ​​in 1371. Later the property was added to the Namiescht lordship . In the course of the separation of the lords of Meziříčí and Namiescht by the Lords of Krawarn , Častotice was sold together with Namiescht Castle to Matthäus Schwanberg von Skrziwin in 1437 and then always stayed with Namiescht. In 1446 another Častotice Zich was mentioned, but at best it owned shares in the village. In 1674 there were three whole huts , one three-quarter hens and two cottagers with fields in Častotice ; another three-quarter hoof estate and a cottage industry had been lying desolate since the Thirty Years' War. From 1752 the Namiescht domain belonged to the Counts Haugwitz .

In 1842 the village of Czastotitz or Častotice , located on a hill in the Znojmo district, consisted of 11 houses in which 85 people lived. The parish and school location was Pischello . The dominant fish ponds of the manor were on the Czastotitzer Flur. Until the middle of the 19th century, Czastotitz remained subordinate to the Fideikommissgrafschaft Namiescht.

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Častotice / Czastotitz 1849 a district of the market town Namiest in the judicial district Namiest . From 1869 Častotice belonged to the Trebitsch district. At that time the village had 80 inhabitants and consisted of 11 houses. In 1894 Zahrádka and Častotice broke away from Namiest and formed the municipality of Zahrádka. In 1900 there were 101 people in Častotice; In 1910 there were 97. In the 1921 census, 87 people lived in the 13 houses in the village, including 86 Czechs. In 1930 Častotice consisted of 15 houses and had 86 inhabitants. Between 1939 and 1945 Častotice / Tschastotitz belonged to the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia . In 1948 Častotice was assigned to the Okres Velká Bíteš. In 1950 Častotice had 69 inhabitants. In the course of the territorial reform and the repeal of the Okres Velká Bíteš, the village was assigned to the Okres Třebíč on July 1, 1960 . In the 2001 census, there were 56 people living in the 19 houses in Častotice.

Local division

The district of Častotice forms a cadastral district.

Attractions

  • Chapel of the Virgin Mary in the village square
  • Earth stables ( lochy ) under the village

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/790214/Castotice
  2. ^ Gregor Wolny : The Margraviate of Moravia, presented topographically, statistically and historically . Volume III: Znojmo District, Brno 1837, p. 444
  3. Čebeky - Chytilův místopis Czechoslovakia, 2nd updated edition, 1929, p 146 Častá , falsely there with Častonice referred