Adrijanci

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Adrijanci (Hungarian Andorháza, German: Klein Schall ) is a village and part of the municipality of Gornji Petrovci in Slovenia . The place is about two kilometers north of the community center on the old Gornji Petrovci - Šalovci road .

The scattered settlement has around 215 inhabitants and is partially spread over the valley of the Adrijanski brook, 263 m, and the two adjacent mountain ranges. The individual groups of houses in the valley have the field names Sojkini, Zavcini, Ferencini and Lepošini. Some farms located higher up are named Borinje, Idukini, Mijokini and Beznovini.

In the north and south, the slopes are partially forested, in places protected from the weather, fruit plantations have been created and a number of vineyards are cultivated on the Vreje hill.

history

The place is first documented in 1366 with "Adrian in valle seu dystrictu Sool", whereby the name Sool refers to the neighboring municipality of Šalovci. In 1499 the settlement was mentioned in a record with Odoryancz and in a protocol of the Diocese of Győr / Raab for 1698 it is recorded that the place "Fölsö Sal seu Odriáncz" belongs to the Catholic parish of the Holy Trinity in Petrocz (Gornji Petrovci).

In 1890 the village is officially called Andorháza and had 424 inhabitants, 419 of whom claimed to be Slovenes, 4 as Germans and one did not indicate any nationality. The place was in the Muraszombat district, today's Murska Sobota , in Vas / Eisenburg county .

The Treaty of Trianon proposed the village to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on June 4, 1920 . For the place now officially called Adrijanci, the following data were determined in the census on January 31, 1921: 407 Slovenes, of these 407 residents 29 professed to be Catholic and 378 to the Protestant faith.

The 1931 census found 392 inhabitants, in 1961 there were 316 and the following figures are known for 1971: 289 inhabitants, 74 houses, 73 households and 240 villagers who live exclusively from agriculture.

literature

  • Ivan Zelko , Historična Topografija Slovenije I. Prekmurje do leta 1500. Murska Sobota, 1982
  • Matija Slavič, Naše Prekmurje. Murska Sobota, 1999.
  • Atlas Slovenije, Ljubljana 1985.

Web links

Coordinates: 46 ° 49 ′ 12.54 "  N , 16 ° 14 ′ 1.53"  E