Bartovice

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bartovice
Coat of arms is missing
Help on coat of arms
Bartovice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Moravskoslezský kraj
District : Ostrava-město
Municipality : Ostrava
Area : 852 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 48 '  N , 18 ° 21'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 47 '51 "  N , 18 ° 21' 24"  E
Residents : 1,836 (2011)
License plate : T
traffic
Next international airport : Ostrava Airport

Bartovice (formerly also Bartulovice or Bartultovice , German Bartelsdorf , Polish Bartowice ) is an eastern district of Ostrava in the Czech Republic , east of the confluence of the Lučina in the Ostravice .

Šenovská Street

history

The place in the Duchy of Teschen , founded in 1290, was first mentioned in a document around 1305 in the Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis (Tithe Register of the Diocese of Breslau ) among around seventy new villages as "Item in Bertoltowitz". The number of hooves was not yet specified in the tithing register. The name was identical to the village Bertoltowitz or Biertołtowice / Biertułtowice an der Biala , now Komorowice , a district of Bielsko-Biała, mentioned for the first time in the tithe register . Both names were patronymically derived from the personal name Biertołt / Bartołt / Bartułt (≤ German Berthold) with the typical West Slavic suffix - (ow) ice, but the German names were different. First, Bartelsdorf or Bertels village on the Ostravice in 1388, after the introduction of the Czech official language in the Kingdom of Bohemia , and around the year 1430 in the Duchy of Cieszyn until the 18th century mostly under the Slavic name as Bartoltowice (1508), Bartulowicz [e ] (1566), Bartultowicze (1679) mentioned, while in 1566 the name Bertoltowitz near Bielitz fell out of use in favor of the German Betzdorf (later Batzdorf ). The Bartovice form, shortened by the haplology of the subject Bartołt- ≥ Bart-, was used from the 17th century (e.g. na Bartowiczych , 1684).

In 1411 Ješek / Jeszek Kornic sold the village of Bartelsdorf to Ondřej / Andrzej von Tworkau and thus it belonged to the Polish Ostrau until the middle of the 17th century. Until 1738 it belonged to Sedlnitzky von Choltitz but with Radvanice it was sold to the Skrbenští z Hříště family, the owners of Šenov , who remained in their possession until 1848.

In the description of Teschener Silesia by Reginald Kneifl in 1804, Bartelsdorf, Moravian Bartultowitze was a rulership village and the parish of Schönhof in Teschner Kreis , on the water Luczina and on Troppauer Strasse. The village had 96 houses with 572 inhabitants in the Silesian-Moravian dialect . After the abolition of patrimonial it became a municipality in Austrian Silesia , judicial district Friedek until 1901 in the district of Teschen , then in the district of Friedek . At this time industrialization followed in the area, but not in Bartelsdorf itself. The number of inhabitants rose to 1191 by 1869, then to 1350 by 1880 (1348 with registration) and in 1910 to 2062 (2061). The village remained predominantly inhabited by Czech-speaking (between 99% in 1880 and 95.8% in 1900) Roman Catholics (over 90% in 1900 and 1910) who called themselves Lachen , but there were also a few dozen Polish and German-speaking residents , over 100 Protestants and some Jews.

After the collapse of Austria-Hungary in late 1918, Bartovice became part of Czechoslovakia . From 1939 in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia . In 1950 the village had almost 3,000 inhabitants. Bartovice was incorporated into Ostrava on January 1, 1960.

Web links

Commons : Bartovice  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Idzi Panic: Śląsk Cieszyński w średniowieczu (do 1528) . Starostwo Powiatowe w Cieszynie, Cieszyn 2010, ISBN 978-83-926929-3-5 , p. 297-299 (Polish).
  2. ^ Wilhelm Schulte: Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T.14 Liber Fundationis Episcopatus Vratislaviensis . Breslau 1889, ISBN 978-83-926929-3-5 , p. 110-112 ( online ).
  3. Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis ( la ) Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  4. Robert Mrózek: nazwy miejscowe dawnego Śląska Cieszyńskiego . Uniwersytet Śląski w Katowicach , 1984, ISSN  0208-6336 , p. 36, 93 (Polish).
  5. ^ Reginald Kneifl: Topography of the Kaiser. royal Antheils von Schlesien , 2nd part, 1st volume: Condition and constitution, in particular of the Duchy of Teschen, Principality of Bielitz and the free minor class lords Friedeck, Freystadt, German people, Roy, Reichenwaldau and Oderberg . Joseph Georg Traßler, Brünn 1804, p. 121 ( e-copy )
  6. Kazimierz Piątkowski: Stosunki narodowościowe w Księstwie Cieszyńskiem . Macierz Szkolna Księstwa Cieszyńskiego, Cieszyn 1918, p. 286 (Polish, online ).