Boršice u Blatnice

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Boršice u Blatnice
Boršice u Blatnice coat of arms
Boršice u Blatnice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Zlínský kraj
District : Uherské Hradiště
Area : 1161 ha
Geographic location : 48 ° 56 '  N , 17 ° 35'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 55 '57 "  N , 17 ° 34' 30"  E
Height: 298  m nm
Residents : 821 (Jan. 1, 2019)
Postal code : 687 63
License plate : Z
traffic
Street: Blatnice pod Svatým Antonínkem - Nové Mesto nad Váhom
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Bohuslav Vávra (as of 2020)
Address: Boršice u Blatnice 157
687 63 Boršice u Blatnice
Municipality number: 592056
Website : www.borsiceublatnice.cz

Boršice u Blatnice , until 1960 Boršice (German Borschitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located seven kilometers southeast of Hluk and belongs to the Okres Uherské Hradiště .

geography

The street green village Boršice u Blatnice extends on the western slope of the White Carpathians along the brook Boršický potok . The village lies on the edge of the protected landscape area CHKO Bílé Karpaty. To the north rises the Babí hora (364 m), in the southeast of the Kolo (490 m), to the south the Lipinka (504 m), the Stráž (401 m) and the Suchovský Šumárník (477 m), in the southwest the Draha (374 m) ) and to the northwest the Jasenová (409 m). The state road I / 54 between Veselí nad Moravou and Nové Mesto nad Váhom runs through Boršice u Blatnice .

Neighboring towns are Babí Hora and Dolni Němčí in the north, Slavkov in the Northeast, Horni Němčí the east, Uherskohradišťské Vápenky , Fojtické Mlýny, Podširocké Mlýny and Čerešnické Mlýny the southeast, Hryzlácké Mlýny, zámečnické Mlýny, Suchovské Mlýny, Trnovský Mlyn and Suchov in the south, Velka nad Veličkou , Žilkův Mlýn, Horákův Mlýn and Louka in the southwest, Blatnička in the west and Ostrožská Lhota and Hluk in the northwest.

history

The village was first mentioned in writing in 1278 in a document from Hartmann von Holenstein . The name of the place goes back to Boresch II von Riesenburg , who was probably also its founder. In the 14th century, the Lords of Sternberg acquired the goods. Albert von Sternberg auf Světlov († 1380) signed the villages of Boršice, Spinek and Wnorov, including the right of patronage over the church in Wnorov, to his wife Anežka as a morning gift. A festival in Boršice was also mentioned. In 1412 Jaroslav von Sternberg ceded the villages of Louka , Boršice, Spinek and Wnorov and later the Světlov Castle to the widow Vok von Krawarns , Eliška von Sternberg. The fortress went out during the Hussite Wars . In the 16th century the village was attached to the Ostroh rule . The subsequent owners were the lords of Kunowitz and, from 1625, the Liechtenstein family . In 1663 Boršice was devastated by troops of the Grand Vizier Ahmed Kiuprili under the leadership of the Duke of Sharosh , Michael Apaffy . In 1686 the Turks invaded Boršice again. The first school was built in Boršice at the beginning of the 18th century. Around 1787 a new local chaplaincy was set up. Around 1790 Borschitz consisted of 131 houses in which 136 families with 675 inhabitants lived. Farmland and vineyards belonged to the place. Until the middle of the 19th century, Boršice always remained subservient to Ostroh.

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Boršice / Borschitz 1850 a municipality in the district administration Hradisch . In 1949 the community was assigned to the new Okres Veselí nad Moravou. After the cancellation of the Okres Veselí nad Moravou, Boršice came back to the Okres Uherské Hradiště at the end of 1960 and received the official addition u Blatnice to distinguish it from Boršice u Buchlovic .

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Boršice u Blatnice.

Attractions

  • Church of St. Katharina, late baroque building from 1788
  • Prayer column of St. Katharina, on the road to Blatnička, was created in the 18th century
  • Boršický kancionál, the songbook was written by the cantor Martin Pomykal between 1727 and 1733 and decorated with motifs from Moravian folk ornaments.
  • CHKO Bílé Karpaty Protected Landscape Area
  • Nature reserves Nádavky and Babí hora, by the vineyards north of the village

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
  2. ^ Franz Joseph Schwoy : Topography of the Markgrafthum Moravia. Volume 2: Brno and Hradian districts. Printed by Joseph Hraschanzky kk German and Hebrew court printer and bookseller, Vienna 1793, p. 487 .