Čepí

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Čepí
Coat of arms of Čepí
Čepí (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Pardubický kraj
District : Pardubice
Area : 248 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 59 '  N , 15 ° 43'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 59 '6 "  N , 15 ° 43' 3"  E
Height: 247  m nm
Residents : 450 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 533 32
License plate : E.
traffic
Street: Choltice - Mikulovice
Railway connection: Heřmanův Městec – Borohrádek
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Zuzana Dvořáková (as of 2018)
Address: Čepí 79
533 32 Čepí
Municipality number: 574864
Website : www.cepi.cz
Chapel of the Virgin of Carmel
House number 22

Čepí (German Czep , 1939–1945 Tschep ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located eight kilometers southwest of the city center of Pardubice and belongs to the Okres Pardubice .

geography

Čepí is located by the Dubanka brook on the Heřmanoměstecká tabule ( Hermannstädtler Tafel ). The Heřmanův Městec – Borohrádek railway runs two kilometers to the south .

Neighboring towns are Starý Mateřov and Dubany in the north, Staré Jesenčany and Dražkovice in the northeast, Blato and Dřenice in the east, Třibřichy in the southeast, Bylany and Rozhovice in the south, Doubrava and Klešice in the southwest, Jezbořice and Cerhov in the west, and Barchov , Veselá and Hladíkov Northwest.

history

The area was already settled during the Bronze Age, and a prehistoric settlement is believed to have occurred in the vicinity of Čepí. In 1881, while deep plowing , a farmer found a bronze treasure from the time of the Silesian-Platenitz culture, consisting of two large fibulae, 29 eyelet neck rings ( hřivna ) and fragments of jewelry. Another bronze depot that u. a. Containing seven circular spirals and belonging to the Lausitz culture , was discovered in 1894. In addition, a body grave with clay objects was found in 1932.

The first written mention of the place took place in 1375 as the property of the nobleman Ješek von Čepie. After the Vladiken family of Čepie had died out, a dispute over the estate began in 1459–1464. The Čepie estate fell to Bohuslav von Drahobudice, the subsequent owner was Jan Přehovský von Zasmuk. At the beginning of the 16th century, Zdislav the elder of Dobřenice bought the Čepí estate; he sold it in 1543 to the Kuttenberg miners' union. On May 4, 1694, Emperor Leopold I bought the Czepie estate , which was of almost no use to the miners, for 8,500 Rhenish guilders and a further 36 guilders key money from the miners' guild and gave it to the cameraman of Pardubitz . The village was subordinated to the Rychta Jezbořice . Other forms of the name at this time were Čziepie , Čzepy and Czepy . The manorial tavern with the shop was sold to a private owner in 1780. The main source of income was agriculture, in the fields v. a. Hemp, flax and millet are grown. In 1818 187 people lived in the 23 houses in the village.

In 1835, the in consisted Chrudim District village located Čep or cepy of 22 houses, where 170 people lived. There was an inn in the village. The parish was Gezbořitz . Until the middle of the 19th century, Čep remained subordinate to the Imperial and Royal Chamber of Commerce Pardubice.

After the abolition of patrimonial Čepy formed from 1849 a municipality in the judicial district of Pardubice . From 1868 the community belonged to the Pardubitz district . Between 1897 and 1899 the railway line Heřmanův Městec – Borohrádek was laid. In 1918 Čepy had 337 inhabitants. In 1924 the official name of the municipality was changed to Čepí . In 1949 Čepí was assigned to the Okres Pardubice-okolí. This was lifted in the course of the territorial reform of 1960, since then the village has belonged again to the Okres Pardubice. In 2000, the municipality bought the site of the former brickworks for expansion into an industrial area.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Čepí.

Attractions

  • Chapel of the Virgin of Carmel in the village square, built in 1871
  • Memorial stone for the fallen of the First World War

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/obec/574864/Cepi
  2. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
  3. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 5: Chrudimer Kreis. Prague 1837, p. 55