Cejřov
Cejřov | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : |
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Region : | Pardubický kraj | |||
District : | Chrudim | |||
Municipality : | Vrbatův Kostelec | |||
Geographic location : | 49 ° 50 ′ N , 15 ° 57 ′ E | |||
Height: | 410 m nm | |||
Residents : | 17 (2011) | |||
Postal code : | 539 73 | |||
License plate : | E. | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Vrbatův Kostelec - Prosetín | |||
Railway connection: | Havlíčkův Brod – Pardubice |
Cejřov (German Cejrow , 1939–45: Zierau ) is a district of the municipality of Vrbatův Kostelec in the Czech Republic . It is located three kilometers west of Skuteč and belongs to the Okres Chrudim .
geography
Cejřov is located on the left side of the Mrákotínský creek in the Iron Mountains ( Železné hory ). The Zárubka (426 m nm) rises to the northwest. The Zárubka quarry extends to the east, behind which the Havlíčkův Brod – Pardubice railway runs . There are several smaller quarry lakes in the vicinity of the village.
Neighboring places are Vrbatův Kostelec , Zárubka and V Týně in the north, Leštinka in the northeast, Na Obci and Pondělíčkův Les in the east, Mikšův Les, Vila, U Mlýnů and Dolní Prosetín in the southeast, Klínek and Horní Prosetín in the south, Mokrýšov, Mokrýšov Southwest, Kvasín in the west and Hlína in the northwest.
history
The first written mention of Cejřov comes from 1541.
In 1835, the in consisted Chrudim District village located Cegřow of 10 houses where 72 people lived. The parish was Kosteletz . Until the middle of the 19th century, Cegřow remained subject to the Nassaberg rule.
After the abolition of patrimonial Čejřov formed from 1849 a district of the municipality Kostelec in the judicial district of Nassaberg . From 1868 the village belonged to the political district of Chrudim . In 1869 Čejřov had 111 inhabitants. In 1871 the Deutschbrod – Pardubitz railway was opened. In 1900 109 people lived in the village, in 1910 there were 121. The main source of income was the quarrying. Since 1924 the place has been officially called Cejřov . In 1930 Cejřov had 150 inhabitants. In 1949 the village was assigned to the newly formed Okres Hlinsko, and since 1961 it has belonged again to the Okres Chrudim. At the 2001 census, there were 20 people in Cejřov's 16 houses.
Community structure
The Zárubka settlement belongs to Cejřov.
The district is part of the cadastral district of Vrbatův Kostelec.
Attractions
- Stone cross, created in 1891
- Several quarry lakes
- Educational trail “Traces of the Ležáky Tragedy ” (Naučná stezka “Stopy ležácké tragédie”)
literature
- Historický lexikon obcí České republiky 1869–2005 , part 1, p. 518
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.vrbatuvkostelec.cz/
- ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 5: Chrudimer Kreis. Prague 1837, p. 271
- ↑ http://www.uir.cz/casti-obce/185833/Cejrov