Cetkovice

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Cetkovice
Coat of arms of Cetkovice
Cetkovice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihomoravský kraj
District : Blansko
Area : 853 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 35 '  N , 16 ° 43'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 34 '46 "  N , 16 ° 43' 14"  E
Height: 406  m nm
Residents : 761 (Jan. 1, 2019)
Postal code : 679 38
License plate : B.
traffic
Street: Boskovice - Jevíčko
Railway connection: Chornice – Skalice nad Svitavou
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Petr Horák (as of 2018)
Address: Náves 168
679 38 Cetkovice
Municipality number: 581470
Website : www.cetkovice.cz

Cetkovice (German Zetkowitz , formerly Czetkowitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located six kilometers south of Jevíčko and belongs to the Okres Blansko .

geography

Cetkovice is located at the northwestern foot of the Drahaner Bergland in the northern part of the Boskowitz furrow known as Kleine Hanna . To the west of the village, the Světelský and Borotínský creeks merge to form the Uhřický creek. The railway line between Chornice and Boskovice also runs a good kilometer to the west , while the nearest train station, Cetkovice, is one and a half kilometers northwest of the village in an open field. Beyond the railway is the route of the unfinished Vienna-Wroclaw Reichsautobahn . To the northeast rises the Vrchhora (554 m), to the east the Perlov (507 m) and the Lipina (589 m).

Neighboring towns are Jevíčko and Uhřice in the north, Brodek and Úsobrno in the Northeast, Skřipov the east, Nové Sady and Pohora the southeast, Mořicův Dvůr, PRIVEST and Svetla in the south, Pamětice and Vanovice in the southwest, Borotín in the west and Velká Roudka and Velké Opatovice in Northwest.

history

The first written mention of Czetkowicz took place in 1078, when Margrave Otto I donated the Gau Úsobrno to the Hradisch monastery. The place, built as a row of houses around a very large market square, suggests it was founded as an urban settlement. At the transition from the 14th to the 15th century, Cetkovice was the seat of the Puklitz family. On July 23, 1490, Wladislaw Jagiellos approved the abbot Jan of the Hradisko monastery to pledge the Knínice provost to Jindřich von Jezera and Vítek von Ptení. Part of Cetkovice also belonged to the pledge. In 1499, Wladislaw Jagiello pledged the Knínice Provostry with the towns of Knínice and Svitávka and the villages of Uhřice , Úsobrno, Světlá , Cetkovice, Šebetov , Kořenec and Okrouhlá to his advisor Ladislav von Boskowitz . This established a manorial estate in Knínice and added other villages to it. Later the rule came back to the Hradisch Monastery. In the course of the 16th century, Šebetov was expanded to become a new mansion and the order had a large castle built there as a residence. For the abbot Pavel Václavík, a small castle was built in the center of Cetkovice as a summer residence. After the abolition of the monastery in the course of the Josephine reforms, its goods fell to the religious fund on August 18, 1784. From 1784 the children of the Protestants attended school in Vanovice . On June 27, 1785, a major fire reduced the entire village to rubble and ashes. At the end of the 18th century, the settlement of Brodek was established in the valley northeast of Cetkovice. Another big fire hit the whole place again on July 25, 1818, including the church and the rectory. In 1825 Karl Graf Strachwitz bought the Šebetov estate. His son Moritz Graf Strachwitz inherited the property in 1837.

After the abolition of patrimonial Četkovice / Czetkowitz formed from 1850 with the district Brodek a municipality in the district administration Moravská Třebová . In 1855 the municipality was assigned to the district administration Jevíčko , which was repealed in 1868. Between 1860 and 1865 the Karl Octavius ​​estates belonged to Lippe-Weißenfeld . In 1865 the Counts of Strachwitz briefly became the owners of the Šebetov estates again. In the course of foreclosure in the same year, the Viennese factory owner Johann May bought the property, which he then sold to Moritz von Königswarter in 1877 . Since the end of the 19th century the community is called Cetkovice / Zetkowitz . In 1929 the Lipina dam was built north of Brodek. During the German occupation, Zetkowitz was assigned to the political district of Boskowitz between 1941 and 1945 . After the end of the war, the community was initially again part of the Okres Moravská Třebová and in 1949 again assigned to the Okres Boskovice. At the beginning of 1961, Cetkovice was assigned to the Okres Blansko . Cetkovice and Brodek have now grown together to form a closed settlement area.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Cetkovice. The location Brodek belongs to Cetkovice.

Attractions

  • baroque church of St. Philip and James, built in 1699, it received its current shape after the fires of 1785 and 1818
  • Cetkovice Castle, built in 1762 as the summer residence of Abbot Pavel Ferdinand Václavík, since the abolition of the monastery and Václavík's death on November 13, 1784, it has served as a rectory
  • Ecce homo chapel, built in 1886
  • Wooden cross on the church, erected to commemorate the devastating fire of 1785

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/obec/581470/Cetkovice
  2. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)

Web links

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