Charbuzice
Charbuzice | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : |
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Region : | Královéhradecký kraj | |||
District : | Hradec Králové | |||
Municipality : | Stěžery | |||
Geographic location : | 50 ° 14 ' N , 15 ° 45' E | |||
Height: | 280 m nm | |||
Residents : | 20 (March 1, 2001) | |||
Postal code : | 503 21 | |||
License plate : | H | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Stěžírky - Chaloupky |
Charbuzice (German Charbusitz , 1939–45 Karbusitz ) is a district of the municipality Stěžery in Okres Hradec Králové in the Czech Republic . It is located seven kilometers west of the city center of Hradec Králové on the city limits.
geography
Charbuzice is located in the Východolabská tabule (table land on the eastern Elbe ). To the north rises the U Žižkova stolu (311 m nm), southwest of the Stínec ( stone field , 304 m nm). Road II / 324 runs south of the village between Nechanice and Opatovice nad Labem .
Neighboring towns are Bor 2.díl and Rosnice in the north, Bříza in the northeast, Chaloupky and Svobodné Dvory in the east, Kukleny in the southeast, Stěžery in the south, Stěžírky in the southwest, Nový Přím and Horní Přím in the west and Dolní Přím , Probluz and Bor 1. díl in the northwest.
history
The first written mention of the place took place in 1547, when Emperor Ferdinand I confiscated the Přím estate belonging to the town of Königgrätz with the villages of Bříza, Charbuzice, Probluz and Stěžírky because of their participation in the Bohemian uprising and sold it to Johann von Pernstein . The following owners were from 1587 the Záruba von Hustířan family and from 1655 the lords of Vinoř. Rudolf von Vinoř died in 1677 without heirs and bequeathed his goods Přím, Popowitz and Rosnitz to the Jesuit College in Königgrätz. The Jesuits combined the three estates into a Dominium Přím. After the Jesuit order was abolished, the Přím estate fell to the Royal Bohemian Study Fund in 1773. In 1806 the estate was sold to Wenzel Klement and Wenzel Sliwensky, who sold it to Johann Riedel in 1811. In 1815 Franz Riedel inherited the property.
In 1835 the village of Charbusitz , located in the Königgrätzer Kreis , consisted of 6 houses in which 30 people lived. Parish was a problem. Until the middle of the 19th century, Charbusitz remained subject to the allodial estate Přim.
After the abolition of patrimonial Charbuzice formed from 1849 a district of the community Stěžírky in the judicial district Nechanitz . From 1868 the village belonged to the Königgrätz district . Since the end of the 19th century the village was called Charbusice . By order of the linguistic commission in Prague, the place name was changed back to Charbuzice in 1920 . 1949 Charbuzice was assigned to the Okres Hradec Králové-okolí; this was lifted in the course of the territorial reform of 1960, since then the village has belonged to Okres Hradec Králové. On January 1, 1976, it was incorporated into Stěžery. On March 3, 1991, the place had 16 residents; in the 2001 census, 20 people lived in the 8 houses in Charbuzice.
Community structure
The district Charbuzice is part of the cadastral district Stěžírky.
Attractions
- Wayside shrine
- To the north of the village are the remains of the medium wave transmitter "Stěžery." It was built as a jammer against Radio Free Europe for the district town of Hradec Králové, later also used for the regional studio HK and Inter programs. After 2000 the medium wave was replaced from here. The remaining 60 m high mast has been used since 2016 for the private station "Rádio Dechovka" (a brass music radio) 792 kHz.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer , Franz Xaver Maximilian Zippe: The Kingdom of Böhmen. Statistically and topographically presented, vol. 4 Königgrätzer Kreis , Prague 1836, p. 43
- ↑ https://www.czso.cz/documents/10180/20565661/13810901.pdf/3fde2441-c81b-4a1e-9b94-551e65007f70?version=1.0