Chotebuz

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Chotebuz
Coat of arms of Chotěbuz
Chotěbuz (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Moravskoslezský kraj
District : Karviná
Area : 1061 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 47 '  N , 18 ° 36'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 46 '58 "  N , 18 ° 36' 24"  E
Height: 330  m nm
Residents : 1,363 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 735 61
traffic
Street: Stanislavice - Zpupná Lhota
Railway connection: Žilina – Bohumín
Ostrava - Český Těšín
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Martin Pinkas (as of 2011)
Address: Chotěbuzská 250
735 61 Chotěbuz
Municipality number: 555291
Website : www.chotebuz.cz

Chotěbuz (German Kotzobendz or Kotzobenz , Polish Kocobędz ) is a municipality in the Moravian-Silesian region in the Czech Republic . It is located five kilometers northeast of Český Těšín on the Czech-Polish border.

geography

Chotěbuz is located in the foothills of the Beskids on a hilltop between the Olsa and Stonávka valleys . To the west, the E 75 / E 462 leads over the Olsa to Poland. In the east, the state road 67 from Český Těšín to Karviná and the railway along the Olsa. The Chotěbuz train station is located in Podobora. To the north are the Důl ČSM coal mine and the Podobora Archeopark, and to the west is the Těrlicko dam .

Neighboring towns are Louky and Kempy in the north, Podobora and Marklowice in the north-east, Zpupná Lhota and Boguszowice in the west, Český Těšín in the south-west, Mosty and Vyroubaný in the south, Stanislavice in the south-west, Pacalůvka in the west and Albrechtice and Pardubice in the north-west.

history

The village was first mentioned in 1229 as the property of the Benedictine monastery Tyniec (later the monastery in Orlau was built ). The monastery ran a fortified farm in Chotěbuz. After the dissolution of the monastery in the 15th century, the monastery courtyard became an independent estate and in 1447 was attached to the rule of Freistadt .

In 1559 the Duke of Teschen gave Wenzel III. the estate to his chancellor Wenzel Rudzky von Rudz. He had the courtyard expanded into a fortified castle. Chotěbuz remained the seat of the Rudzky von Rudz family until 1701. After numerous changes of ownership, Karl Josef Freiherr Trach von Březí acquired the castle in 1771 . In 1802 the Teschener Kammer acquired the Kotzobendzer property.

After the abolition of patrimonial Kotzobendz formed a community in the Teschen district from 1850 . In 1871 the first German agricultural school opened in the castle. After the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the ethnic border between Poland and Czechoslovakia was first drawn. Because of the large Polish population, Poland also claimed the Olsa area and the Polish-Czechoslovak border war broke out . From 1920 the place belonged to the Český Těšín district. After the Munich Agreement , Kocobędz was annexed to Poland in 1938 and joined the German Reich the following year after the occupation of Poland. Until 1945 Kotzobends belonged to the district of Teschen and returned to Czechoslovakia after the end of the war.

After the dissolution of the Okres Český Těšín, the place came to the Okres Karviná at the beginning of 1961. In 1975 it was incorporated into Český Těšín . Since 1998, Chotěbuz has been an independent municipality again.

67% of the inhabitants of Chotebuz are Czechs, the strongest national minority are Poles with 27%.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Chotěbuz. The locations Obora ( Hegerhäuser ), Podobora ( Thiergarten ), and Zpupná Lhota ( Allodial Ellgoth ) belong to Chotěbuz .

Attractions

Chotěbuz watch tower
  • Chotěbuz Castle, in the 16th century a renaissance fortress of Rudzký von Rudz was built from the monastery courtyard, which was rebuilt into a classical chateau at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1871 an agricultural school was housed in the castle.
  • Guard tower of the monastery courtyard from the 15th century
  • Archeopark Podobora, on the small Olsa tributary Mlýnka, a fortress was discovered that shows settlement from the Hallstatt period to the first third of the 11th century
  • Chain of bunkers of the Czechoslovak Wall between Zpupná Lhota and Podobora.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
  2. Ludwig Patryn: The results of the census of December 31, 1910 in Silesia according to population size, homeland law, religion, colloquial language and level of education, taking into account a number of conditions that are more important for the community and traffic. Silesian State Committee, Opava 1912, p. 56.

Web links

Commons : Chotěbuz  - collection of images, videos and audio files