Dědinka

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Dědinka
Dědinka does not have a coat of arms
Dědinka (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Olomoucký kraj
District : Olomouc
Municipality : Troubelice
Area : 187 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 48 '  N , 17 ° 4'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 48 '19 "  N , 17 ° 3' 33"  E
Height: 280  m nm
Residents : 56 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 783 83
License plate : M.
traffic
Street: Medlov - Dědinka

Dědinka (German Dörfl , also Dörfel ) is a district of the Troubelice municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located six kilometers northwest of Uničov and belongs to the Okres Olomouc .

geography

The Dědinka Rundling is located on the eastern edge of the Úsovská vrchovina ( Ausseer Hügelland ) in the valley basin of the Dědinkovský creek. The Račůvka (370 m) rises to the north, the Vystříbro ( Silberberg , 289 m) to the east, the Holubice (380 m) to the west and the Skalka (425 m) to the north-west. The Šternberk – Lichkov railway line runs east of the village ; there is also the Troubelice train station .

Neighboring towns are Pískov and Sídliště in the north, Troubelice in the north-east, Lazce in the east, Uničov in the south-east, Medlov in the south, Zadní Újezd ​​in the south-west, Úsov and Police in the west, and Holubice, Klopina and Veleboř in the north-west.

history

In the 14th century, the Troubelice fiefdom created a small courtyard on the site of the village , around which a round was created by Czech settlers. The first written mention of the village Ugyezd Parvum ( Újezdeček ) belonging to the rule Úsov took place in 1371. From 1492 the place was referred to as Moravský Újezdec , 1516 as Dědinka , from 1525 as Přední Oujezdeček and from 1564 as Přední Oujezdečky . During the Thirty Years' War the village was ravaged by a plundering and murdering Polish mercenary army in 1624. In the last years of the war the area was occupied by the Swedes, who did not leave Mährisch Neustadt until July 8, 1650 after the Peace of Westphalia . As a result, the village became deserted. The resettlement of the desert farmsteads was carried out by German settlers from the mountainous region. The registers were kept in Medlov since 1650. From 1673 the village was led under the German name Dörfel above the Medl and Dörffel . Other forms of name were Přední Augest (1720), Dörffle , Dörfel , Dörfla (from 1724), Aujezdce (1771), Přední Aujezd (1798), Dědinky and Derfle (1846). Until the middle of the 19th century, the village always remained subservient to Aussee .

After the abolition of patrimonial , Dörffel / Derfle formed from 1850 a district of the municipality Storzendorf / Zadní Újezd in the district administration of Littau and the judicial district of Mährisch Neustadt. In 1855 the place was assigned to the Mährisch Neustadt district and from 1868 back to the Littau district. Between 1871 and 1873 the railway from Olomouc to Mährisch Schönberg was built , on which the Troubelice station was built east of the village . The Czech community name Dědinka has been used since 1872. Since 1878 Dörfel formed its own municipality. In 1909 the place was assigned to the Sternberg district . In 1930 there were 165 people in the village, in 1939 there were 152. Most of them were Germans, there was also a Czech minority.

According to the Munich Agreement , Dörfl was incorporated into the German Reich on October 10, 1938 and belonged to the Sternberg district until 1945 . After the attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, a prisoner-of-war camp for Red Army soldiers was set up at Treublitz station. On May 6, 1945, the Red Army took the place. During the war most of the local history was burned, other documents disappeared. After the war ended, the community returned to Czechoslovakia and the German residents were expelled in 1946.

1949 Dědinka was assigned to the judicial district of Šternberk. In the course of the territorial reform of 1960, the place came after the dissolution of the Okres Šternberk to the Okres Olomouc and was incorporated into Troubelice . In 1991 there were 51 inhabitants in Dědinka. In the 2001 census, 56 people lived in the village's 26 houses.

Attractions

  • Chapel of the Virgin Mary, it was built with the surrounding cemetery on a piece of land donated by the German farmer Gramel and was consecrated in 1927.

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/zsj-obec/505293/Obec-Troubelice
  2. Místopisný rejstřík obcí českého Slezska a severní Moravy (p. 82) ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 2.2 MB)  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.archives.cz

Web links