Dolnji Slaveči

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dolnji Slaveči (Slovenia)
Dolnji Slaveči
Dolnji Slaveči
Location in SloveniaSloveniaSlovenia 

Volunteer fire brigade in Dolnji Slaveči.

Dolnji Slaveči ( Hungarian : Alsócsalogány , German : Unter Slabitsch ) is a village and part of the municipality of Grad in Slovenia .

geography

The houses and farms of the settlement are scattered in the valley of the Lukaj brook and on the two adjoining mountain slopes. The place, 240  m. i. J. , occupies the western part of the municipality and has 477 inhabitants (2006). The village boundary has an area of ​​5.52 km² and is used exclusively for agriculture and forestry. There are a few vineyards for personal use on sunny slopes. The groups of houses in the village area have traditional field names. The most interesting are east of the Lukaj brook Ažija, Kukojca and Ferkova and west of the brook Olabe, Ungarov Breg, Vratušov Breg, Reckova Graba and Šumarski Vrh.

history

The place is first mentioned in 1365 as "Alsozcleueche". A year later it is noted: “Alsozaloucha in dystrictu Waralyakurniky”, which means that the settlement belonged to the Felsőlendva dominion (Oberlimbach, today Grad). In 1499 the village was called Alsozalocha, and in a protocol of the diocese of Raab / Győr for the year 1698 the place name Alsó Szlavecsa is documented. At that time the place was in the area of ​​the parish of Felsőlendva.

In 1890 the village is officially called Alsócsalogány and had 707 inhabitants, 657 of them known as Slovenes and 50 as Germans. The place belonged to the Muraszómbat district (today Murska Sobota ) of Eisenburg / Vas county .

The Trianon Peace Treaty gave the village to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes . For the place now officially named Dolnji Slaveči, the following data were determined in the census on January 31, 1921: 813 Slovenes, 6 Germans and another ethnic group, of these 820 residents 522 professed to be Catholic and 298 to the Protestant faith.

The 1931 census found 812 inhabitants, in 1961 there were 668 and the following figures are known for 1971: 647 inhabitants, 142 houses, 140 households and 524 villagers who live exclusively on agricultural income.

Personalities

literature

  • Ivan Zelko : Historična Topografija Slovenije I. Prekmurje do leta 1500 . Murska Sobota, 1982.
  • Matija Slavič: Naše Prekmurje . Murska Sobota, 1999.
  • Atlas: Slovenije . Ljubljana, 1985.

Individual evidence

  1. Slovenija na vojaškem zemljevidu 1763-1787: Sekcije I-6, I-7, I Vincenc Rajšp, Slovenska akademija - ed. 7 - 1995

Coordinates: 46 ° 47 '  N , 16 ° 4'  E