Domaslavice (Proseč pod Ještědem)

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Domaslavice
Domaslavice does not have a coat of arms
Domaslavice (Proseč pod Ještědem) (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Liberecký kraj
District : Liberec
Municipality : Proseč pod Ještědem
Geographic location : 50 ° 41 ′  N , 15 ° 1 ′  E Coordinates: 50 ° 40 ′ 48 ″  N , 15 ° 0 ′ 31 ″  E
Residents : 57 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 463 43
License plate : S.

Domaslavice (German Ober-Domaslowitz , also Domaslowitz or Domaslowicz ) is a district of the municipality Proseč pod Ještědem in the Czech Republic . It is located ten kilometers south of the city center of Liberec and belongs to the Okres Liberec .

history

It was originally named after the Moravian town of Domoslaw. The Domaslowitz estate consisted of the Domaslowitz farm and the villages of Domaslowitz, Jawornik , Raschen (Rašovka), Padouchow (Padouchov), Bystra (Bystra, now part of Šimonovice ) and Proschwitz . Under the Smiřický von Smiřice lords , Domaslowitz still belonged to the Aicha rule . Wallenstein took over the rule of Aicha in 1622 as guardian of the feeble-minded Jindřich Smiřický and separated the Domaslowitz estate as a feudal estate. Now Friedländer fief, the duke sold the estate on March 6, 1628 to the Friedland court master Paul Cornazani (also Karnitzan). He and his wife also owned an estate in Mladějov in the Bunzlauer Kreis and Möhlten . Paul Cornazani died on February 18, 1632 in Pischkowitz . His wife Anna Susanna Saltza von Heidersdorf then married the Imperial Colonel Sergeant Christian von Schaffhurdt (* ~ 1600, † 1640), a grandson of Hieronymus Schaffhirt . On April 13, 1636, the estate was transferred to inheritance by an imperial resolution. He was judged with the sword in 1640 for allegedly poisoning his wife. As early as July 18, 1638, Emperor Ferdinand ordered the imperial Austrian commissioner Johann Putz von Adlersthurn (* 1595, † 1660) to administer the estate in court. In 1653 the imperial general Lothar Dietrich von Bönninghausen is said to have owned the estate. After 1650 the estate came into the possession of Count Adam Wilhelm Schellart von Obbendorf Freiherr von Gürzenich. After his death around 1681, the Domaslowitz estate was divided into two parts. One part to the son Franz Schellart, the other on May 23, 1686 to the widow Susanna Helena Schellart, born von Goltz and now married to Anton de Bedarrides. In 1692, Susanna Helena donated the women's monastery to the holy angels in Prague for the free world nobles and became the first superior. In 1690 the Domaslowitz estate was leased to Gedeon Ehrlich von Ehrenfeld. Around 1700, the estate and the associated villages of Jawornik, Proschwitz and Raschen came into the possession of the Bohemian chamber law assessor Wenzel Matthias Josef von Desfours . After his death, Johann Georg von Waßmuth (Polish delegation secretary) took the oath of feud on October 13, 1710 for the widow Polyxena Elisabeth Desfour, born Hartmann von Klarstein (* February 25, 1672, † July 11, 1760). On March 8, 1723, the sons Joachim Maximilian Josef von Desfour (* October 6, 1702, † September 29, 1749) and Franz Wenzel von Desfour (* May 1, 1701, † May 17, 1742) are inscribed in the table. The latter fell as an imperial colonel in the battle of Chotusitz . The brother sold the Domaslowitz estate on January 26, 1728 for 40,000 guilders to Count Ludwig Joseph von Hartig on Wartenberg (* 1685, † January 17, 1735). He bequeathed the property to his children. The son Adam Franz von Hartig (born March 25, 1724, † November 15, 1783) took over the estate on June 26, 1747. In 1750 he bought Alt-Aicha (today's village of Starý Dub, 2 km north of Český Dub ) . The Domaslowitz estate remained in the possession of Count Hartig until 1835. On June 1 and July 14, 1835, respectively, Domaslowitz and Alt-Aicha were given to Charles Alois Gabriel des Rohan, Duke, by Count Franz de Paula Anton von Hartig (* June 5, 1789, † January 11, 1865) for 95,000 guilders by Montbazon and Prince of Guéméné (* January 18, 1764, ???? † April 24, 1836) sold. This then placed both goods under the administration of the original rule Böhmisch Aicha .

In 1991 the village had 52 inhabitants, at the 2001 census 57 people lived in 19 houses in Domaslavice.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Announcements of the Association for Local Studies of the Jeschken-Iser-Gaues, Vol. 25–26 . 1931 ( limited preview in Google Book Search).
  2. http://www.czso.cz/csu/2009edicniplan.nsf/t/010028D080/$File/13810901.pdf