Gradnitz (municipality of Zwettl-Lower Austria)
Gradnitz ( village ) locality cadastral community Gradnitz administrative district |
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Basic data | ||
Pole. District , state | Zwettl (ZT), Lower Austria | |
Judicial district | Zwettl | |
Pole. local community | Zwettl-Lower Austria | |
Coordinates | 48 ° 37 '49 " N , 15 ° 8' 41" E | |
height | 614 m above sea level A. | |
Residents of the village | 121 (January 1, 2020) | |
Building status | 50 (2001) | |
Area d. KG | 3.69 km² | |
Post Code | 3910 Zwettl | |
prefix | + 43/02822 (Zwettl) | |
Mayor | Rudolf Blauensteiner (as of September 15, 2019) | |
Statistical identification | ||
Locality code | 07035 | |
Cadastral parish number | 24316 | |
Counting district / district | Gradnitz (32530 080) | |
Population density : 42.55 / km² Source: STAT : Place directory ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS |
Gradnitz is a village in the Waldviertel in Lower Austria and a village and cadastral municipality of the municipality of Zwettl-Niederösterreich in the Zwettl district .
geography
Gradnitz is about five kilometers as the crow flies northwest of the city center of Zwettl. According to the 2001 census, the place had 157 inhabitants on an area of 3.69 km².
The place is connected to the Austrian intercity bus network by post buses .
- Neighboring towns, villages and cadastral communities
Unterrabenthan | Großhaslau | |
Oberstrahlbach | Rotten | |
Niederstrahlbach |
Zwettl city |
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history
- Gradnitz was first mentioned in 1139 with the name Gradenze in the founding document of the Zwettl Monastery . The name is derived from the Slavic word grad (German: castle ) and thus describes the area around a castle.
- When the feudal social system was abolished in the Austrian Empire after the revolution of 1848/49 , independent communities were formed everywhere. An unrealized draft for the Waldviertel stipulated that Gradnitz should belong to the local community of Zwettl. Due to resistance from the population, Gradnitz was finally allowed to constitute itself as an independent local community in 1850 .
- In the course of the voluntary amalgamation of municipalities after 1968, Gradnitz joined the newly formed municipality of Zwettl in 1970.
Population development |
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date | Residents |
1869 | 127 |
1951 | 140 |
1961 | 138 |
1971 | 133 |
1981 | 132 |
1991 | 133 |
2001 | 157 |
2011 | 133 |
Web links
- Cadastral communities - G. Bibliography. In: zwettl.gv.at. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on May 8, 2030 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Mayor - All. In: zwettl.gv.at. Retrieved September 15, 2019 .
- ↑ Census of May 15, 2001: inhabitants by locality. (PDF; 16 kB) In: Statistics Austria. Federal Statistical Office Austria, p. 1 , accessed on August 5, 2009 .
- ^ Austrian Academy of Sciences (ed.): The cities of Lower Austria . Publishing house of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, 1982, ISBN 978-3-7001-0463-6 , p. 388 .
- ↑ Certificate No. 36 in Friedrich Hausmann (Ed.): Diplomata 21: The documents of Konrad III. and his son Heinrich (Conradi III. et filii eius Heinrici Diplomata). Vienna 1969, pp. 58–60 ( Monumenta Germaniae Historica , digitized version )
- ^ Cadastral communities, initial mention and interpretation of names. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on July 15, 2009 . Cf. Elisabeth Schuster: The Etymology of Lower Austrian Place Names . Ed .: Association for regional studies of Lower Austria. Vienna (1989, 1990, 1994).
- ↑ 1850, congregations are formed. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on August 5, 2009 .
- ^ Parish consolidation . City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on July 15, 2009 .
- ↑ Kurt Klein: Historisches Ortslexikon - Statistical Documentation on Population and Settlement History. Lower Austria, part 4: Waidhofen an der Thaya, Wiener Neustadt (Land), Vienna area, Zwettl. (PDF; 840 KB) In: oeaw.ac.at. ÖAW , August 31, 2016, p. 114 , accessed May 5, 2019 .