Hřibová

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Hřibová
Hřibová does not have a coat of arms
Hřibová (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Olomoucký kraj
District : Jeseník
Municipality : Vlčice
Geographic location : 50 ° 21 '  N , 17 ° 1'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 20 '48 "  N , 17 ° 0' 39"  E
Height: 550  m nm
Residents : 0

Hřibová , until 1948 Pilcberk (German Pilzberg ), is an extinct settlement in the municipality of Vlčice in the Czech Republic . It is located five kilometers south of Javorník and belongs to the Okres Jeseník .

geography

Hřibová is located on the right side above the valley of Lánský potok on the northern slope of the mountain of the same name in the Reichensteiner Mountains ( Rychlebské hory ). To the east rises the Schafferberg (486 m nm), in the south the Hřibová ( Pilzberg , 600 m nm) and the Suť ( Steingerütte , 717 m nm), southwest of the Totenhübel (591 m nm), in the northwest the Buxhübel (545 m nm) ) and to the north the Pastviny (489 m nm).

Neighboring towns are Zastávka in the north, Uhelná and Buková ( Buchsdorf ) in the northeast, Vlčice in the east, Vojtovice in the southeast, Nová Véska and Hraničky in the south, Nové Vilémovice ( Neu Wilmsdorf ) in the southwest and Červený Důl in the west.

history

The earliest mentions of Pöltzberg (1602) and Pilzberg (1610) as part of the prince-bishop's fiefdom Wildschütz represent only a local name on the rule border. The hill was first settled around 1690 by the lords of Maltitz . The village was first mentioned in 1693 as Peltzberg . Since most of the settlers lived on gardeners' jobs , the place was called Pultzberg gardeners in 1722 . In 1806 Pilzberg had grown to 23 houses and had 123 inhabitants.

In 1836 the village of Pilsberg consisted of 24 houses in which 141 German-speaking people lived. The main sources of income were agriculture and daily wages. The parish, school and court location was Wildschütz. Until the middle of the 19th century, Pilsberg remained subject to the Wildschütz rule.

After the abolition of patrimonial Pilzberg formed a district of the Wildschütz community in the Jauernig judicial district from 1849 . From 1869 the village belonged to the Freiwaldau district. At that time, the population began to decline sharply. The Czech place name Pilcberk was introduced at the end of the 19th century. In the 1921 census, 85 Germans lived in the 21 houses in the village. After the Munich Agreement , the village was assigned to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Freiwaldau district until 1945 . After the end of World War II, Pilcberk came back to Czechoslovakia; most of the German-speaking residents were expelled in 1945/46 . The new settlement was only partially successful because of the remote location. Most of the new settlers soon left the village. In 1948 the name was changed to Hřibová . In 1950 there were no more permanent residents in the 19 houses in the village. The corridors of Hřibová and Zastávka were then used as pastureland. Only the former tavern, into which the new residents had moved, and a yard used as a cattle barn remained. The abandoned houses were destroyed by the army. During the territorial reform of 1960, the Okres Jeseník was abolished and Hřibová was incorporated into the Okres Šumperk . In 1965, Hřibová was officially abolished as a district of Vlčice. Today only a few house ruins and foundation walls of the mountain village are preserved.

From the mountain meadows of the former village there is a broad view over the Patschkauer foreland ( Przedgórze Paczkowskie ).

Local division

Hřibová belongs to the cadastral district of Vlčice u Javorníka.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Vyhláška č. 22/1949 Sb. Ministerstva vnitra o změnách úředních názvů míst v roce 1948
  2. Faustin Ens : The Oppaland or the Opava district, according to its historical, natural history, civic and local peculiarities. Volume 4: Description of the location of the principalities of Jägerndorf and Neisse, Austrian Antheils and the Moravian enclaves in the Troppauer district . Vienna 1837, p. 305
  3. Chytilův místopis ČSR, 2nd updated edition, 1929, p. 967 Pila Valcha - Pindula