Hodslavice
Hodslavice | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : | Czech Republic | |||
Region : | Moravskoslezský kraj | |||
District : | Nový Jičín | |||
Area : | 1084 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 49 ° 32 ' N , 18 ° 2' E | |||
Height: | 337 m nm | |||
Residents : | 1,742 (Jan 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 742 71 | |||
License plate : | T | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Nový Jičín - Valašské Meziříčí | |||
Railway connection: | Hostašovice – Nový Jičín horní nádraží | |||
Next international airport : | Ostrava Airport | |||
structure | ||||
Status: | local community | |||
Districts: | 1 | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Pavla Adamcová (as of 2012) | |||
Address: | Hodslavice 211 742 71 Hodslavice |
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Municipality number: | 599409 | |||
Website : | www.hodslavice.cz |
Hodslavice (German Hotzendorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located six kilometers south of Nový Jičín and belongs to the Okres Nový Jičín .
geography
The street village is located at the northwestern foot of the Moravian-Silesian Beskids at the transition from Kuhländchen to Moravian Wallachia . It extends along the Zrzávka in a north-south direction.
Neighboring towns are Bludovice in the north, Životice in the northeast, Mořkov in the east, Jehličná and Bynina in the southwest, Hostašovice and Straník in the west and Kojetín in the northwest.
history
The first documentary mention comes from 1411 by Lacek von Krawarn auf Štramberk . The village was part of the Neutitschein-Stramberg rule, which passed to the Jesuit order in Olomouc in 1623 .
After the dissolution of the order in 1773, the rule of the Theresian Knight Academy in Vienna was given. In 1834, 984 people lived in the village, three quarters of whom were Protestant. In 1849 Hodslavice became an independent municipality in the judicial district of Neutitschein in the course of the replacement of patrimonial rule . In 1880 Hodslavice had 1,386 inhabitants. After the Munich Agreement , the purely Moravian-speaking village was initially added to the German Reich in 1938. In the course of further border regulations, Hodslavice was spun off from the Neu Titschein district on November 24, 1938 and returned to Czechoslovakia . Until 1945 Hodslavice was then assigned to the newly formed district Wallachisch Meseritsch and came back to Okres Nový Jičín after the end of the war.
Community structure
No districts are shown for Hodslavice.
Attractions
- Schrotholzkirche St. Andreas, built before 1551
- Church of St. Peter and Paul of the Bohemian Brethren, built between 1813 and 1819
- Catholic Church of the Most Holy Heart of Jesus, built from 1905 to 1907
- František Palacký monument, erected in 1968
- František Palacký's birth house , which was declared a national cultural monument in 1978 , has housed an exhibition about the life and work of Palacký as well as the history of the place since 1998
- Windmill
Sons and daughters of the church
- František Palacký (1798–1876), historian and politician
- Josef Lukl Hromádka (1889–1969), Protestant theologian and writer
- Svatopluk Turek (1900–1972), visual artist and writer
- Josef Hromádka (* 1936), Protestant theologian