Köttmannsdorf
Köttmannsdorf
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coat of arms | Austria map | |
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Basic data | ||
Country: | Austria | |
State : | Carinthia | |
Political District : | Klagenfurt-Land | |
License plate : | KL | |
Surface: | 28.19 km² | |
Coordinates : | 46 ° 34 ' N , 14 ° 14' E | |
Height : | 558 m above sea level A. | |
Residents : | 3,079 (January 1, 2020) | |
Postal code : | 9071 | |
Area code : | 04220 | |
Community code : | 2 04 14 | |
NUTS region | AT211 | |
Address of the municipal administration: |
Karawankenblick 1 9071 Köttmannsdorf |
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Website: | ||
politics | ||
Mayor : | Josef Liendl ( ÖVP ) | |
Municipal Council : ( 2015 ) (19 members) |
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Location of Köttmannsdorf in the Klagenfurt-Land district | ||
Source: Municipal data from Statistics Austria |
Köttmannsdorf ( Slovenian : Kotmara vas, Hotimirjeva vas ) is a south-west of Klagenfurt located bilingual municipality with 3079 inhabitants (as of 1 January 2020) in the district of Klagenfurt-Land in Carinthia .
geography
Geographical location
The municipality of Köttmannsdorf is located southwest of the state capital Klagenfurt on the mountain range of the Sattnitz (made of conglomerate rock) and is formed by the Ferlacher reservoir in the south, the Keutschacher Seental in the north, the Dobeiner Wand in the northwest and the Hollenburger Sattel or Maria Rainer Senke in the east limited. The highest point in the community is the Sabalahöhe in the west at 921 m, while the lowest point is at the Ferlach reservoir at 441 m. The surface structure of the community shows a north-south or west-east gradient. The main drainage takes place via the Rekabach, which flows through the municipality from west to east.
Community structure
Köttmannsdorf is divided into the four cadastral communities Wurdach ( Vrdi ), Köttmannsdorf ( Kotmara vas ), Hollenburg ( Humberk ) and Rotschitzen ( Ročica ). The municipality includes the following 23 localities (population as of January 1, 2020):
- Aich ( Hovč ) (230)
- On the plate ( Talir ) (56)
- Gaisach ( Čežava ) (61)
- Göriach ( Gorje ) (100)
- Hollenburg ( Humberk ) (6)
- Köttmannsdorf ( Kotmara vas ) (779)
- Lambichl ( Ilovje ) (384)
- Mostitz ( Mostič ) (40)
- Neusaß ( Vesava or Novo selo ) (69)
- Plöschenberg ( Plešivec ) (51)
- Preliebl ( Preblje ) (81)
- Rotschitzen ( Ročica ) (171)
- St. Gandolf ( Šentkandolf ) (126)
- St. Margarethen ( Šmarjeta ) (72)
- Swan ( Zvonina ) (31)
- Thal ( Lipica ) (38)
- Trabesing ( Trabesinje ) (192)
- Tretram ( Medrejtre ) (61)
- Tschachoritsch ( Čahorče ) (235)
- Tschrestal ( Črezdol ) (56)
- Unterschloßberg ( Pod Gradom ) (17)
- Divide ( Razpotje ) (89)
- Wurdach ( Vrdi ) (134)
Neighboring communities
Keutschach am See | Klagenfurt | |
Maria Rain | ||
Ludmannsdorf | Feistritz in the Rosental | Ferlach |
history
Since the settlement of the area by the Karantaner - Slavs in the 6th century. and the establishment of the Carantan state in the 7th century, the area of the Sattnitz (Slov. Gure ) and Köttmannsdorf / Kotmara vas is closely linked to the Slovene cultural history.
Köttmannsdorf was first mentioned in 1142 as Kotmansdorf , derived from the personal name Hotemer . During this time, some of the still existing localities in the municipality emerged, which in the 13th century belonged to the Viktring monastery or the Keutschach rule .
The Hollenburg on the left bank of the Drau was also mentioned for the first time in 1142 . For centuries it was the power center of the Rosental , the respective lords of the Hollenburg, as the first the Hollenburgers , shaped the area between the Drau and the Keutschacher Tal. Almost destroyed by an earthquake in 1348 and then rebuilt, it was the seat of a regional court from 1349. Maximilian I sold the castle to Siegmund von Dietrichstein in 1514 . The Hollenburg line of the Dietrichstein family, named after her , expanded the castle into a castle in the 16th and 17th centuries, as it is still preserved today. With Moritz von Dietrichstein , this branch of the family died out in the male line in 1864.
In 1850, the community of Köttmannsdorf was formed from the cadastral communities of Hollenburg, Köttmannsdorf and Rotschitzen.
In 1869 the municipality of Wurdach, which had existed since 1850, was incorporated with the villages of Wurdach, Plöschenberg, Mostiz, St. Margarethen and Tschrestal.
1920 "Carinthian referendum" : 62.3% of the population vote to stay with Austria.
After the official end of the Second World War (May 8), on May 10, 1945, Slovenian Domobranci (Home Guard), anti-communist Četnik units , Volksdeutsche Waffen SS units ( 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division "Prinz Eugen" ) and fleeing anti-communist civilians from Yugoslavia with the Titopartisans, still heavy fighting at the Hollenburg. These columns of refugees were interned by the British in a provisional refugee camp at Viktringer Feld on the northeastern municipal boundary of Köttmannsdorf and handed over to the partisans in the second half of May.
On the night of October 11, 2008, Governor Jörg Haider was killed in a traffic accident in Lambichl on the Loiblpass road . Since then, people have been making pilgrimages to the scene of the accident and laying down flowers, candles, flags and expressions of mourning. The traditional Carinthian associations also hold a counter-rally with a wreath-laying ceremony on a regular basis.
Geography and nature
The farmer from Karutschnig
The farm was run as a separate business until 1909, before it came into the possession of the Razaj farm on the Plöschenberg through purchase. The building still stood on the east side of the meadow until 1988. Now not even the smallest remnant of the wall reminds of it. Today, as a result of the lack of fertilizers, many meadow flowers such as B. the mosquito-Händelwurz and the Fiederschuppen- meadow knapweed can be admired.
Rural life
Rural life on the Sattnitz ridge has always been shaped by the water-permeable conglomerate rock. Most house springs were fed by water veins close to the surface and dried up during longer periods of drought. Often the drinking water then had to be laboriously fetched from the deeper trenches. The remote clearing islands were particularly hard hit. So the desert farms have been abandoned over the past few decades.
Sinkholes and karst phenomena
Because of its high proportion of lime, the up to 400 meters thick Sattnitz conglomerate behaves like a soluble limestone mountain range and shows various karst features . So z. B. Soak funnels, which are referred to as sinkholes . After seeping into the ground, the water flows down to the water-retaining coal-clay layers below the conglomerate and comes to the surface in numerous, sometimes very productive springs at the foot of the Sattnitz train. Famous is z. B. the Müllner spring at Bassgeigensee with a second pour of 50-150 liters of water.
The scops owl from Köttmannsdorf
Köttmannsdorf is considered the most populous breeding area of the scops owl in Austria. In 2007, the breeding behavior of these birds was monitored in a specially prepared nest box and essential behavior of this shy nocturnal bird could be researched. The almost natural mountain regions offer this migratory bird an ideal food supply.
population
According to the 2001 census, the municipality of Köttmannsdorf has 2,792 inhabitants, 95.1% of whom are Austrian, 1.6% German and 1.4% Bosnian citizens. 6.4% of the population belong to the Slovene-speaking ethnic group .
81.6% of the community population profess to the Roman Catholic Church , 5.0% to the Evangelical Church , 1.5% to Islam , and 8.6% are without religious belief.
The Catholic parish is bilingual, German and Slovenian.
The Slovenian dialect
Typologically, Köttmannsdorf belongs to the Slovenian dialect group of the so-called Rosental dialect or to its northwestern variety, the Sattnitz ( Gure ). Numerous phonetic, morphological and lexical archaisms are characteristic.
The autochthonous Slovenian name of the inhabitants of the Sattnitz (Slov. Gure = mountain region) is Gorjanci (in contrast to the name of the inhabitants of the lower Klagenfurt field Poljanci < polje = field).
The Slovenian field names
The embedding of the area in the Slovene cultural history also gives rise to the consistently Slovene field names in the community, which activists of the local cultural association repertorize with scientific meticulousness and in cooperation with the Ethnographic Institute Urban Jarnik in Klagenfurt and finally publish them in printed and electronic form were. Audio samples in the local Slovenian dialect can be found on the association's website. In 2010 the vocabulary of the Slovene field and farm names in Carinthia was declared an intangible world heritage , as declared by UNESCO and included in the list of Austria (national cultural property) .
The Slovene field names also correspond to the often Slovene house names, as they are also repertorated in book form.
Culture and sights
Buildings
- Hollenburg Castle emerged from a Gothic castle from the 14th century; it was expanded into a castle by 1588.
- St. Georgskirche - Romanesque style church with the oldest Gothic lamp for the dead in Austria.
- Filial church St. Gandolf ob Köttmannsdorf
- Filial church St. Margarethen ob Köttmannsdorf
- Nature trail scops owl on the Plöschenberg and Wurdach
- Maria Waldesruh - forest chapel. The four wooden panels around the crucified one tell the following legend in words and painted pictures: “ In 1863 a woman from Ludmannsdorf was carrying a suitcase that was getting heavier and heavier so that she had to rest at this point. But when she left she could no longer lift the load and therefore, out of desperation, asked for God. Immediately a man appeared to her. And this man helped her lift the load. The woman noticed, however, that he was pale and had wounds on his hands. When she wanted to thank her, he disappeared from her eyes. "
- Dr.-Jörg-Haider memorial in Lambichl for the right-wing populist and Carinthian governor who died in the local area . The memorial park includes several memorial monuments surrounded by flower beds, flags and various mourning messages.
Slovenian club life and the Gorjanci cultural association
The men's quartet Gorjanci was founded by the later Slovenian mayor and cultural activist Matija Prosekar as early as 1885 , making the later Slovenian cultural association one of those with the longest institutional tradition in the country. In 1888, a branch of the Slovene Kyrill and Method school association ( Društvo svetega Cirila in Metoda ) was founded in Köttmannsdorf .
The Slovenian cultural association Gorjanci itself was founded on December 14, 1919 as an educational association. The founding of the Gorjanci educational association goes back to the great Slovenian cultural movement of that time, as part of the efforts to affirm Slovenian identity on the one hand, and numerous Slovenian educational and cultural associations in response to the growing political, economic and social pressure to Germanize on the other hand, and in many cases to this day active Slovenian cooperatives as well as savings and loan funds were established. The first chairman was Prosekar's son Tomaž Prosekar. The most important fields of activity of the Cultural Association Gorjanci were the amateur theater , the Tambura , the leadership of a club library as well as the holding of verschiedenster educational activities.
The Slovenian cultural association Gorjanci offers a wide range of cultural activities and opportunities to meet.
Austria's oldest Gothic funerary lamp in the parish cemetery
politics
City council and mayor
The municipal council of Köttmannsdorf has 19 members and has been composed as follows since the municipal council election in 2015 :
The directly elected mayor is Josef Liendl (ÖVP).
coat of arms
The coat of arms of Köttmannsdorf refers to the Hollenburg, which was decisive in history for the community as well as the entire region. A seal of Ulrich von Hollenburg, who held the castle from 1308 to 1335, was used as a template on a document dated February 2, 1335. Its motif is interpreted as three hazelnuts in a three-pass , even if older seals show more pointed oval leaves. An earlier interpretation as elder leaves in the sense of a "talking" coat of arms ("Hollerburg") is no longer represented today, as the name of the castle is probably derived from the sandstone caves in the castle rock.
The municipality's coat of arms and flag were awarded on August 21, 1961. The official blazon of the coat of arms reads: "In a green triangular shield on a golden, diagonally right-facing handle, three golden hazelnuts in a three-pass." The flag is green and yellow with an incorporated coat of arms.
Personalities
- Franz Erwein (1823-1891), politician
- Anton Trampitsch (1860 Wegscheide / Razoptje - 1941 Nancy), Slovenian brewer, founded the Brasserie Champigneulles in France
- Primus Lessiak (1878–1937), Old Germanist
- Werner Jobst (* 1945 in Tschachoritsch), classical archaeologist
literature
- 850 years of Köttmannsdorf. Köttmannsdorf 1142–1992 . Editor: Vinzenz Jobst. Self-published by the municipality. Köttmannsdorf 1992.
- Bertrand Kotnik: Zgodovina hiš južne Koroške, občina Kotmara vas, 2nd knjiga . Celovec 1993 (Slovenian house name)
- Anton Kreuzer: Köttmannsdorf and the surrounding area - the area between the Keutschacher Seental and the Draufluss , Klagenfurt 2011, Kreuzer Buch, Einigkeitsstraße 3, 9020 Klagenfurt
- J. Filipič: The national differentiation process in the municipalities of Oberdörfl / Zgornja Vesca, Ludmannsdorf / Bilčovs and Köttmannsdorf / Kotmara vas in the years 1880 to 1945 . Vienna 1994.
- M. Müller: The language change in Carinthia. A case study in the municipality of Köttmannsdorf / Kotmara vas . Vienna 2000.
- Dekanalamt Ferlach (ed.) / Dekanijski urad Borovlje (izd.): Deanery Ferlach, past and present = Dekanija Borovlje, zgodovina in sedanjost . Klagenfurt / Celovec 2012, pp. 83–112.
- Branko Maršič: Izredna življenjska pot koroškega Slovenca Antona Trampitscha . In: Koledar Mohorjeve družbe 2007 , pp. 120–126.
Web links
- Köttmannsdorf community
- 20414 - Köttmannsdorf. Community data, Statistics Austria .
Individual evidence
- ^ AF Reiterer: Lebenswelt mother tongue, Slovenian and its current perception - a report . In: K. Anderwald, P. Karpf, H. Valentin (Ed.): Kärntner Jahrbuch für Politik 2000 . Klagenfurt 2000, 340-362.
- ↑ AF Reiterer: Counting minorities? Methodological and content-related problems of official language counts . In: M. Pandel [ea] (Hrsg.): Conflict of local signs in Carinthia - crisis or opportunity? Vienna 2004, 25–38.
- ↑ Statistics Austria: Population on January 1st, 2020 by locality (area status on January 1st, 2020) , ( CSV )
- ↑ Tamara Griesser-Pecar: The torn people. Slovenia 1941-1946. Occupation, collaboration, civil war, revolution . Böhlau Verlag, Vienna 2003. ISBN 3-205-77062-5
- ↑ Archived copy ( memento of the original from October 13, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Jörg Haider: Wreaths at the place of worship and a sea of candles. In: DiePresse.com. October 11, 2009, accessed January 11, 2018 .
- ↑ Text from one of the display boards on the Scops Owl Nature Trail
- ↑ Picture of a display board on the Scops Owl Nature Trail
- ↑ http://www.kath-kirche-kaernten.at/pfarren/pfarre/C2963
- ↑ List of parishes in the dean's office in Ferlach / Borovlje
- ↑ Johann Scheinigg: Obraz rožanskega narečja na Koroškem . XXXII. Program of the kk state high school in Klagenfurt. Klagenfurt, printed by the St. Hermagoras printing house in 1882
- ^ Fran Ramovš: Kratka zgodovina slovenskega jezika . Ljubljana 1936.
- ↑ Tine Logar: Slovenska narečja . Ljubljana 1975
- ^ Tine Logar: Koroška slovenska narečja In: Enciklopedija Slovenije 5 (Kari – Krei), Ljubljana 1991.
- ↑ V. Wieser, B. Preisig, J. Pack: Kotmara vas: Horni Kompánj, Konják in Hudár: slovenska ledinska, krajinska in hišna imena / Köttmannsdorf: Horni Kompánj, Konják in Hudár: Slovene field, area and farm names (map material ), Ed. SPD Gorjanci. Kotmara vas / Köttmannsdorf 2008.
- ↑ Gorjanci: www.gorjanci.at
- ↑ Directory of the intangible cultural heritage in Austria, Slovene field and farm names in Carinthia, archived copy ( memento of the original from October 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (October 7, 2011)
- ↑ Bertrand Kotnik: Zgodovina His Južné Koroške, občina Kotmara vas, 2. knjiga. Celovec 1993
- ↑ Andrej Vovko: Odborniki podružnic "družbe sv. Cirila in Metoda «na Koroškem v letih 1885–1918. In: Koroški koledar 1979, pp. 110–121.
- ↑ Andrej Vovko: Odborniki in članstvo podružnic družbe sv. Cirila in Metoda 1885-1918. Ljubljana 2004, pp. 335-336. ISBN 961-6500-45-7 .
- ↑ http://www.posojilnica-bank.at/index.php/de/footer/ueber-uns.html
- ↑ 110 let SPD Gorjanci (110 years of the Gorjanci Cultural Association), ed. Slovensko prosvetno društvo Gorjanci v Kotmari vasi. Kotmara vas 1995, 23 p .;
- ↑ Gorjanci: www.gorjanci.at
- ↑ Gorjanci: www.gorjanci.at
- ↑ Homepage of the Carinthian state government, municipal council election 2009 ( Memento of the original from April 3, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Quoted from Wilhelm Deuer: The Carinthian municipal coat of arms . Verlag des Kärntner Landesarchiv, Klagenfurt 2006, ISBN 3-900531-64-1 , p. 148
- ↑ Branko Maršić: Izredna življenjska pot koroškega Slovenca Antona Trampitscha . In: Koledar Mohorjeve družbe 2007, pp. 120–126.
- ↑ Archived copy ( Memento of the original from March 17, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ fr: Champigneulles # Brasserie de Champigneulles