Kobylé

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Kobylé
Kobylé does not have a coat of arms
Kobylé (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Karlovarský kraj
District : Karlovy Vary
Municipality : Pšov
Area : 252.9165 ha
Geographic location : 50 ° 4 '  N , 13 ° 11'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 4 '3 "  N , 13 ° 10' 39"  E
Height: 544  m nm
Residents : 52 (March 1, 2001)
License plate : K
traffic
Street: Žlutice - Pšov
Next international airport : Karlovy Vary Airport

Kobylé (German Kobyla ) is a district of the municipality of Pšov in the Czech Republic . It is located three kilometers south of Žlutice and belongs to the Okres Karlovy Vary .

geography

Kobylé is located in the Tepler highlands west of the Na Vršku hill (581 m). To the north rises the Krkavec hill (575 m), behind it lies the Nevděk (630 m). In the northeast is the Vladař (693 m).

Neighboring towns are Hradský Dvůr, Žlutice and Strahovský Mlýn in the north, Záhořice in the northeast, Kolešov in the east, Močidlec , Víska and Novosedly in the southeast, Pšov in the south, Borek in the southwest and Nový Dvůr and Semtěš in the west.

history

The first written mention of the village and the church comes from the year 1233. At that time the place belonged to the property of the Nevděk Castle . Since 1384 the Church of the Exaltation of St. Cross verifiable as a parish church. In 1623 the parish in Kobylé went out.

In 1850 the political community Kobyla was established in the Luditz district . In 1855 the Church of the Assumption of Mary was consecrated and raised again to the parish church. In 1890 Kobyla consisted including the Vorwerkes Ratzkahof and the Brickyard Ratzka of 19 buildings and had 115 inhabitants, of which 112 German and three Czech folk group belonged. In 1930 the village had 137 inhabitants. After the Munich Agreement , Kobyla was added to the German Reich in 1938 and the village belonged to the Luditz district until 1945 . In 1939 Kobyla had 112 inhabitants. After the end of the Second World War, Kobylé returned to Czechoslovakia and was classified in the Okres Toužim in 1949. On January 1, 1961, it was incorporated into Pšov , at the same time the village became part of the Karlovy Vary Okres. In 1991 the place had 55 inhabitants. In 2001 the village consisted of 19 houses in which 52 people lived.

Attractions

  • Church of the Assumption in Kobylé, built in the 13th century

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/736490/Kobyle