Komárov u Soběslavi

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Komárov
Coat of arms of ????
Komárov u Soběslavi (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihočeský kraj
District : Tábor
Area : 860 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 15 '  N , 14 ° 36'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 15 '1 "  N , 14 ° 35' 37"  E
Height: 429  m nm
Residents : 124 (Jan. 1, 2019)
Postal code : 391 73
License plate : C.
traffic
Street: Týn nad Vltavou - Soběslav
Next international airport : České Budějovice Airport
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : František Malecha (as of 2012)
Address: Komárov 32
392 01 Soběslav
Municipality number: 599280
Website : www.obeckomarov.cz
Village pond with chapel of St. John of Nepomuk
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Homestead No. 8, built in 1861

Komárov (German Komarau , also Komarow ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located eight kilometers west of Soběslav in South Bohemia and belongs to the Okres Tábor .

geography

Komárov is located south of the Bechyňská pahorkatina ( Bechyňská pahorkatina ) on a ridge in the northwest of the Soběslavská Blata pond landscape belonging to the Wittingau basin in the headwaters of the Komárovská stoka. To the north are the ponds Horní Benešův rybník, Dolní Benešův rybník and Komárovský rybník, to the east the Nadějka and Naděje and to the west the Rožberk ( Rosenberger pond ). The village is surrounded by forests on three sides. The Černická obora nature park extends to the north and the Borkovická blata moorland to the southeast.

Neighboring towns are Benešovská Hajnice, Komárovská Hajnice, Černice, Vyhnanice and Hlavatce in the north, Rytířský Mlyn and Svinky in the Northeast, Naděje, Vlastiboř and Záluží the east, Jitra, Borkovický Dvůr and Borkovice the southeast, Mažice , Zálší , Klečaty and Kozelka in the south, Korákovská Hájovna, Korákov, Markovna, Krakovčice, Čenkov u Bechyně , Havlice and Záhoří in the southwest, Hvožďánek, Hodětín , Čečkov and Blatec in the west and Nová Ves and Sudoměřice u Bechyně in the northwest.

history

Komárov was first mentioned in writing in 1492. In 1510, the lord of the Thein estate , Jan Čabelický von Soutice, bought the Březnice fortress with the villages of Březnice and Komárov and the Naděje farm. A little later, Čabelický Naděje leased to the Sobieslau citizen Antonín Skočdopole for 260 guilders .

In 1840 Komarov consisted of 37 houses with 266 inhabitants. There was an inn in the village. The remote manorial Meierhof Nadieg ( Naděje ) as well as the Beneschauer and Komarower Hegerhaus belonged to Komarow . The parish and school location was Hlawatetz . In 1845 the Nadieg farm was leased to the Bechin citizen Gabriel Švestka. Until the middle of the 19th century Komarov always remained submissive to Bechin .

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Komárov / Komarov 1850 a municipality in the district administration Milevsko / Mulhouse and the Judicial District Bechyně / Bechin. Because of the poor road connection to Bechin and the long distance to Mühlhausen, the community tried several times for a transfer to the judicial district of Sobieslau . After it was often come because of the impermeable clay soils around Komárov to floods occurred in 1925, the amelioration of the area. Since then, an extensive system of ditches has been diverting the water via the Blatská stoka as the main drainage ditch of the Soběslavská Blata to Veselí nad Lužnicí and the Lainsitz . After the dissolution of the Okres Milevsko, the municipality became part of the Okres Soběslav in 1948. After its abolition in late 1960, Komárove was assigned to the Okres Tábor . At the beginning of 1976 Komárov was incorporated into Vlastiboř . After a referendum, the village broke away from Vlastiboř on November 24, 1990 and formed its own municipality.

Traditionally, the borky stab takes place every May in the marshland around Naděje . The peat bricks obtained after drying serve as cheap fuel.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the Komárov municipality. Komárov to include monolayer Benešovská Hajnice, Hajnice Komárovská and Naděje.

Attractions

Homestead No. 1, built in 1862 by Martin Paták
Homestead No. 7, built in 1888 by Jan Paták
  • Chapel of St. John of Nepomuk at the village pond, built in the 19th century
  • Ensemble of magnificent gabled courtyards in the Blata style of the South Bohemian peasant baroque on the village square; the residential buildings and granaries decorated with colored plaster and white stucco reliefs were built in the 19th century. The reconstruction of the site from timbered to bricked farmsteads began early in Komárov. The oldest brick building is the granary of courtyard No. 4. Other buildings were built in the 1830s, they were probably built by master mason Jan Šoch. From 1862 further farms were built by the Vlastiboř master mason Martin Paták and his son. In 1995 the historic village center was declared a rural monument protection area.
  • Borkovická blata natural monument, southeast of the village; A nature trail leads from the Jitra Hegerhaus into the peat bog with a lookout tower
  • Memorial to the fallen of the First World War

Sons and daughters of the church

  • Bedřich Dubský (1880–1957), teacher and archaeologist

Web links

Commons : Komárov u Soběslavi  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 0.8 MiB)
  2. Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia. Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 10: Tabor Circle. Ehrlich, Prague 1842, p. 35.