Konice (Znojmo)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Konice
Konice does not have a coat of arms
Konice (Znojmo) (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihomoravský kraj
District : Znojmo
Municipality : Znojmo
Area : 350.1616 ha
Geographic location : 48 ° 50 '  N , 16 ° 2'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 49 '52 "  N , 16 ° 1' 30"  E
Height: 310  m nm
Residents : 354 (2001)
Postal code : 669 02
License plate : B.
traffic
Street: Nový Šaldorf-Sedlešovice - Konice
Church of James the Elder
View of Konice from the railway
Statue of St. Florian
Statue of Anthony of Padua
Lower end of the village green
Rectory
school

Konice (German German Konitz ) is a district of the city of Znojmo in the Czech Republic . It is located four kilometers southwest of the city center of Znojmo and belongs to the Okres Znojmo .

geography

Konice is located on the right side above the Kerbtal of the Thaya, which is flooded with the Znojmo reservoir, on the edge of the Podyjí National Park in the Znojemská pahorkatina ( Znojmo hill country ). The village, which is particularly surrounded by extensive vineyards in the northeast and southwest, is located on the southern slope of the Kuhberg ridge. To the north rise the Stará hora ( Altenberg ) and the Kraví hora ( Kuhberg , 347 m nm), in the southeast the Sáh ( Goldberg ), south of the Na Skaliskách ( Spielberg , 326 m nm) and the Pustý kopec or Na Dalekých ( drought hill , 264 m nm) and in the northwest of the Nad Novou cestou ( Neuwegberg , 374 m nm). The Trausnitzer Grund ( Trouznické údolí ) extends to the west . The Vienna – Retz – Znojmo railway runs east of the village, and the next stop is Znojmo – Nový Šaldorf .

Neighboring towns are Hradiště sv. Hypolita in the north, Údolí Dyje, Znojmo and Louka in the north-east, Sedlešovice and Nový Šaldorf in the east, Vrbovec and Chvalovice in the south-east, Šatov in the south, Popice in the south-west and Podmolí , Mašovice and Andělský Mlýn in the north-west.

history

Archaeological finds show a small Neolithic settlement in the corridors of Konice. The present-day village was probably formed during the medieval colonization of the Moravian border region by German settlers in the 12th century; pottery finds in the lower part of the village can also be dated to this period. Legend has it that the settlers originally laid the village on the Pustý kopec ( drought hill ) and soon abandoned this location due to lack of water. Konice was created as a longitudinal tangle village along a small stream between the Hühnerberg and the Altenberg. In contrast to the villages founded earlier, Konice had little land and little agricultural area. When the German King Rudolf I confirmed and extended the privileges of Znojmo in 1278 after the Battle of Dürnkrut , he also donated a forest on Kuhberg to the city for deforestation. The city ​​had extensive vineyards planted on the area between Konice, Edelspitz and Znaim.

The first written mention of the village of Konitz , which belongs to the Bruck monastery , was on September 1, 1302 in a deed of donation from Abbot Dietrich. In another document of the monastery from August 30, 1330, the village was called Canicz . The Znojmo land register of 1363 shows that Canicz consisted of a dozen houses. Intensive viticulture was practiced on the sandstone slopes of the Kuhbergrat; In addition to the Znojmo vineyard Kuhberg, which stretched to the northeast, there were other locations north of the village with the Altenberg and south with the Spielberg. A wooden church has also been documented since the 14th century. In the 15th century, the Seelau Monastery acquired Canicz , which at that time probably formed its own parish. However, a large vineyard near Canicz was owned by the city of Znojmo and the Znojmo Clarissini Monastery . In 1497 King Vladislav II Jagiello extended the Znojmo town charter to include the vineyards near Gnadlersdorf , Kaidling and Canicz . The Bruck abbot Michael Freytag ceded his Caniczer benefice in 1577 to the Poppitzer pastor and the Seelau abbot. In 1590, the Seelau monastery was re-established by the Strahov abbot Jan Lohelius . In 1591 the city of Znojmo gave part of the Kuhberg to the municipality of Kanitz for an annual payment of five talers. At that time Kanitz was surrounded by a defensive wall and accessible through four gates. In 1622 the Premonstratensians of Strahov Monastery were able to buy back the seized Seelau goods from Marie Trčka of Lípa for the order. During the Thirty Years' War, the parish in Kanitz went out in 1630 , and the services were subsequently carried out by Znojmo pastors. In 1632 Albrecht von Waldstein set up the main camp of his new army on the Kuhberg. Kanitz had about 130 inhabitants at that time. When the Seelau Abbey became independent again in 1643, the Niklowitz and Kanitz estates remained with Strahov Abbey. After the end of the war, part of the village was desolate, and the vineyards never regained their former size. In 1656 the Strahov Premonstratensians left their Moravian property to the Bruck Abbey for some time , from then on the Bruck Premonstratensians took over the pastoral care tasks in Kanitz . Between 1673 and 1713 the city of Znojmo and the municipality of Kanitz had a dispute with the Pöltenberg provost about fishing in the Thaya. The municipality of Kanitz claimed the fishing rights on the right bank of the Thaya between the Trausnitzer mill ( Čekanovický mlýn ) and the former donkey house opposite the Rabenstein or Giant Head ( Obří hlava ) above Znojmo, where the meadows belonged to the municipality. In 1713, the Moravian regional court awarded the provost to fishing on both banks on this section.

In 1680, numerous residents died when the plague broke out. In 1683 the monastery of the regulated canons of the Premonstratensian Order of Strahov took over the Niklowitz and Kanitz estates into its own administration and united them with the newly acquired Ober-Dannowitz estate . The Kanitz church was formally subordinate to the Niklowitz pastor, but the religious services continued to be held by the friars from the Bruck monastery. Since the beginning of the 18th century, Teutsch-Konitz or Deutsch-Konitz became the place name. The village was greatly expanded during this time; In the entire lower part of the village, the large parcels were divided into building lots, on which new houses with wine cellars were built. Three new rows of houses were built at the upper end of the village. As a result, the number of houses grew from 44 to 100 and the population rose to 500. Since there was a lack of water, the construction of further houses was not permitted. A well was dug at house number 59 to supply water to the new houses. At that time, a stately barn was built on the main access road.

In 1712 a new baroque church with three altars, a clock tower and a small organ from Hohenberg was built. The wall frescoes were created by the Znojmo painter Adalbert Radda, the side altars were the hll. Consecrated to Anna and Barbara. In 1719 57 people died in an epidemic. In Teutsch-Konitz at this time many Jews lived; A street in Oberdorf was called Judengasse for almost 300 years . During the War of the Austrian Succession , 600 Prussian soldiers from the Glasenapp Regiment were quartered in the village in early 1742 . On February 23, 1742, its commander, Major von Kameke , raised a contribution from the city of Retz from his camp in Teutsch-Konitz . On September 10, 1763, the Strahov abbot Gabriel Kašpar founded a parish in Teutsch-Konitz , which was de facto a locality of Niklowitz; On September 23, the rectory was completed, which also served the Premonstratensian canons as a mansion. The new parish was formally subordinate to the Niklowitz pastor; in fact, all spiritual acts continued to be carried out by the Bruck Premonstratensians. In 1781 a major fire destroyed 34 houses.

After the Bruck monastery was dissolved in the course of the Josephine reforms in 1784 , the church in Teutsch-Konitz was separated from the Niklowitz parish and thus actually raised to a parish church, the parish was now administered directly from the Strahov monastery. Subsequently, Czech priests from the Bohemian interior worked as parish administrators in the purely German-speaking village in South Moravia. School lessons were initially held in Isidor Mahr's house, then in a room in the manor house. The teacher was paid by the authorities for his services with eight masons of grain or a bucket of wine, he was also active as a community clerk, organist and choir director; He obtained his main occupation from his beer bar and grocery store. In the following years the village was repeatedly hit by local fires. 30 houses burned down in 1786, 34 houses in 1793 and 23 houses in 1798. In 1793 there were 543 people living in the community. In 1798 the authorities and the community bought the fire place of a chalet next to the rectory and built a schoolhouse on the property. When Napoleonic troops moved through, the community suffered major damage. On June 8, 1808, a devastating fire broke out in Teutsch-Konitz , which hit 49 houses, the church, the rectory and the school; all historical documents were lost. In 1809 the French occupied the village again and caused damage of over 23,500 Viennese guilders. Due to the financial hardship as a result of the contribution payments , the reconstruction of the burned down buildings could not begin until 1811. In 1811 the new St. Jakobus Church and a new schoolhouse with a teacher's apartment were built. The oldest place seal dates from 1831; it shows in the upper part St. Norbert and underneath a branch with two grapes next to a winemaker's knife. The inscription reads: SIGILLDER: GEMEINDE: DEUTSCHKONITZ: BEY ZNAIM 1831 .

In 1834 the Teutsch-Konitz estate comprised 6 yokes 375 square fathoms Dominikalland and 679 yokes 56 square fathoms rustic land. The population lived mainly from viticulture, fruit and vegetable growing, an average of 775 buckets of wine were produced annually . The favorable climatic conditions allowed the cherries and peaches on the slopes around Teutsch-Konitz and Poppitz to ripen earlier than in other places in the Znojmo district. The village of Teutsch-Konitz or Konice německe consisted of 102 houses with 569 inhabitants. The parish church of St. John, which belongs to the Deanery of Znojmo and is staffed with religious priests from the Strahov Abbey, was under official patronage. James the Great and the school. The place of office was Niklowitz. The doubts expressed in 1836 by the citizens of Znojmo and the administration of the Znojmo urban estates about the legality of the long-term lease on Kuhberg, which had existed since 1591, led to a brief rift with the city of Znojmo, which was soon resolved. Until the middle of the 19th century, Teutsch-Konitz remained part of the combined Stiftsgüter Niklowitz, Ober-Dannowitz and Teutsch-Konitz.

After the abolition of patrimonial formed German-Konitz / Německé Kounice 1849 formally a municipality in the judicial district of Znojmo. The year before, the office of local judge and the tithe obligation had been given to Strahov Monastery; however, the monastery hindered the development of local self-government. It was not until 1864 that a mayor was elected in Deutsch-Konitz ; the first incumbent, Leopold Mahr, held the office for 18 years. The stately barn on the outskirts lost its function and was left to decay. The community seal has been simplified; The inscription GEMEINDEAMT-DEUTSCH-KONITZ was around a bunch of grapes with a leaf and stem . During the German War of 1866, the population fled with their cattle from the Prussian troops to the Poppitzer forests. Valuables and food had previously been buried in the storage and wine cellars. In 1868 the municipality became part of the Znojmo District. In 1869, pilgrims from Deutsch-Konitz donated a picture to the Virgin Mary in the pilgrimage church Maria Trost zu Brünnl as thanks for the more than 60 years of sparing the village from fires, while the surrounding places burned down several times during this time. The painting shows how the fire of 1808 spread from the north in Deutsch-Konitz ; Above in the upper part are the patrons James the Elder, Mary with the baby Jesus surrounded by four angels as well as St. Florian shown. In the lower part of the picture there was a German-language thank-you inscription.

With the construction of the Thaya Viaduct between 1869 and 1871, technical progress made its way to the rural outskirts of Znojmo. The cuboids for the right bridge pillar were extracted in a quarry on the cadastre of Deutsch-Konitz , the blocks for the other piers were broken near Pöltenberg. Some of the stonemasons from Carrara and Calabria lived in Deutsch-Konitz . After the Nordwestbahn went into operation , a number of young people from the village moved to Vienna , only a few returned. Německé Konice has been used as a Czech place name since the 1870s . After 1890, the phylloxera spreading from Schattau via southern Moravia also reached the Kuhberg area. All the vineyards were successively cleared; the winegrowers, who were deprived of their livelihoods, had to feed themselves on agriculture and cattle breeding until new vines were planted. In order to remedy the lack of arable land, the mayors managed to buy the Dürnbach area from the municipality of Kaidling . This increased the area of ​​the municipality to over 200 hectares, which, however, were not contiguous. Therefore the formation of two cadastral districts took place; Deutsch-Konitz I - the hallways of the village - and Deutsch-Konitz II - the hallways of Dürnbach. In 1880 the village had 507 inhabitants. Ten years later, 498 people lived in the place, of which 496 were Germans and two Czechs. In 1899 a local group of the Federation of German South Moravia was established, and there was also a boys' association in the village. At that time the village consisted of 106 houses; there were three rows of houses in the upper village and two in the lower village. At the 1900 census there were 489 people living in Deutsch-Konitz , 487 of whom were Germans and two Czechs. The cemetery around the church was closed in 1901 by order of the Znojmo District Commission due to overcrowding for hygienic reasons, as the fresh graves were too close to the surrounding houses. In 1903 the new cemetery was laid out in the clay pit corridor behind houses 92 and 93 in the lower part of the village . In the previous year, the old rectory had been replaced by a new building that was connected to the neighboring school building on one gable end. The Schattau prelate Leonhard Knopp consecrated the rectory on October 13, 1902. The Strahov Abbey bore the costs for both construction measures, while the maintenance costs were borne by the municipality. At that time, the church had also become very dilapidated, and it was too small for the congregation that had grown in the almost 100 years since its construction. The Strahov abbot Metoděj Zavoral therefore also intended to build a new church at the beginning of 1907, which was to be consecrated for the 60th anniversary of the reign of Emperor Franz Joseph I. These plans met with resistance from monument conservationists, who considered the demolition of the church unnecessary. Another obstacle was that the property boundaries were too close to the enlarged church and the proposed rotation of the presbytery around the longitudinal axis of the new building proved to be impractical. On October 2, 1907, the district authority finally approved the project with the stipulation that the community contributes 10,000 crowns to the construction costs, organizes the transport of the building materials and carries out the auxiliary work. Since the completion of the church building as a memorial for Franz Joseph I had become impossible due to the delays, the start of construction was postponed to spring 1908. A wooden church was built in the cemetery for the services during the construction period. On October 3, 1909, Bishop Paul Count Huyn consecrated the new church. In 1910 474 inhabitants lived in the 115 houses in the village, all of whom, with the exception of three Czechs, belonged to the German ethnic group. Since the old school turned out to be too small for the increased number of pupils, the community bought a building site for a new school with a teacher's apartment in 1914 from the Koller family above house no.78 at the transition between the lower and upper villages which began in the same year the two-class teaching. The old school building was then sold and converted into a residential building. With the death of the master craftsman Bayer, whose clientele included local winegrowers as well as the Pöltenberg provost and the parish of Klosterbruck, the community's craft became extinct. During the First World War , 21 men from Deutsch Konitz were killed .

After the war, the multi-ethnic state of Austria-Hungary disintegrated , and Deutsch Konitz became part of the newly formed Republic of German Austria in 1918 . In early 1919, despite strong protests from German residents, the community became part of the Czechoslovak Republic . A little later, the German-speaking places in the border area were obliged to keep a Czech inscription in the community stamp. In 1921 the official Czech place name was changed to Německá Konice . About a dozen Czech families lived in Deutsch Konitz , of which around half left the village during the nationality conflict that began in the following years, while the rest gradually gave up their nationality. In the 1921 census, 96.5 (459 people) of the 481 inhabitants identified themselves as Germans and 3.5% (13 people) as Czechs; all the inhabitants of the village were Catholics. In the elections in the 1920s, the farmers' union achieved an absolute majority. In August 1923, the community unveiled a memorial stone for those who fell in World War I. The hill Feuerberg ( Skaliska ) between Deutsch Konitz and Poppitz was the destination of the solstice celebrations of the gymnastics clubs. In addition, a solemn inspection of the boundary stones was carried out every spring by the mayor and the municipal council. In 1929 the village was electrified; In addition, the municipality took out a loan of 150,000 crowns from the Znojmo City Savings Bank, which was repaid after six years. After the conflicts between the nationalities increased in the country in the 1930s, the Sudeten German Party also gained influence in Deutsch Konitz and became the strongest force in town. In 1930, 489 people lived in the 119 houses of the community, including 471 Germans and 13 Czechs. In the mid-1930s, a light bunker line of the Czechoslovak Wall was built in the Thayatal , and the border with Austria , about ten kilometers away, was also fortified. After Austria was annexed to the German Reich in March 1938, fears of a German attack increased in Czechoslovakia. In the late summer of 1938 there was partial mobilization and the bunker lines were occupied. In autumn, strong troops were relocated to the border to defend the country. As a result of the Munich Agreement , the village was occupied by German troops on October 13, 1938 and assigned to the German district of Znaim . For the invasion, the German Konitz teacher Karl Kupka, a member of the Czech minority, secretly decorated the school with swastika flags together with twelve of the 80 students. With the annexation to the German Reich, the local population saw the danger of war as averted. Agriculture experienced an upswing during this period; The regional collection point (BAST) for imperial food, which was set up everywhere, saved the farmers from marketing their fruit, turkey and other vegetables on the Znojmo market. With the construction of two villas on the Kuhberghang, the village grew to 124 houses. In 1939 Deutsch Konitz merged with Poppitz to form a community of Waldberg ; Deutsch Konitz became the district Waldberg-Nord, Poppitz became Waldberg-Süd. The seat of the community was Waldberg-Nord. Since the mayor Angerbauer was no longer able to cope with the increased administrative tasks on his own, Ignaz Noisser, a local secretary, was put at his side. The renaming, which took place without the participation of the residents, caused all kinds of misunderstandings, as it was assumed that this would have been agreed upon with the integration into the German Reich. The imaginary names of several parish mergers were actually initiated by the Znojmo District Administrator Alfred Kottek . By decision of the municipality, the old Czech settlers Jan Lichý and Jan Nechvátal had to leave the village; the Czech pastor Zikmund Sudík was accused of embezzling church property, removed from office and taken to a concentration camp. At the end of the Second World War, 49 men from Waldberg moved to the front together with the mayor Angerbauer. On May 8, 1945, the Red Army took the village. There were excesses by drunken Red Army soldiers who plundered and pillaged the village and made women of all ages the fair game of their sexual desires. This was followed by teenage thugs who described themselves as Czech partisans. All cattle were first confiscated by the Red Army soldiers.

Německá Konice came back to Czechoslovakia after the end of the war and again formed a community in Okres Znojmo ; the Waldberg merger was canceled. Czechs, mostly from Moravian Slovakia , were quartered in the houses of the village . In July 1945, the houses and land of the German residents were transferred to them. Some of the German residents had fled across the border to Austria at that time. On June 11, 1945, the former mayor Rudolf Meister, the community secretary Noisser, the master blacksmith Ruppert Till and the teacher Kupka were arrested and tortured in the prison of the district court in Znojmo; later they were sent to the Znojmo-Mansberk labor camp. The local history and the official documents of the municipality were lost during this time. The remaining German residents were employed as unskilled workers in the fields, after the harvest they were given a max. 25 kilos of luggage to Germany sold . On October 16, 1945 the German war invalid Engelbert Schmidl was shot in the village by a Czech who was later convicted as a church robber. Most of the new Czech residents came to Německá Konice purely with the intention of enriching themselves; they looted the houses assigned to them and later disappeared again. In 1946 the Ministry of the Interior proposed to the Německá Konice Administrative Commission to rename the municipality to Třešňov , but this proposal was not accepted. The place name, felt to be offensive, was shortened to N. Konice in the stamp and temporarily changed to Nové Konice . In the first local elections after the war, 169 of the 203 voters voted for the KSČ in 1946 , and a Local National Committee (MNV) was elected instead of the administrative commission . In August 1946 the last German residents were expelled from Německá Konice. At the end of 1947 the municipality of Německá Konice was officially renamed Konice u Znojma . In the same year the gymnastics club Sokol Konice and a new fire brigade were founded. After the February revolution of 1948 little changed in Konice u Znojma , as the residents of the village had already sympathized with the communists. German graves were leveled in the cemetery to "make room for new burials". Some of the old tombstones have been reworked and reused on graves by Czechs. At the same time, German inscriptions on wayside shrines around Konice u Znojma were removed to erase the German history of the place. During this time Konice u Znojma became increasingly neglected . Wild garbage dumps formed around the village, fruit trees were cut down and burned, fields remained uncultivated, and no one took care of the community wells. In 1950 the farmers were collectivized, and Emanuel Suchánek took over the chairmanship of the JZD . Two years later, the MNV transferred all community forests to the state forest. Over time, some of the fields were abandoned and reforested. In 1954 a new syringe house was built. In 1958 the construction of a cultural center with a restaurant, dance hall and bowling alley began. After its completion, the MNV office also moved into the building. In 1960 Popice was incorporated. At the same time, the JZD Konice u Znojma and Popice merged. The district of Konice u Znojma had 337 inhabitants in 1961. In the 1960s, the Brucker Tor ( Lucke ) located on Friedhofsweg between house number 88 and the wine cellars was demolished because it had become an obstacle for modern agricultural machinery. The village stream was piped from the source in the 1960s and the old stone bridges demolished; In 1967 the pond opposite the school was finally filled. As a result, the stream below the village as far as Nový Šaldorf dried up and was partially filled with rubble and rubbish. The JZD had the fields merged, dirt roads plowed under and the shrines removed. The small fields and orchards in the immediate vicinity of the village were gradually planted with vines. As a result, the original varied character of the corridors of Konice u Znojma was lost; on the slopes around the village stretched an extensive vineyard and in the plain huge fields. With the construction of new settlement houses, which the locals mocked as " Krabice " because of their monotonous design, the historical townscape that had been seen until then changed significantly at the beginning of the 1970s.

With the construction of the Thayatalsperre Znojmo, the Trauznický mlýn hydroelectric power station and the hotel "Pod Obří hlavou", formerly called "Rabštejn", were demolished in 1962; the Znojmo swimming pool was also closed. In 1966 the Rabenstein valley was flooded. When plans became known in the 1970s to build another large dam in the profile of the rock face "Býčí skála" opposite the "Sealsfieldův kámen", with which the entire Thayatal as far as Hardegg was to be flooded, particularly the Austrian "citizens' initiative for conservation" prevented des Thayatales "the project.

In 1977 there were 543 people living in the municipality (including the Popice district). In order to counteract the aging of the community and to offer young families living space, rental apartments were built behind the school in the same year; In addition, new single-family houses were built on the way to Popice and on the Kuhberghang. In 1978 a new 18 m deep well was sunk on the railway line to supply the community with water. In addition, the houses in the community were consecutively renumbered; the houses in Popice were given house numbers 1–61 and those in Konice u Znojma were given numbers 62–165. On July 1, 1980, it was incorporated into Znojmo; thereafter, the original house numbering was restored in both places, at the same time the district received the new name Konice . The old Brucker Weg was destroyed and plowed up in the 1980s in the course of renovation work. In 1985 the war memorial, devastated after the end of the Second World War, was transformed into a memorial stone for the liberation of the village by the Red Army . In 1998 Konice was connected to the gas supply. In 2002 the district received a connection to the Znojmo sewage system. In 1991 Konice had 358 inhabitants. In the 2001 census, the place consisted of 111 houses in which 354 people lived. There are a total of 143 addresses in Konice.

mayor

  • 1864–1882: Leopold Mahr
  • 1882–1898: Mathias Bayer
  • 1898–1911: Johann Meister
  • 1911–1924: Leonhard Buschek
  • 1924–1928: Josef Bayer
  • 1928–1932: Rudolf Meister
  • 1932–1938: Josef Bayer
  • 1938–1945: Franz Angerbauer
  • 1945–1946: František Štambera (Administrative Commissioner)
  • 1946–1949: Emanuel Suchánek (Chairman of the MNV)
  • 1949–1954: Rudolf Dusík (Chairman of the MNV)
  • 1954–1960: Josef Svoboda (Chairman of the MNV)
  • 1960–1964: Emil Vecheta (Chairman of the MNV)
  • 1964–1972: Emanuel Suchánek (Chairman of the MNV)
  • 1972–1980: Karel Poláček (Chairman of the MNV)

Local division

The Trauznický Mlýn (Trausnice Mill ) desert belongs to Konice .

Attractions

  • Neo-Gothic church of St. James the Elder, built 1908–1909 in place of a previous building from 1811. In the church there is a copy of the picture of the German Konitz fire donated in 1869 to the pilgrimage church of Maria Trost in Dobrá Voda and not preserved in the original. In the years 1997-1999 the church was renovated.
  • Chapel of St. John of Nepomuk, built in 1774 in front of house no.5
  • Statue of St. Florian
  • Statue of St. Anthony of Padua
  • Rectory, built in 1902 in place of a previous Baroque building from 1763
  • Elementary school, built in 1914
  • Memorial stone for the fallen of the First World War, unveiled in 1923. The memorial, devastated after the Second World War, was redesigned in 1985 as a memorial stone for the Red Army.
  • Pustý Kopec u Konic natural monument, the hill was placed under protection in 1956
  • Deeply cut Rabenstein valley of the Thaya with rock walls and the reservoir Znojmo
  • Trauznické údolí valley
  • Sealsfieldův kámen , the rock forest with a view of the 150 m deep Thayatal, was opened up for tourism in 1900 by the Znojmo section of the Austrian Tourist Club. Opposite are the Altan Králův stolec and the rock face Býčí skála

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Gottfried Fitzinger (1801–1857), director of the Löwenburgschen Konviktes in Vienna

Lived and worked in Konice

  • Prokop Diviš , the Premonstratensian canon held services in Konice between 1730 and 1732 and kept the church records

literature

  • Friedrich Bayer: History of the Kuhberggemeinde Deutsch Konitz , private printing. Vilshofen 1992
  • Jiří GK Ševčík: Konice - Poznámky k historii , Praha 2009
  • Silvestr Kozdas: Farní kostel sv. Jakuba Většího v Konicích u Znojma 1909–2009 , Znojmo-Louka 2009

Web links

Commons : Konice  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/669113/Konice-u-Znojma
  2. ^ Gregor Wolny : The Margraviate Moravia topographically, statistically and historically described , III. Volume: Znaimer Kreis (1837), pp. 455–458
  3. ^ Adolf Rybka: Deutsch-Konitz , in: Heimatskunde of the political district Znaim (German Antheil) . I. Historical part. Booklet 6. Znaim 1898, pp. 18-26.
  4. Předpis č. 7/1948 Sb.
  5. http://www.czso.cz/csu/2009edicniplan.nsf/t/010028D080/$File/13810901.pdf
  6. http://www.uir.cz/adresy-objekty-casti-obce/069116/Cast-obce-Konice