Krplivnik

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The place Krplivnik / Kapornak with surroundings. Excerpt from: Josephinische Landesaufnahme 1782–1785

Krplivnik (ung. Kapornak) is a village and part of the municipality of Hodoš (ung. Hodos) in Slovenia .

geography

The place has a district area of ​​5.6 km 2 and is located south of the river Velika Krka (Hungarian Nagy- Kerka ) on the Krplivnik brook and directly on the Hungarian border.

The village consists of the districts Veliki and Mali Krplivnik (Hungarian Nagy- and Kiskapornak) and in 2002 had 105 predominantly Hungarian inhabitants. The settlement is located at 232 m, slightly elevated on the edge of the wide Krka valley, which is traversed by extensive meadows and arable land. The south of the village boundary is hilly and wooded.

history

The place is mentioned for the first time in 1428: "Kapornok in districtu Ewrseg". The settlement therefore belonged to the 18 municipalities of Örség , a privileged region in Eisenburg / Vas County which appears in old documents as "Eörségh", "Örséger Land", as "peculium" of the holy crown . The settlement of Domaföld, mentioned in a document in 1431 (Cheke de Domafelde), can be documented as a district until the end of the 19th century, today it is lost.

In a description of the Diocese of Győr / Raab for the year 1698 it is recorded that the inhabitants of the village "Capornak" of the Catholic parish "St. Andreas in Hodos ”.

In 1890 the village is officially called Kapornak and had 210 inhabitants, 204 of them known as Hungarians, 2 as Germans and 4 as Slovenes. The place was in the district of Szentgotthárd (Slov. Monošter) in the Hungarian county of Vas / Eisenburg.

The Treaty of Trianon gave the village to the Kingdom of SHS on June 4, 1920, without consulting the population . For the place now officially called Krplivnik, the following data were determined in the census on January 31, 1921: 252 inhabitants, 235 Hungarians, 11 Slovenes and 6 other ethnic groups, of these 252 inhabitants 52 were Catholic, 150 Protestant and 50 Calvinist Believe.

In the census in 1931 240 inhabitants were found, in 1961 there were still 208 and for 1971 the following figures are known: 183 inhabitants, 49 houses, 48 ​​households and 175 villagers who live exclusively from agriculture.

literature

  • Ivan Zelko , Historična Topografija Slovenije I. Prekmurje do leta 1500. Murska Sobota, 1982
  • Matija Slavič, Naše Prekmurje. Murska Sobota, 1999.
  • Jože Sraka, Prekmurci in Prekmurje. Chicago, 1984.
  • Atlas Slovenije, Ljubljana 1985.

Web links

Coordinates: 46 ° 49 '  N , 16 ° 19'  E