Květná (Luková)

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Květná
Květná does not have a coat of arms
Květná (Luková) (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Pardubický kraj
District : Ústí nad Orlicí
Municipality : Luková
Geographic location : 49 ° 51 '  N , 16 ° 36'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 50 '58 "  N , 16 ° 35' 39"  E
Height: 387  m nm
Residents : 64 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 561 23
traffic
Street: Trpík - Luková

Květná , until 1950 Kozínoha (German goat foot ), is a district of the Luková municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located eleven kilometers northwest of Moravská Třebová and belongs to the Okres Ústí nad Orlicí .

geography

Květná is located in the Lanškrounská kotlina ( Landskron Basin ) in the Eagle Mountains foothills. The street village lies on a hilltop east of the Schönhengster ridge in the headwaters of the Červený potok and Květná streams.

Neighboring towns are Damníkov in the north, Luková and Žichlínek in the northeast, Rychnov na Moravě in the southeast, Mladějov na Moravě in the south, Helvíkov in the southwest and Trpík in the west.

history

Cigenfus was first mentioned in a document in 1304 in a document from Wenceslas II when the Landskron lordship was donated to the Königsaal monastery . The village arose along an old road from Kronland to Blosdorf . Between 1335 and 1336, Johann von Luxemburg attacked the rights of the monastery and deprived the Königsaal Cistercians of several villages around Kronland in Eastern Bohemia. The king pledged the villages of Cigenfus and Türpes to Otto von Tannenfeld. In 1350 Charles IV ordered the return of the villages to the monastery.

Cigenfus remained monastic property even after the monastery was swapped with the Litomyšl diocese in 1358. The monastery sold the remaining East Bohemian goods soon afterwards. In 1372 Heinrich von Brandeis acquired Cigenfus on Lichwe . In 1402 he sold the village together with Türpes to the Augustinian monastery in Kronland. After the Augustinians fled to Olomouc during the Hussite Wars in 1421 and never returned, their goods ended up in secular hands. In 1460 Georg von Podiebrad rejected the existing demands of the order for a return transfer. After 1450 Zdeniek Kostka von Postupitz became the owner of Cigenfus . He joined Cigenfus to his Landskron rule .

Up to the 19th century the spelling of the place name changed to goat foot and the Czech names Kozí Noha and Kozinka emerged. After the abolition of patrimonial Ziegenfuß / Kozí Noha formed a district of the municipality of Türpes / Trpík in the Landskron district from 1850. In the second half of the 19th century the Czech place name changed to Kozínoha. From 1873 Ziegenfuß became an independent municipality. In 1930 there were 186 people living in the village, most of whom were Germans. After the Munich Agreement , the annexation to the German Reich followed in 1938. From 1939 to 1945 Ziegenfuß belonged to the Landskron district . In 1939 the community of Ziegenfuß had 182 inhabitants. After the end of World War II, Kozínoha returned to Czechoslovakia and the Germans were expelled. In the course of the renaming of place names of German origin, the municipality received the new name Květná in 1950. During the territorial reform of 1960 Květná lost its independence and was incorporated into Luková on January 1, 1961. At the same time, the Okres Lanškroun was dissolved and incorporated into the Okres Ústí nad Orlicí . In 1991 the place had 77 inhabitants. In 2001 the village consisted of 26 houses in which 64 people lived.

Attractions

  • Chapel of St. Laurentius, built in 1863
  • Baroque cross of the Sorrowful Virgin Mary from 1771

Individual evidence

  1. Sněm království Českého 1872-1877, 1. zasedání, 21. schůze, část 3/5 (December 2, 1872)

Web links