Lampertice

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lampertice
Lampertice coat of arms
Lampertice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Královéhradecký kraj
District : Trutnov
Area : 584 ha
Geographic location : 50 ° 40 ′  N , 15 ° 57 ′  E Coordinates: 50 ° 39 ′ 43 "  N , 15 ° 56 ′ 41"  E
Height: 504  m nm
Residents : 382 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 541 01
License plate : H
traffic
Street: Trutnov - Lubawka
Railway connection: Jaroměř – Lubawka
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Jaroslav Rosa (as of 2008)
Address: Lampertice 210
54101 Trutnov 1
Municipality number: 548804
Website : mesta.obce.cz/lampertice

Lampertice (German Lampersdorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located twelve kilometers north of Trutnov ( Trautenau ) and belongs to the Okres Trutnov .

geography

Lampertice is three kilometers east of Žacléř ( Schatzlar ) between the Rabengebirge and the Rehorngebirge . It is reached via a side road that runs from Bernsdorf ( Bernartice ) to Žacléř. The highest point to the east is the 881 m high Spitzberg ( Špičák ).

Neighboring towns are Královec ( Königshan ) in the north, Bernartice u Trutnova ( Bernsdorf ) and Bečkov ( Potschendorf ) in the southeast, Zlatá Olešnice ( Goldenöls ) in the south, Křenov ( Krinsdorf ) in the southwest and Žacléř in the west. Beyond the border with Poland, which is reached via the Královec – Lubawka border crossing, are Lubawka ( Liebau ) in the north and Niedamirów ( Kunzendorf ) and Opawa ( Oppau ) in the north-west .

history

Lampersdorf was first mentioned in a document in 1521 as Lampertice . It is believed that the place name is derived from a lampert and that the village is much older. The spelling Lampersdorf is documented for 1538 . As a monastery village it belonged to the Cistercian monastery Grüssau in the Duchy of Schweidnitz and was sold by him during the tenure of the Grüssau abbot Kaspar Albert (1578–1611) together with the three other monastery villages Bernsdorf , Königshan and Potschendorf to the rule Schatzlar . Together with the Schatzlar lordship, Lampersdorf and the three abbey villages mentioned above came under the Trautenau lordship in 1599 . This in turn sold Lampersdorf as well as Bernsdorf, Königshan and Potschendorf to the Grüssau monastery. Emperor Rudolph II confirmed the purchase contract with the stipulation that these villages should remain with Bohemia. In 1617 the abbot and convent leased Lampersdorf together with the three abbey villages mentioned above to Heinrich Kapler in Liebau at an annual rate of 1000 thalers . But the inhabitants of these villages wanted to stay with Grüssau Abbey. Presumably for this reason Lampersdort as well as Bernsdorf, Königshan and Potschendorf were confiscated by the rebels in 1619. After the Battle of the White Mountains , the former abbey villages were again given to the Grüssau monastery. Under Abbot Georg II, Bernsdorf came to Jan Rudolf Trčka von Lípa , heir to Schatzlar in 1622 . His goods were confiscated by Emperor Leopold I after his death in 1635 . The Schatzlar reign, with which Lampersdorf remained connected, was donated by the Emperor to the Jesuits of St. Anna in Vienna in 1636 . As compensation for the four Bohemian abbey villages, the emperor granted Grüssau Abbey 9,000 florins.

Until 1790 the children from Lampersdorf attended school in Bernsdorf. They were then taught in Lampersdorf, where a first school building was built in 1818, which was replaced by a new building in 1878. From the 1830s onwards, the mining of hard coal gained economic importance. After the abolition of the patrimonial Bernsdorf belonged from 1850 to the judicial district Schatzlar or to the district Trautenau . As a result of the Munich Agreement , Lampersdorf was annexed to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Trautenau district until 1945 . After the Second World War, the German residents were expelled .

Community structure

No further districts are shown for the municipality of Lampertice.

Sons and daughters

literature

  • P. Ambrosius Rose: Grüssau Monastery. OSB 1242-1289. S ORD CIST 1292-1810. OSB since 1919. Theiss, Stuttgart et al. 1974, ISBN 3-8062-0126-9 .
  • Nikolaus von Lutterotti : The 'Bohemian Villages' of the Cistercian monastery Grüssau in Silesia . In: Yearbook of the German Riesengebirgs-Verein 16, 1927, pp. 47–59.

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)

Web links