Linhartovy

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Linhartovy
Linhartovy does not have a coat of arms
Linhartovy (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Moravskoslezský kraj
District : Bruntál
Municipality : Město Albrechtice
Area : 532 ha
Geographic location : 50 ° 8 '  N , 17 ° 37'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 8 '11 "  N , 17 ° 36' 52"  E
Height: 366  m nm
Residents : 191 (2001)
Postal code : 793 95
License plate : T
traffic
Street: Krnov - Město Albrechtice
Railway connection: Krnov - Třemešná
structure
Status: District

Linhartovy (German Geppersdorf ) is a district of the municipality Město Albrechtice in the Okres Bruntál in the Czech Republic . It is located seven kilometers northwest of Krnov on the border with Poland.

geography

Geppersdorf is located in the Slezská Haná nature reserve on the right bank of the Goldoppa . Neighboring towns are Krásné Loučky ( Schönwiese ) in the southeast, Hošťálkovy ( Gotschdorf ) in the south, Vraclávek ( Klein Bressel ) and Staré Purkartice ( Alt Bürgersdorf ) in the southwest, Česká Ves ( Neudörfel ), Burkvíz ( Burgwiese ) and Opavice ( Troplowitz ) in the northwest.

Across the border with Poland on the left bank of the Goldoppa are Opawica ( Troplowitz ) in the northwest, Radynia ( Raden ) in the northeast and Pietrowice ( Peterwitz , 1936–1945: Zietenbusch ) in the east.

history

Geppersdorf Castle (Linhartovy)

Geppersdorf was founded in the middle of the 13th century in the course of the planned settlement of North Moravia by the Olomouc bishop Bruno von Schauenburg and settled with Germans. It stretched on both banks of the Goldoppa and was first mentioned in a document in 1255. It was initially owned by the bishop and politically belonged to Moravia . Later it was incorporated into the newly founded Duchy of Opava . After its division in 1377, Geppersdorf came to the Duchy of Jägerndorf and in 1410 came into the possession of the von Bladen, a branch of the Lords of Füllstein , together with the Oppawicz lordship . A festival is also documented for this year 1410. In 1504 it belonged to the Chamberlain of the Duchy of Opava, Hojer ( Ojíř ) von Füllstein, who had the fortress converted into a Renaissance castle in the 1530s. By marriage it came in 1566 to Georg Bernhard von Tworkau ( Jiří Bernart Tvorkovský z Kravař ), from whom it inherited in 1578 his daughter Katharina ( Kateřina Kravařská ze Šlovic ), who was married to Wenzel von Haugwitz . Geppersdorf suffered severe damage during the Thirty Years' War. Presumably for this reason, the then 18-year-old Ladislaus Alois von Haugwitz sold it together with Oppawicz and Burkvíz ( Burgwiese ) to Baron Karl Maximilian Sedlnitzky von Choltitz in 1658 . During the rule of the Sedlnitzky, the castle was rebuilt in the Baroque style.

After the First Silesian War in 1742, Geppersdorf was divided. The part lying on the right bank of the Oppa remained with Bohemia and was now on the border with Prussian Silesia . The part lying on the east bank of the Oppa came to Prussia, after the Second World War, along with most of Silesia, fell to Poland, was given the place name Lenarcice in 1945 and is now part of the urban and rural community of Głubczyce ( Leobschütz ).

After the abolition of patrimonial , Geppersdorf, which remained with Bohemia, became an independent municipality in 1850 and belonged to the district administration Jägerndorf . At the same time, the neighboring village of Schönwiese was incorporated into Geppersdorf. In the second half of the 19th century, Geppersdorf got by marriage to the Lords of Oppersdorf and in 1892 to the Jägerdorfer textile merchant Eduard Wenzelides, under whom the palace was rebuilt from 1905 to 1907 by the Viennese architect Leopold Bauer , who came from Jägerndorf . After the transition to Czechoslovakia in 1918, the village of Schönwiese ( Krásné Loučky ) was excluded. In 1930 there were 365 residents in Geppersdorf, 301 of whom were Germans. After the Munich Agreement , Geppersdorf was added to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Jägerndorf district until 1945 . After the Second World War it fell back to Czechoslovakia and was given the official place name Linhartovy . The German residents were expelled in 1945/45 . As a result, the number of inhabitants decreased significantly and in 1950 was only 226. At the end of 1960 the Okres Krnov was dissolved and Linhartovy was assigned to the Okres Bruntál.

Attractions

  • Linhartovy Castle
  • The Catholic Church Exaltation of the Cross was built in the Empire style from 1833–1834 with funds from the Religious Fund .

Sons and daughters (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Czech Vladěnín , from 1945 Włodzienin
  2. http://architektenlexikon.at/de/21.htm