Lovečkovice

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lovečkovice
Lovečkovice coat of arms
Lovečkovice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Ústecký kraj
District : Litoměřice
Area : 2271.8555 ha
Geographic location : 50 ° 37 '  N , 14 ° 16'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 37 '19 "  N , 14 ° 15' 36"  E
Height: 437  m nm
Residents : 563 (Jan. 1, 2019)
Postal code : 411 44 ​​- 412 01
License plate : U
traffic
Street: Povrly - Úštěk
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 7th
administration
Mayor : Václav Pavlík (as of 2007)
Address: Lovečkovice 40
411 45 Úštěk
Municipality number: 565211
Website : mesta.obce.cz/loveckovice

Lovečkovice (German Loschowitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located 18 kilometers southeast of the city center of Ústí nad Labem in the Bohemian Central Mountains and belongs to the Okres Litoměřice .

geography

The village is located north of the Sedlo above the valley of the Luční potok. Lovečkovice is the intersection of the state road 260 between Povrly and Úštěk with the 240 between Verneřice and Roudnice nad Labem .

Neighboring towns are Dolní Šebířov in the north, Hradiště and Levínské Petrovice in the northeast, Horní Bukovina and Bukovina in the east, Levín and Horní Vysoké in the southeast, Lázně Jeleč and Lhotsko in the south, Horní Týnec in the southwest, Lukavice, Nová Ves and Přední in the west Klínky in the northwest.

history

Lovečkovice was first mentioned in a document in 1396 as the property of Peter Zvěst. In 1412 the Zvěst von Lovečkovice received the village and the fortress Zábabeč from Wenceslaus von Dědice.

In 1456 there was a fortress in Lovečkovice, and the place belonged to the Ploskovice estate . In 1542 the village was handed down as part of the Liběšice rule . After 1600 the place was attached to the rule Zahořany and belonged to Radislav Kinský von Vchynitz and Tettau. At the end of the 18th century, brown coal was mined in the Ferdinandszeche near Ratsch. During this time the first school building in Loschowitz was built. In 1830 the place had 182 inhabitants who lived in 31 houses. Until the replacement of patrimonial Loschowitz remained part of the Zahorzan rule and became an independent municipality in 1848.

In 1890 the Großpriesen – Wernstadt – Auscha local railway started operations; in Loschowitz the route forked to Auscha and Wernstadt . In 1892 a new school was built. In 1930 the place, including the districts of Ratsch, Vorder Nessel and Lukowitz, consisted of 38 houses and had 186 inhabitants, who, with the exception of four Czechs, belonged to the German ethnic group. After the Second World War, the German residents were expelled. The loss of population could not be compensated, and several of the smaller settlements consist only of holiday homes without permanent residents. Horní Šebířov was completely given up. During the communist rule the parish churches of St. Francis of Assisi in Mukařov and St. Prokop in Touchořiny were demolished. The St. Prokop Chapel in Knínice, built in 1763, was also demolished. In 1978 the railway was shut down and the tracks to Verneřice and Úštěk were dismantled. The remaining section of the line to Velké Březno was declared a cultural monument in 1998, and the supporting association of the Zubrnice Railway Museum intends to start operating the museum railway on the section from Zubrnice to Lovečkovice. In 2002 the bell tower in Mukařov collapsed.

Community structure

The Lovečkovice municipality consists of the districts Dolní Šebířov ( Nieder Rebire ), Knínice ( Kninitz ), Levínské Petrovice ( Petrowitz ), Lovečkovice ( Loschowitz ), Mukařov ( Munker ), Náčkovice ( Naschowitz ) and Touchořiny ( diver ). Basic settlement units are Dolní Šebířov, Hlupice ( Luppitz ), Knínice, Levínské Petrovice, Lovečkovice, Mukařov, Náčkovice and Touchořiny. Lovečkovice also includes the settlements of Hradiště ( Ratsch ), Klínky ( Klinge ), Lukavice ( Lukowitz ), Nová Ves ( Neudörfel ), Přední Nezly ( Front Nettle ), Zadní Nezly (Back Nettle ), Panna ( Panhöhe ) and Lada ( Latten ) and the Horní Šebířov ( Upper Rebire ) desert .

The municipality is divided into the cadastral districts of Dolní Šebířov, Hlupice, Knínice u Touchořin, Levínské Petrovice, Lovečkovice, Mukařov u Úštěku, Náčkovice and Touchořiny.

Attractions

  • Chapel in Lovečkovice, built around 1850
  • Chapel with a bell tower in Levínské Petrovice
  • Chapel of the Helpful Virgin Mary in Náčkovice
  • Scrap wood and half-timbered buildings
  • Lookout tower on Víťova vyhlídka near Náčkovice, inaugurated in 2004

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/obec/565211/Loveckovice
  2. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
  3. http://www.uir.cz/casti-obce-obec/565211/Obec-Loveckovice
  4. http://www.uir.cz/zsj-obec/565211/Obec-Loveckovice
  5. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi-obec/565211/Obec-Loveckovice

Web links

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