Mezilesí u Pelhřimova
Mezilesí | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||
Basic data | ||||
State : |
![]() |
|||
Region : | Kraj Vysočina | |||
District : | Pelhřimov | |||
Area : | 698 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 49 ° 32 ' N , 14 ° 57' E | |||
Height: | 598 m nm | |||
Residents : | 122 (Jan. 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 395 01 | |||
License plate : | J | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Pacov - Načeradec | |||
structure | ||||
Status: | local community | |||
Districts: | 3 | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Jana Holadová (as of 2018) | |||
Address: | Mezilesí 14 395 01 Pacov |
|||
Municipality number: | 548367 | |||
Website : | www.obecmezilesi.cz |
Mezilesí (German: Mesoles , older Meziles-Thein ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located 19 kilometers south of Vlašim and belongs to the Okres Pelhřimov .
geography
Mezilesí is located on a ridge between the Huťský potok and Vočadlo valleys in the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands . To the east rises the Hřeben (685 m), behind it the Stražiště (744 m).
Neighboring towns are Velká Ves in the north, Zelená Ves, Lukavec and Týmova Ves in the northeast, Salačova Lhota in the southeast, Velká Černá and Těchobuz in the south, Talmberk and Velký Ježov in the southwest, Malý Ježov in the west and Holýšov in the northwest.
history
The first written mention of the village Mezilesí including the parish church and a fortress comes from the year 1352. The church patronage was shared by the Vladiken von Holýšov and von Mezilesí. The village of Mezilesí had been divided since the 16th century; a part including the church belonged to the Lukavec manor , the other part of the Mezilesí fortress. In 1689 Jindřich Jeník von Bratřice bought the fortress and the Mezilesí manor and added them to the Lukavec manor.
In 1706 the Mezilesí estate was separated from Lukavec and sold to Ignaz Ubelli von Siegburg. He had the Thein Castle built at Meierhof Thein. After 1760, Ignaz Sigmund Liborius Ubelli von Siegburg sold the property, now called Mezyles-Thein , to Kajetan Obitecký von Obitec-Rabenhaupt and Suché, who sold it to Maria Cajetan Briffaut von Slawietin. Before 1786 the estate fell back to Kajetan Obitecký von Obitec-Rabenhaupt. The village of Gründorf was laid out to the southeast of the castle at the end of the 18th century.
At the beginning of the 19th century, the owners changed in quick succession. In 1806 Adalbert Dwořak bought the estate, from 1810 Ludwig Graf Pourtalès followed , from 1821 Karl Graf von Rey, from 1825 Rosalie Woracziczky von Pabienitz and Bissingen nee. Stillfried-Rattonitz , from 1827 Joseph von Sternegg and from 1840 his brother August von Sternegg.
In 1840 the Mezyles-Thein estate , located in the extreme southwest of the Časlauer Kreis, consisted of the villages Gründorf and Mezyles as well as two houses from the freebie village Lhota Salačowa . 506 Czech-speaking people lived on the manor, including two Jewish families. The agricultural area covered 907 yokes 1502 square fathoms. The village of Mezyles or Mezylesy consisted of 37 houses in which 281 people, including a Jewish family, lived. The branch church of St. James the Great was under the patronage of the Lukawetz authorities. The parish was Lukawetz . In Mezyles there was also an aristocratic Meierhof with a sheep farm, a Dominikales brandy house, a Dominical potash boiler, an inn and a private school, which was partly supported by the owners of the Mezyles-Thein estate and the communities of Gründorf and Mezyles . The Wondraker Mill ( Karbanův Mlýn ) was off the beaten track .
After the abolition of patrimonial Mezilesí / Meziles formed from 1850 a district of the municipality Tejmoves / Theindorf in the judicial district of Pilgram . From 1868 the village belonged to the Pilgram district . In 1872 the owner of the Lukawetz estate, Prince Ernst zu Löwenstein-Wertheim , bought Thein Castle. It then served as a residential building for employees of the Lukawetz large estate; Repair work was not carried out.
Since the end of the 19th century, the place name Meziles-Týn / Meziles-Thein was used as an alternative . The dilapidated Týn Castle was demolished after 1948. In 1949 Mezilesí was assigned to the Okres Pacov. In the course of the territorial reform of 1960, both the Okres Pacov and the municipality of Týmova Ves ( Theindorf ) were abolished . From their districts Mezilesí and Zelená Ves and the district Holýšov, which previously belonged to the municipality Velký Ježov, the new municipality Mezilesí, assigned to the Okres Pelhřimov , emerged.
Community structure
The municipality Mezilesí consists of the districts Holýšov ( Holejschow ), Mezilesí ( Mesoles ) and Zelená Ves ( Gründorf ).
Attractions
- Gothic church of St. James the Elder, built on a hill in the northern part of the village
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.uir.cz/obec/548367/Mezilesi
- ↑ Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
- ^ Official German local register for the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia , 2nd edition, Prague 1940, 3 / 11-48
- ^ Ernst Pfohl: Orientation lexicon of the Czechoslovak Republic. Gebr. Stiepel, Reichenberg 1931, p. 389.
- ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 11: Caslauer Kreis. Prague 1843, pp. 111-113
- ↑ http://www.uir.cz/casti-obce-obec/548367/Obec-Mezilesi