Mladoňovice

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Mladoňovice
Mladoňovice coat of arms
Mladoňovice (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Pardubický kraj
District : Chrudim
Area : 1240 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 53 '  N , 15 ° 43'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 53 '14 "  N , 15 ° 43' 25"  E
Height: 437  m nm
Residents : 351 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 538 21
License plate : E.
traffic
Street: Morašice - Bojanov
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 8th
administration
Mayor : Ivana Blehová (as of 2018)
Address: Mladoňovice 14
538 21 Slatiňany
Municipality number: 571857
Website : www.obec-mladonovice.cz
Municipal Office
Chapel in Deblov

Mladoňovice (German Mladonowitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located nine kilometers southwest of Chrudim and belongs to the Okres Chrudim .

geography

Mladoňovice is located on the right side of the Markovický creek in the Iron Mountains ( Železné hory ). To the northeast rises the Na Chocholce (452 ​​m nm), in the southwest the Smrčina (544 m nm) and northwest of the Smrt (461 m nm).

Neighboring towns are Pohled, Habrovka and Mýtka in the north, Deblov and Smrkový Týnec in the northeast, Lipina and Pohořalka in the east, Licibořice and Liboměřice in the southeast, Petříkovice, Nové Lhotice and Dolanka in the south, Rtenín, Žďárec u Seče and Kraskov in the south-west Cítkov in the west and Nerozhovice and Zbyhněvice in the northwest.

history

It is believed that Duke Vladislav I donated the border forest in which Mladoňovice was located to the newly founded Benedictine monastery Wilmzell . The first written mention of Mladoňov took place in 1329, when the abbot Jaroslav and the prior Všeslav left the desert Bojanover district with the exception of Křižanovice to Heinrich von Lichtenburg for resettlement. The Bojanover Sprengel came under the administration of the Lichtenburg , and at the end of the 14th century the monastery acquired the area back. After the monastery was destroyed by the Hussites in 1421 , Jan Hervít von Rušinov seized the Bojanover district on Wichstein . Later the area came to Oheb Castle ; Markvart Špína from Jenišovice sold it in 1491 to Nikolaus Trčka from Lípa auf Lichtenburg. Wilhelm Trčka von Lípa sold the Ohebern property in 1555 to the brothers Albert and Wenzel Robenhaupt von Sucha. When the property was shared between the brothers, Wenzel Robenhaupt von Sucha received the property of the desert Oheb Castle in 1564 and struck the Bojanover Sprengel of the Seč domain . In 1628 Johann Záruba von Hustířan sold the Seč reign with Bojanov to the imperial lieutenant colonel Franz de Cuvier, who united them with his Nassaberg reign . In the berní rula from 1653 5 farmers are listed for Mladoňovice. After the death of Emanuel de Cuvier († 1663) the rule fell to Nassaberg with Seč and Bojanov, his mother, Rosina de Cuvier, née von Heiden, who was married to Nikolaus von Schönfeld for the second time . In 1753, the rulership of Nassaberg fell to Johann Adam von Auersperg as the universal heir of the Counts of Schönfeld, who died out with Joseph Franz von Schönfeld († 1737).

In 1835 the village of Mladonowitz in the Chrudim district consisted of 12 houses in which 75 people lived. The parish was Litzibořitz . Until the middle of the 19th century, Mladonowitz remained subject to Nassaberg rule.

After the abolition of patrimonial Mladoňovice formed from 1849 a district of the municipality Licibořice in the judicial district Nassaberg . From 1868 the village belonged to the political district of Chrudim . In 1869 Mladoňovice had 90 inhabitants. The volunteer fire brigade was founded around 1900. In 1900 there were 86 people living in the village, in 1910 there were 72. In 1910 the division of the municipality Licibořice into the four municipalities Licibořice, Deblov, Křižanovice and Liboměřice was approved; Mladoňovice became part of Deblov. In 1960, the districts of the municipalities Deblov (Deblov, Lipina, Mladoňovice, Mýtka, Petříkovice, Rtenín) and parts of the municipality Čejkovice (Čejkovice, Pohled) became the new municipality Mladoňovice.

Community structure

The municipality Mladoňovice consists of the villages Čejkovice ( Tschejkowitz ) Deblov ( Deblau ), Lipina, Mladoňovice ( Mladonowitz ) Mýtka ( Mejtka ) Petříkovice ( Peter Kowitz , 1939-45 Petersdorf ) Pohled ( Pochled ) and Rtenín ( values in , even Rtein ). The Habrovka ( Habrota ) and Koda residential areas also belong to Mladoňovice . Basic settlement units are Čejkovice, Deblov, Mladoňovice, Mýtka, Petříkovice, Pohled and Rtenín.

The municipality is divided into the cadastral districts of Čejkovice u Mladoňovic, Deblov, Petříkovice u Mladoňovic and Pohled u Mladoňovic.

Attractions

  • Guardian Angel Chapel in Deblov, it was built in 2014-2016 by converting a former transformer station and was consecrated on October 2, 2016
  • Wooden bell tree in Čejkovice
  • Stone cross on the Mladoňovice village square

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/obec/571857/Mladonovice
  2. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
  3. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 5: Chrudimer Kreis. Prague 1837, p. 268
  4. http://www.uir.cz/casti-obce-obec/571857/Obec-Mladonovice
  5. http://www.uir.cz/zsj-obec/571857/Obec-Mladonovice
  6. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi-obec/571857/Obec-Mladonovice
  7. https://www.obec-mladonovice.cz/kaplicka-v-deblove/