Nuzarov

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Nuzarov (German Nimvorgut ) is a desert in the municipality of Postřekov in the Czech Republic . The village was three kilometers south of Stockau in the Bohemian Forest . Both the German and the Czech place names reflect the poor living conditions of the place located on a plateau in the middle of the forest: Nimvorgut is derived from the phrase “take for good”, which means “accept your situation”, Nuzarov is derived from czech nouze 'die emergency'. Forestry and lace- making provided work and bread, and later tourism too. In 1930 there were 158 people living in Nimvorgut.

Nimvorgut was initially an independent municipality in the Bischofteinitz district . After the annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 by the German Reich and the occupation of the so-called remaining Czech Republic , the village was incorporated into Possigkau in the district of Markt Eisenstein on July 15, 1939 and thus became part of the district of Waldmünchen in 1940 . In 1945/46 the German residents were expelled. The remote village was not repopulated and was abandoned and destroyed by the Czechoslovak administration around 1955 because it was in the restricted border area.

literature

  • Franz Liebl, Heimatkreis Bischofteinitz (Ed.): Our Heimatkreis Bischofteinitz. Brönner & Daentler, Eichstätt 1967

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 28 ′ 7.2 "  N , 12 ° 44 ′ 31.9"  E

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. sud_bischofteinitz.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).