Oľdza
Oľdza | ||
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coat of arms | map | |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Slovakia | |
Kraj : | Trnavský kraj | |
Okres : | Dunajská Streda | |
Region : | Podunajsko | |
Area : | 8.861 km² | |
Residents : | 546 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 62 inhabitants per km² | |
Height : | 123 m nm | |
Postal code : | 930 39 ( Zlaté Klasy post office ) | |
Telephone code : | 0 31 | |
Geographic location : | 48 ° 5 ' N , 17 ° 25' E | |
License plate : | DS | |
Kód obce : | 501832 | |
structure | ||
Community type : | local community | |
Administration (as of November 2018) | ||
Mayor : | Ildikó Gyurcsiová | |
Address: | Obecný úrad Oľdza č. 16 930 39 Zlaté Klasy |
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Website: | www.oldza.sk | |
Statistics information on statistics.sk |
Oľdza (until 1948 in Slovak "Olgya"; in Hungarian Olgya ) is a municipality in southwest Slovakia with 546 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2019). It belongs to the Okres Dunajská Streda , part of the Trnavský kraj .
geography
The municipality is located in the western part of the Great Schüttinsel , part of the Slovak Danube lowlands . The town center is located at an altitude of 123 m nm and is 11.5 kilometers from Šamorín , 19.5 kilometers from Dunajská Streda and 29 kilometers from Bratislava .
Neighboring municipalities are Čenkovce in the north and east, Lehnice in the southeast, Mierovo in the south and Hubice in the west.
history
Oľdza was first mentioned in writing in 1239 as Ogia . Initially, the village belonged to the estate of the Bratislava Castle , then to the lower aristocratic Olgyay family , and from the 17th century partly to the Baczák and Udvarnoky families . In 1828 there were 49 houses and 366 inhabitants, whose main source of income was agriculture.
Until 1919, the place in Pressburg County belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary and then came to Czechoslovakia or now Slovakia. 1938-45 he was again in Hungary due to the First Vienna Arbitration .
population
According to the 2011 census, Oľdza had 403 inhabitants, including 239 Magyars, 145 Slovaks and one German, one Croat, one Russian and one Czech. 15 residents gave no answer. 278 residents committed themselves to the Roman Catholic Church, 18 residents to the Evangelical Church AB, four residents to the Reformed Church, three residents to the Greek Catholic Church and one resident to the Orthodox Church; one resident professed a different denomination. 57 residents had no denomination and 41 residents had no denomination.
Individual evidence
Web links
- Entry on e-obce.sk (Slovak)