Radětice u Bechyně

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Radětice
Radětice coat of arms
Radětice u Bechyně (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihočeský kraj
District : Tábor
Area : 1471 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 19 ′  N , 14 ° 27 ′  E Coordinates: 49 ° 19 ′ 9 ″  N , 14 ° 26 ′ 31 ″  E
Height: 421  m nm
Residents : 224 (Jan. 1, 2019)
Postal code : 391 65
License plate : C.
traffic
Street: Bernartice - Bechyně
Next international airport : České Budějovice Airport
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Josef Svoboda (as of 2012)
Address: Radětice 94
391 65 Bechyně
Municipality number: 552925
Website : www.radetice.cz

Radětice (German Radietitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located three kilometers northwest of Bechyně in South Bohemia and belongs to the Okres Tábor .

geography

Radětice is on the right side above the valley of the Smutná in the Bechin Hills ( Bechyňská pahorkatina ). The Plziny Nature Park extends to the west. The Jahodinská (489 m) rises to the northwest.

Neighboring towns are Zběšice and Rataje in the north, U Viktorů, Haškovcova Lhota and Větrov in the northeast, Na Prádle, Senožaty and Hutě in the east, Lišky, Poušť and Bechyně in the southeast, Cihelna, Plechamr, Hvožďany and U Šternberbů, in the south, U Šternberbů , Hajnice, Hemera, Koudelka, Chrášťany and Dražíč in the south-west, Dražíčské Březí, Smolečské Březí, Drtina, Soví, Na Pohodnici and Nepomuk in the west and Rakov, Svatkovice and Borovany in the north-west.

history

Several burial mounds document an early settlement of the area; The remains of a 3000 year old settlement with ramparts and around 50 burial mounds were found in the Soví forest and another 14 in the Poušť forest.

The first written mention of Radětice took place in a settlement on June 17, 1291. In the course of an exchange of goods between King John of Luxembourg and Peter I von Rosenberg , the Bohemian crown received the villages of Radětice, Hvožďany on October 10, 1323 to round off the rule of Bechin and Křída; in return he ceded Bukowsko with the villages Neplachov and Drahotěšice to Peter von Rosenberg. In 1528 Christoph von Schwanberg acquired the villages of Hodonice , Smoleč, Černýšovice , Černice, Hodětín , Sudoměřice , Radětice, Bežerovice, Oltýň, Vyhnanice, Senožaty and Hvožďany. After he had acquired the owner of the Bechin estate in 1530 , he rejoined the villages. Heinrich von Schwanberg sold the Bechin manor and the villages of Hodušín, Dražíce, Sepekov , Olší, Podhoří, Nuzice, Držkrajov, Lhota Haškovcova, Blatec, Čečkov and the desert village of Benešovce for 23,750 Schock Bohemian groschen to Peter Wok von Rosenberg in 1569 . He sold the rule in 1596 to the Lords of Sternberg , from whom it came to the Counts of Paar through marriage in 1715 . In 1840 Radietitz / Radětice consisted of 68 houses with 508 inhabitants. In the village there was a private school in a community schoolhouse. On the other side were the Hegerhaus Sowy ( Soví ), the brickworks and the Smutna lime kiln as well as the hunter's house hermitage ( Poušť ) with a pilgrimage chapel that had been removed. The parish and school location was Bechin . Until the middle of the 19th century Radětice always remained submissive to Bechin.

After the abolition of patrimonial Radětice formed from 1850 a municipality in the district administration Milevsko / Mühlhausen and the judicial district Bechyně / Bechin. After the dissolution of the Okres Milevsko, the municipality became part of the Okres Týn nad Vltavou on February 21, 1949. After the Okres Týn nad Vltavou was abolished, Radětice was assigned to the Okres Tábor in late 1960 . Radětice has had a coat of arms and a banner since 2003.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Radětice. The settlement of Cihelna and the layers of Na Prádle, Poušť and Soví belong to Radětice .

Attractions

  • Niche chapel of the Virgin Mary, built in 1857
  • Bell tower chapel on the village square, built in 1921
  • Church of John the Baptist on a rocky hill in Poušť, built in 1676 together with a wooden hermitage under Johann Norbert von Sternberg. Hermits lived in Poušť between 1678 and 1793. The last mass in the church was held in 1830. In 1864 she was robbed. Then it fell into disrepair and served as a shelter for wandering thieves. In 1930 the United Methodist Church bought the building and renovated it, because until 1950 the church operated a recreation camp for orphans in railroad cars. In 1968 the camp was resumed and several huts were built around the church. Since 1980 the church of Poušť has served as a training center for Christian education and as a church resort for Methodists.
  • Hegerhaus Poušť, it was built around 1750 as a stately hunter's house and was converted into a Hegerhaus in 1850. It was inhabited by Hegern until 1955, since then it has been used for celebrations.
  • Former water mill Na Prádle an der Smutná, the building erected in the 19th century is now used for recreational purposes.
  • Wooden observation tower on the edge of the forest to the west of the village, the 13.2 m high structure built in 2004 with three observation platforms at 5.4, 7.8 and 10.8 m heights offers an easterly view of Bechyně and the Smutná and valleys Lainsitz .
  • Barrows in the Poušť and Soví forests
  • The Zkamenělé stádo ( Petrified Herd ) group of boulders in the Poušť forest, the stones made of Swedish granite and basalt are deposits of a glacier.
  • Memorial stone for those who fell in both world wars, erected in 1931 and added in 1946.

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 0.8 MiB)
  2. Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia. Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 10: Tabor Circle. Ehrlich, Prague 1842, p. 33.