Stražiště (Počaply)

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Stražiště
Stražiště does not have a coat of arms
Stražiště (Počaply) (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Středočeský kraj
District : Příbram
Municipality : Počaply
Area : 153 hectares
Geographic location : 49 ° 33 '  N , 14 ° 0'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 32 '59 "  N , 14 ° 0' 15"  E
Height: 490  m nm
Residents : 6 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 262 72
License plate : S.
traffic
Street: Počaply - Stražiště
Railway connection: Protivín – Zdice

Stražiště (German Straschischt ) is a district of the municipality Počaply in the Czech Republic . It is located four kilometers southeast of Březnice and belongs to the Okres Příbram .

geography

Stražiště is located in the Central Bohemian hill country . The village lies on a ridge on the right-hand side above the Vlčava valley ( Mirowitz brook ). In the north and east, the Protivín – Zdice railway line runs through the Vlčava valley, the nearest railway station is Dobrá Voda . The Ohařská hora (518 m) rises to the east, the Myslínek or Boješický vrch (492 m) to the southeast, the Rampaška (516 m) to the southwest and the Stražiště (507 m) and the Šance (512 m) to the west.

Neighboring towns are Dobra Voda , Holandr and Starosedlský Hradek in the north, Školův Mlyn and Nestrašovice in the Northeast, retec, Liskovec and Ohař the east, Řejvodův Mlyn, Boješice and Myslín the southeast, Na Drahách, Lhotka and Holý Vrch in the south, Na Pazdernách and Počaply in the south-west, Počapelský Mlýn, Martinice and Bubovice in the west and Březnice , Zámecký okres, Bor and V Hamru in the north-west.

history

In the early Middle Ages, the Bozeň Slavic castle , which also included a fortified settlement on the Stražiště hill, was located on the Šance hill above the confluence of the Mlýnský potok and Vlčava rivers.

The first written mention of Stražiště was in 1352. The owners included u. a. Messrs Wrabsky from Wraby on Drahenice . Wilhelm the Elder Ä. Wrabsky Tluksa von Wraby had the Wrabsky family crypt built between 1613 and 1616 in the Church of John the Baptist. Later Stražiště was separated from the allodial rule Drahenice and became subject to the Myslín manor.

In 1837 Stražissť consisted of nine houses with 70 inhabitants. In the local branch church of John the Baptist, services were held every third Sunday. Aside from the Mirowitzer Bach the ruins of Hrad lay . The parish and school location was Mirowitz . Until the middle of the 19th century Stražissť remained subordinate to the Mislin estate , part of the Worlik Fideikommissherrschaft including the allodial goods Zalužan, Zbenitz and Bukowan.

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Strážiště / Stražischt 1850 a district of the municipality Lety in the district administration and the judicial district Písek Miro joke. Between 1873 and 1875 the Protivín – Zdice railway line was built in the Vlčava valley . In 1887 Myslín and Stražiště broke away from Lety and formed the municipality of Myslín. Stražiště consisted of ten houses in 1910 and had 85 inhabitants. In the course of the land reform, the Myslín estate, which belonged to the large estate of the Schwarzenbergs, was parceled out between 1923 and 1924, the remainder of the estate fell to the Czechoslovak state. The district Stražiště was umgemeindet 1952 at their own request to Počaply in Okres Příbram . On January 1, 1976 Počaply and Stražiště were incorporated into Březnice . On November 24, 1990, both villages broke away from Březnice and formed the municipality Počaply. In 1991 Stražiště had eleven inhabitants; in the 2001 census, six people lived in the seven houses.

Attractions

  • Romanesque church of John the Baptist, built in the 14th century. It was redesigned in the years 1613-1616. Inside the church is the Wrabsky von Wraby family crypt. There is a derelict cemetery around the church.
  • Šance Hill with Bozeň Castle , it is considered an archaeological site.
  • Hrochův Hrádek ruins , north of the village on the Vlčava

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer The Kingdom of Bohemia, Vol. 9 Budweiser Kreis, 1840, p. 66

Web links