Sudkov
Sudkov | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : | Czech Republic | |||
Region : | Olomoucký kraj | |||
District : | Šumperk | |||
Area : | 489 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 49 ° 55 ' N , 16 ° 57' E | |||
Height: | 290 m nm | |||
Residents : | 1,127 (Jan 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 788 21 - 789 61 | |||
License plate : | M. | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Šumperk - Postřelmov | |||
Railway connection: | Zábřeh - Šumperk | |||
structure | ||||
Status: | local community | |||
Districts: | 1 | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Milena Sobotková (as of 2008) | |||
Address: | Sudkov 96 78821 Sudkov |
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Municipality number: | 541109 | |||
Website : | sudkov.zabrezsko.cz |
Sudkov (German Zautke ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located six kilometers southwest of Šumperk and belongs to the Okres Šumperk .
geography
Sudkov is located in the Müglitzer Furche (Mohelnická brázda) on the left side of the Desná above its confluence with the March . The Dražník (506 m) rises to the northeast and the Brousná (364 m) to the northwest. Sudkovský rybník pond is located in the southern part of the village. On the opposite bank of the river the railway lines from Česká Třebová to Mohelnice and from Zábřeh to Šumperk branched off. The Bludov train station is also located there.
Neighboring towns are Bludov in the north, Dolní Studénky in the north-east, Dlouhomilov in the east, Brníčko in the south-east, Kolšov and Pazderna in the south, Postřelmov in the south-west, Postřelmůvek in the west and Chromeč in the north-west.
history
The first written mention of Sudkov was in the country table in 1353 , when Paul the Younger of Sovinec got half the village from his mother Anna. In 1373 the Lords of Sovinec sold the village to the castle captain of Mürau . The subsequent owners were the lords of Schönwald from the end of the 14th century and the lords of Zwole in the 15th century . During the power struggles between Georg von Podiebrad and Matthias Corvinus , the area was ravaged and plundered by Hungarian and German armies between 1468 and 1471. The neighboring Brníčko Castle and both fortresses in Kolšov were also destroyed. In 1480, Markvart von Zwole sold the village to Georg Tunkl von Brníčko in connection with the planned establishment of the Zadworschitzer ponds in the corridors of the desert village of Závořice . This struck it in 1490 to the unified Hohenstadt rule . In 1516 the village consisted of 16 properties. The existence of the Sudkover mill and a stately fulling mill has been documented since 1567. After the Battle of the White Mountain , the four lords of Ladislav Velen von Zerotein , who had owned Hohenstadt since 1589, were confiscated and left in 1622 for a small obolus to Karl von Liechenstein . During the Thirty Years' War the village became deserted and in 1690 it had 28 farms again. In 1814 the village consisted of 73 houses and had 529 inhabitants.
After the abolition of patrimonial Sudkov / Zautke formed a political municipality in the Hohenstadt district from 1850. In 1862 the last miller from Sudkov, Johann Pulkert, who had owned the mill since 1829, hanged himself. The mill acquired the Mährisch Schönberg entrepreneur Ignaz Seidl in the following year and built a mechanical spinning mill in its place, which went into operation in 1864.
In 1900 Sudkov consisted of 90 houses and had 963 inhabitants. In 1922 the bridge over the Desná was built. In 1930, 1548 people lived in the town's 173 houses, 154 of them Germans. After the Munich Agreement , the place was added to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Hohenstadt district until 1945 . In 1939 there were 1,450 people in Zautke . The Seidl textile factory was nationalized in 1945; Today the company as Moravolen Šumperk is still the largest employer in town. After the dissolution of the Okres Zábřeh, the municipality came to the Okres Šumperk at the beginning of 1961.
Community structure
No districts are shown for the municipality of Sudkov.
Attractions
- St. Prokop Church, built in 1795
- Prayer house of the Evangelical Church of the Bohemian Brethren , built in 1937