Sulimov

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Sulimov
Sulimov coat of arms
Sulimov (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Zlínský kraj
District : Kroměříž
Area : 197 hectares
Geographic location : 49 ° 14 '  N , 17 ° 25'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 13 '39 "  N , 17 ° 25' 19"  E
Height: 278  m nm
Residents : 152 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 768 21
License plate : Z
traffic
Street: Kvasice - Vrbka
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 1
administration
Mayor : Zdeněk Dvořák (as of 2010)
Address: Sulimov 51
768 21 Kvasice
Municipality number: 589055
Website : www.sulimov.cz

Sulimov (German Silimow , formerly Sillimow ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located eight kilometers south of Kroměříž and belongs to the Okres Kroměříž .

geography

The street village Sulimov extends in the north-eastern foothills of the Mars Mountains on the edge of the Chřiby nature park over a length of almost one kilometer on a slope above the valley of a small tributary to the Panenský potok. The highest point is at 304 m nm, the lowest at 238 m nm. The Vinohrádek (295 m) rises to the northeast, the Jámy (299 m) to the east and the Kula (391 m) to the south.

Neighboring towns are Bařice in the north, Karolín in the northeast, Nový Dvůr and Bělov in the east, Kopaniny, Podkoryta and Nová Dědina in the southeast, Tabarky in the south, Lubná in the southwest, Vrbka in the west and Velké Těšany in the northwest.

history

The first written mention of Svlimow was in 1353. In 1365, the village became part of the Milota von Benešov owned lordship Kvasice . During the Hussite Wars , the Hussites plundered and pillaged the rule belonging to the strict Catholic and supporter of the emperor, Milota II of Benešov and Kvasice. In June 1423 the rebels under Diviš Bořek von Dohalice and Miletínek conquered the Kvasice castle after a three-day battle in which the landlord also fell. In 1433 Milota's sister Anna sold the estate to Jan Kužel from Žeravice. The village became extinct in the second half of the 15th century. When Arnošt Kužel from Žeravice and Kvasice appointed Hynek Boček from Kunstadt in his will in 1507 as heir of the Kvasice estate, Sulimov was described as desolate.

After the end of the Thirty Years' War, Johann von Rottal had the village repopulated. In 1670 it was called Sylymow . After the death of Joachim Adam von Rottal in 1746 his daughter Marie Anna and her husband Franz Adam von Lamberg inherited the rule. In 1845 Friedrich von Thun and Hohenstein acquired the rule of Kvasice by marrying Leopoldine von Lamberg. In 1846 the village was called Sulimow . Until the middle of the 19th century, Sulimow always remained submissive to Kvasice.

After the abolition of patrimonial Silimow formed from 1850 a community in the district administration Kroměříž. The inhabitants of the village lived from agriculture. From 1890 the municipality was called Silímov and from the beginning of the 20th century as Silimov . The distillery was established in 1906. The current place name Sulimov has been used since 1924. After the communists came to power, agriculture was collectivized; only the Fiala family's business was run privately until the end of communist rule. In 1961 Vrbka and Karolín were incorporated . At the beginning of 1992 Karolín and a year later also Vrbka broke away and formed their own communities. The village is known nationwide for its schnapps distillery.

Community structure

No districts are shown for the municipality of Sulimov. The one-layer Tabarky belongs to Sulimov .

Attractions

  • Statue of St. Anna, built in 1994
  • Bell tower built at the beginning of the 19th century
  • Kusalov Cross at the school, erected in 1904
  • Zapletal Cross, created in 1906
  • Two graves from the time of the Great Moravian Empire near Tabarky. The one north of Tabarky includes 60 burial mounds, another one is southeast of Tabarky.
  • Windmill, north-west of the village, halfway to Velké Těšany, now serves as a museum

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)