Třebívlice
Třebívlice | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : | Czech Republic | |||
Region : | Ústecký kraj | |||
District : | Litoměřice | |||
Area : | 1,404.9614 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 50 ° 27 ' N , 13 ° 54' E | |||
Height: | 275 m nm | |||
Residents : | 855 (Jan 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 411 15 | |||
License plate : | U | |||
traffic | ||||
Railway connection: | Most – Lovosice | |||
structure | ||||
Status: | local community | |||
Districts: | 8th | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Josef Seifert (as of 2007) | |||
Address: | Komenského náměstí 17 411 15 Třebívlice |
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Municipality number: | 565776 | |||
Website : | www.trebivlice.integro.cz |
Třebívlice (German Trieblitz , Trziblitz , also Triblitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It belongs to the Okres Litoměřice .
geography
The place is located 7 km west of Třebenice in the southwest of the Central Bohemian Uplands . It is 275 m above sea level. M. at Kuzovský potok. State road 15 passes to the north. Třebívlice is on the branch line Most – Lovosice .
history
The first documented mention of it comes from 1318. Four manors have been documented since the 15th century , the upper and lower courtyards and the upper and lower fortresses. The long-established von Udritsch family from the lower fortress acquired the entire town in 1560, which in 1586 was divided into Unter-Trziblitz and Ober-Trziblitz according to the division of inheritance. Ober-Trziblitz came to the Kaplirz de Sulewicz family and through various other owners to the Lobkowicz .
Historically significant was especially Unter-Trziblitz, which passed into the possession of Johann Ritz von Lichtenfeld in 1622. In 1651 the postmaster Ferdinand Prucher acquired the rule. Through his daughter, the property came to the Tyrolean nobleman Ulrich von Klebelsberg, whose descendants also acquired the lords of Leskay, Semtsch and Jetschan in 1732. Between 1787 and 1815, the lower fortress under the Klebelsberg was converted into a baroque palace. In 1812 Ober-Trziblitz was bought by the Lobkowicz.
The Imperial and Royal Finance Minister Franz Josef von Klebelsberg-Thumburg had the baroque palace torn down in 1836 and replaced with a simple, classicist building. In 1843 the 69-year-old Klebelsberg married the widow Amalie von Brösigke-Levetzow , who brought three daughters Ulrike, Amalie and Bertha with her from her marriages with Court Marshal Joachim Otto Ulrich von Levetzow and his cousin Friedrich Carl Ulrich von Levetzow. Ulrike von Levetzow was considered the last love of the aging Goethe in her youth . She remained unmarried and inherited the rule after the death of her stepfather.
After Ulrike von Levetzow's death, her nephew Adalbert Baron Rauch inherited the property on Netluk. Rauch sold the castle in 1901 to the city of Brüx , which set up a children's home in it. The castle has served as a school since 1920.
Since 1999 there has been an exhibition on Ulrike von Levetzow in the garden house of the palace. In 2006 the market square was redesigned.
Community structure
The municipality of Třebívlice consists of the districts Blešno ( Plöschen ), Dřemčice ( Dremtschitz ), Dřevce ( Drefze ), Leská ( Leskay ), Šepetely ( Schöppental ), Skalice ( Skalitz ), Staré ( Starrey ) and Třebívlice ( Trieblitz ).
The municipality is divided into the cadastral districts of Dřemčice, Dřevce, Leská, Šepetely, Skalice u Lovosic, Staré and Třebívlice.
Partnerships
- Wiederitzsch , district of Leipzig, Germany
- Grünhain-Beierfeld , Saxony, Germany
Attractions
- Castle park with ponds at Kuzovský potok
- Ulrike von Levetzow exhibition
- Parish Church of St. Wenceslaus from 1695
- Rectory from 1787
- Chapel of St. John of Nepomuk from 1731
- Columns of St. Florian, St. Alois and Johann Amos Comenius
Web links
- Information about the castle (Czech)