Trocnov

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Trocnov
Trocnov does not have a coat of arms
Trocnov (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihočeský kraj
District : České Budějovice
Municipality : Borovany
Area : 291 ha
Geographic location : 48 ° 54 '  N , 14 ° 36'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 54 '21 "  N , 14 ° 35' 46"  E
Height: 535  m nm
Residents : 102 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 373 12
License plate : C.
traffic
Street: Ledenice - Římov
Railway connection: České Velenice – České Budějovice
Jan Žižka monument in Žižka's birthplace

Trocnov , until 1949 Záluží (German Zalluschi ) is a district of the city of Borovany in the Czech Republic . It is located three and a half kilometers west of Borovany in South Bohemia and belongs to the Okres České Budějovice .

geography

Trocnov is located at the southern foot of the Studnička (552 m) on a ridge that drops to the north to the valley of the Zborovský creek and to the south to the valley of the Stropnice . The Strážkovický vrch (558 m) rises to the southwest. The road I / 155 between Ledenice and Římov runs through the village . Trocnov is bypassed in the south and west by the railway line České Velenice – České Budějovice , the nearest railway station Trocnov is halfway to Strážkovice in the settlement of Paseka. To the south is the national cultural monument Žižkovo rodiště ( Žižka's birthplace).

Neighboring towns are U Pilare, Vojdlesák, Zborov Ohrazeníčko and Mysletín the north Ledenice , Nováček and Stašov in the Northeast, Pikov and Radostice the east, Borovany , Beran and Štrob in the southwest, Ostrolovský Újezd and Veselka in the south, U Želízků, Řevňovice and Strážkovice in Southwest, Paseka and Borovnice in the west and U Zajíčků, Nová Ves , Klukov and Svatá Voršila in the northwest.

history

The first written mention of Záluží was in 1379 as the property of Peter II von Rosenberg . In 1409, in connection with the murder of Václav Pitrůch, the village was mentioned again in the Krumlov registers . Later the village became part of the property of the Archdechantei Krumlov. In 1840 Záluží consisted of 17 houses with 82 Czech-speaking residents. The place was parish after Střížov . Until the middle of the 19th century, the village always remained subordinate to the Krumlov prelature .

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Záluží / Zalluschi in 1850 with the single layer Trocnow a village in the municipality Radostice in the district administration Budějovice / Budweis. In 1898, the České Velenice – České Budějovice railway began operating. The Záluží - Ledenice stop was built outside the village . The railway line was expanded to two tracks in 1914, and the station building was also laid out. In 1914 the village had 126 Czech-speaking residents. At the beginning of 1924, Záluží broke away from Radostice and formed its own community with the Trocnov single shift. During the German occupation , Zaluží was incorporated into Radostice in 1943, with Zaluží becoming the seat of the municipality. This incorporation was abolished in 1945 after the end of the Second World War. In 1948 the community was added to the newly formed Okres Trhové Sviny , which was abolished twelve years later. In 1949, Záluží was renamed Trocnov at the request of the local national committee (MNV) . At the beginning of 1961 it was assigned to the Okres České Budějovice. Trocnov has been part of Borovany since July 1, 1985. In 1991 the place had 107 inhabitants, in the 2001 census 102 people lived in the 51 houses of Trocnov.

Attractions

  • Chapel of St. John of Nepomuk, built in 1909
  • National cultural monument Žižkovo rodiště , two kilometers south in the forest on the site of the Trocnov farm

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/768448/Trocnov
  2. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer The Kingdom of Bohemia, Vol. 9 Budweiser Kreis, 1840, pp. 280-281
  3. Radostice / Záluží ( Memento from January 30, 2005 in the Internet Archive )
  4. Trocnov do 1949 název Zálu ?? í ( Memento of July 4, 2011 in the Internet Archive )