Velká Ledhuje

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Velká Ledhuje
Velká Ledhuje does not have a coat of arms
Velká Ledhuje (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Královéhradecký kraj
District : After that
Municipality : Police nad Metují
Area : 589.1566 ha
Geographic location : 50 ° 32 '  N , 16 ° 14'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 32 '19 "  N , 16 ° 14' 21"  E
Height: 475  m nm
Residents : 2,472 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 549 54
License plate : H
traffic
Street: Police nad Metují - Suchý Důl
Statue of St. Wenceslaus
Storage
Krčma Guest House

Velká Ledhuje (German Groß Ledhuj , 1939–45 Groß Ledhui , formerly Ledhuj ) is a district of the town of Police nad Metují in the Czech Republic. It is located immediately east of Police nad Metují and belongs to the Okres Náchod .

geography

Velká Ledhuje extends in the valley of the Ledhujka in the Polická vrchovina ( Politzer Upland ). To the north rises the Klůček (614 m nm), in the east the Hora (593 m nm) and southeast of the Chlum (606 m nm).

Neighboring towns are Hlavňov in the north, Ochoz in the northeast, Suchý Důl and Slavný in the east, Bělý in the southeast, Nízká Srbská , Škutiny and Bezděkov nad Metují in the south, Radešov in the southwest, Police nad Metují in the west and Malá Ledhuje and Bukovice in the northwest.

history

The village, which was founded in the course of the colonization of the Politzer Sprengels by the Břevnov monastery, probably in the 1230s, was first mentioned in a document in 1406. It is believed that the colonists came from Provodov or the area around Poděbrady . Ledhuj then belonged to the Braunau monastery for centuries and was under the Politz provost's office . After the abolition of the Politz Propstei by Emperor Joseph II in 1775, the Politz monastery was formed from it; on condition that an annual lump sum was paid from the income to the religious fund, it remained in the possession of the Braunau- Breunau double abbey .

In 1836 the village of Ledhug in the Königgrätzer Kreis consisted of 72 houses, in which 527 Czech-speaking people lived. In the place were the stately brewery, the brandy distillery, a farm with sheep, a mill and an inn. The parish was Politz. Until the middle of the 19th century, the village remained subject to the Politz monastery.

After the abolition of patrimonial formed Ledhuje / Ledhuj 1849 with the hamlet Bukovice a municipality in the judicial district Politz . In 1868 the community was assigned to the Braunau district . Bukovice became independent in 1877. The houses scattered south of Politz on the left bank of the Ledhujka were called Malá Ledhuje / Klein Ledhuj , while the actual village was increasingly called Velká Ledhuje / Groß Ledhuj . At the beginning of the 20th century, Ledhuj was used as a community name.

Since the unfavorable district boundaries severely restricted the expansion possibilities of the city of Politz, which was emerging at the beginning of the 20th century, a merger with the municipality of Ledhuj , whose cadastre enclosed the city on three sides, was agreed in 1920 . After its approval, the incorporation of Velká Ledhuje and Malá Ledhuje took place in 1922. In the 1920s, two new housing estates were built north and east of Politz on the Velká Ledhuje area, to which the name Malá Ledhuje was transferred. After the Munich Agreement, Velká Ledhuje remained with the "remaining Czech Republic" and was assigned to the Okres Náchod. After the end of the Second World War, Velká Ledhuje came back to Okres Broumov. In the course of the territorial reform of 1960 the Okres Broumov was abolished, since then Velká Ledhuje has belonged to the Okres Náchod. Malá Ledhuje lost the status of a district of Police at the beginning of 1974 and was assigned to Velká Ledhuje. In 1991 Velká Ledhuje had 2582 inhabitants. In 2001 the district consisted of 384 houses in which 2472 people lived. The majority of the inhabitants live in the two suburban settlements of Malá Ledhuje.

Local division

The district of Velká Ledhuje forms the largest cadastral district in the city of Police nad Metují and encloses the city center in the east and north. The settlements Malá Ledhuje ( Klein Ledhuj ) and Ochoz ( Ochos ) belong to Velká Ledhuje .

Attractions

  • Mark's column, created in 1716
  • Statue of St. Markus, created in 1903
  • Statue of St. Markus, from 1716, at house number 218
  • Statue of St. Florian, from 1779, at house number 117

Web links

Commons : Velká Ledhuje  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi/725340/Velka-Ledhuje
  2. Eva Kudláčková: Drobné sakrální plastiky na Policku , University of Hradec Králové, 2015 (thesis)
  3. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer , Franz Xaver Maximilian Zippe: The Kingdom of Böhmen. Statistically and topographically presented, vol. 4 Königgrätzer Kreis , Prague 1836, p. 188
  4. https://www.czso.cz/documents/10180/20565661/13810901.pdf/3fde2441-c81b-4a1e-9b94-551e65007f70?version=1.0