Vyšehorky

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Vyšehorky
Vyšehorky does not have a coat of arms
Vyšehorky (Czech Republic)
Paris plan pointer b jms.svg
Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Olomoucký kraj
District : Šumperk
Municipality : Líšnice u Mohelnice
Area : 255 ha
Geographic location : 49 ° 46 '  N , 16 ° 53'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 46 '8 "  N , 16 ° 52' 31"  E
Height: 370  m nm
Residents : 69 (March 1, 2001)
Postal code : 789 85
License plate : M.
traffic
Street: Podolí - Líšnice
Parish Church of All Saints

Vyšehorky , until 1949 Vyšehoří (German All Saints' Day ) is a district of the municipality of Líšnice in the Czech Republic . It is located three kilometers southwest of Mohelnice and belongs to the Okres Šumperk .

geography

Vyšehorky is located in the transition from the Mirovská vrchovina (Mürauer Uplands) and Bouzovská vrchovina ( Busauer Uplands ) to the Mohelnická brázda ( Müglitzer Furche ). The Skalky (407 m) rises to the southwest. In the north the state road I / 35 / E 442 runs between Moravská Třebová and Mohelnice.

Neighboring towns are Podolíčko in the north, Podolí and Mohelnice in the northeast, Dolní Krčmy in the east, Újezd ​​and Žádlovice in the southeast, Líšnice in the south, Starý Mlýn and Bušín in the southwest, Paseky and Studená Loučka in the west and Mírovský Grunt and Mírov in the north-west.

history

It was first mentioned in writing in 1369, when Bedřich and Smil von Kunstadt pledged the church in Vyšehoří an annual sum to support their mother Anna. Vyšehoří belonged to the Líšnice manor and was possibly laid out in the corridors of the manor house. In the 15th century the parish Vyšehoří became utraquist and later evangelical. Since 1551 Vyšehoří belonged to the Podolí manor. This was confiscated after the Battle of the White Mountain and sold to the Olomouc bishop Franz Xaver von Dietrichstein , who added it to his rule in Mürau . The diocese settled the village, three quarters of which had fallen desolate during the Thirty Years 'War, with Germans who named the place All Saints' Day . In 1663 a Catholic pastor was reinstated. In the hoof register of 1677 24 properties are shown for Allerheiligen, three of which were still in desolation. Around 1750 the small settlement of Passek emerged in one fell swoop in the woods west of Allerheiligen. In 1834, 247 people lived in the 34 houses in the village. In the great fire of 1842, the village was reduced to a few houses and the church in rubble and ashes. A school was built before 1848.

After the abolition of patrimonial All Saints / Vyšehoří formed a district of the community Großpoidl / Hrubé Podolí in the Hohenstadt district from 1850 . In 1896 the political community of All Saints was created. In 1900 the place consisted of 36 houses and had 223 inhabitants. In 1930 there were 192 Germans and one Czech living in Allerheiligen. After the Munich Agreement , the community was added to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Hohenstadt district until 1945 . In 1939 All Saints' Day had 172 inhabitants. After the end of the Second World War, the Germans were expelled and the Czechs settled. In 1949 the place was renamed Vyšehorky , as there was another municipality Vyšehoří in the vicinity . In 1950, 104 people lived in the 25 houses in Vyšehorky. On June 8, 1957, the church burned down after being struck by lightning. 1961 Vyšehorky was incorporated into Líšnice and at the same time assigned to the Okres Šumperk . Between 1963 and 1964 the church was reconstructed. In 1985 Líšnice and its districts were forcibly incorporated into the town of Mohelnice . Since 1990 Vyšehorky has again been part of the Líšnice municipality. In 1991 there were 62 people living in the village's 18 houses. In 2001 the village consisted of 27 houses in which 69 people lived.

Attractions

  • Church of All Saints, built in the middle of the 13th century
  • Cemetery gate and wall
  • Cross, stonework from 1807
  • Líšnice castle stables on Skalky hill southwest of the village, remains of a fortress from the 13th and 14th centuries

Web links