Záboří u Českých Budějovic

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Záboří
Coat of arms of ????
Záboří u Českých Budějovic (Czech Republic)
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Basic data
State : Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Region : Jihočeský kraj
District : České Budějovice
Area : 1657 ha
Geographic location : 48 ° 59 '  N , 14 ° 16'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 59 '6 "  N , 14 ° 16' 9"  E
Height: 430  m nm
Residents : 368 (Jan 1, 2019)
Postal code : 373 84
License plate : C.
traffic
Street: Lhenice - Budweis
Next international airport : České Budějovice Airport
structure
Status: local community
Districts: 3
administration
Mayor : Josef Honsa (as of: 2018)
Address: Záboří 15
373 84 Dubné
Municipality number: 545317
Website : www.obeczabori.cz
Location of Záboří in the České Budějovice district
map
Farmsteads in the peasant baroque

Záboří (German Sabor , formerly Saborsch or Saborz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located 16 km northwest of Budweis in South Bohemia and belongs to the Okres České Budějovice .

geography

Záboří is located in a pond landscape on the northeastern edge of the Blanský les . The place is traversed by the Zábořský creek. To the northeast are the Dehtář and Posměch ponds , to the south the Kamenný rybník and the Roubíček. To the north rises the Zádušní vrch (454 m), in the east the Bor (455 m), southeast the Velký Bor (472 m) and the Doubí (496 m), in the south the Malý vršek (480 m), southwest the Vysoká Běta (803 m), in the west the Chrášťanský vrch (780 m) and to the northwest the Buková hora (650 m) and the Kamenná (485 m).

Neighboring towns are Strýčice and Radošovice in the north, Dehtáře and Holubovská Bašta in the northeast, Curna, Špicuk, Tesař, Kalouch, Jaronice and Křenovice in the east, Čakov , Borovka, Čakovec and Jankov in the southeast, Holašovice in the south, Lipestenanovice in the south Dobčice in the west and Dolní Chrášťany, Chvalovice and Babice in the northwest.

Community structure

The municipality Záboří consists of the districts Dobčice ( Dobschitz ), Lipanovice ( Linden ) and Záboří and the single layer Pergerův Mlýn ( Perger Mill ).

The municipality is divided into the cadastral districts of Lipanovice and Záboří u Českých Budějovic.

Neighboring communities

Chvalovice u Netolic Strýčice Radošovice u Českých Budějovic
Lhenice Neighboring communities Žabovřesky , Čakov u Českých Budějovic
Brloh pod Kletí Nová Ves u Brloha Jankov

history

The first written mention of Zabore took place in 1263 when the knight Budivoj Čéč von Železnice sold the village to the Hohenfurth monastery . The pandemic of the plague of 1520/21 left the village deserted. The Lords of Rosenberg, as patrons of the monastery, had the deserted villages belonging to the monastery repopulated with Palatinate Swabians in the 1530s, thus creating a German-speaking island. On February 28, 1822, Abbot Isidor Teutschmann succeeded in separating the monastery from the rule of Krumlov . In 1840 Saboř consisted of 28 houses with 256 inhabitants. The single-layer mountain mill belonged to the village . The rectory was Stritzitz . Until the middle of the 19th century, the village remained subject to the Hohenfurth monastery.

After the abolition of patrimonial Saborz formed from 1850 with the districts Stritzitz and Hollschowitz a municipality in the district administration Budějovice / Budweis. In 1869 the municipality Linden ( Lipanovice ) with the district Dobschitz ( Dobčice ) joined Saborz . In 1914 the community Saborz or Saboř / Záboř had 803 inhabitants, of which 792 were Germans and eleven Czechs. 246 Germans lived in the village of Saborz . After the Munich Agreement , the municipality of Sabor or Saborsch was added to the German Reich in 1938 and belonged to the Krummau an der Moldau district until 1945. In 1930 there were 875 people in the community, in 1939 there were 817. After the end of the Second World War, Záboří returned to Czechoslovakia and became part of the Okres České Budějovice again. After most of the German population was expelled in 1946 , only three families lived in Záboří. The village was repopulated with Czech settlers from the inland. After the expulsion, only 17 long-established families lived in Záboří, Dobčice and Lipanovice. In 1950 the district Strýčice was reassigned to Radošovice . In 1964 Holašovice was separated from Záboří and added to the Jankov community .

Záboří was declared a monument protection area of ​​folk architecture in 1995, the districts of Dobčice and Lipanovice have had this status since 1990. Characteristic for the townscape is the folk architecture of the South Bohemian peasant baroque that is typical for the area . The center of the village is formed by a village green with a chapel and a pond, around which the farmsteads and the still preserved village blacksmiths were laid out.

Attractions

  • Numerous gabled courtyards in the South Bohemian peasant baroque
  • Chapel on the village green, built in 1841
  • Former village smithy
  • Along the Zábořský potok there is an avenue, at the beginning of which there is a walled shrine with a depiction of the suffering of Christ, which was built as a vault over the brook
  • Ancient burial place in the Dřeviny forest on the road to Lipanovice
  • Chapel on the road to Čakov from 1843

Web links

Commons : Záboří  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.uir.cz/obec/545317/Zabori
  2. Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 0.8 MiB)
  3. http://www.uir.cz/casti-obce-obec/545317/Obec-Zabori
  4. http://www.uir.cz/katastralni-uzemi-obec/545317/Obec-Zabori
  5. ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer The Kingdom of Bohemia, Vol. 9 Budweiser Kreis, 1840, p. 180
  6. http://povesti.wz.cz/jih_zabori.pdf
  7. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Krummau an der Moldau district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).