Zvěstovice
Zvěstovice | ||||
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Basic data | ||||
State : |
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Region : | Kraj Vysočina | |||
District : | Havlíčkův Brod | |||
Area : | 300 ha | |||
Geographic location : | 49 ° 51 ' N , 15 ° 31' E | |||
Height: | 288 m nm | |||
Residents : | 69 (Jan. 1, 2019) | |||
Postal code : | 582 82 | |||
License plate : | J | |||
traffic | ||||
Street: | Vilémov - Ronov nad Doubravou | |||
structure | ||||
Status: | local community | |||
Districts: | 1 | |||
administration | ||||
Mayor : | Jiří Veselý (as of 2019) | |||
Address: | Zvěstovice 16 582 82 Golčův Jeníkov |
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Municipality number: | 548626 | |||
Website : | www.zvestovice.cz |
Zvěstovice (German Zwiestowitz , also Swiestowitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic . It is located five kilometers northeast of Golčův Jeníkov and belongs to the Okres Havlíčkův Brod .
geography
Zvěstovice is located between the valleys of the streams and Hostačovka Doubravka ( Borekbach ) in the Doubravská brázda ( Doubrawasenke ). The Homole (346 m nm) rises to the northeast and the Na Hradci (343 m nm) to the southeast. To the south lies the Jezuitský rybník pond.
Neighboring towns are Biskupice in the north, Kněžice and Třemošnice in the Northeast, Moravany the east, Pařížov, Bučovice and Spytice the southeast, Na Doubravě, Potěšilka, Jezuitský Mlyn and Sirákovice in the south, Stupárovice and Křemen in the southwest, Skryje , Na Doubravě and Hostačov in the West as well as Hostovlice and Kamenné Mosty in the north-west.
history
The first written mention of Ziestowicz was in 1557 as the property of the Benedictine monastery Wilmzell . After the monastery was abandoned around 1575, King Rudolf II sold the desert monastery and the associated villages to Beneš Beneda von Nečtiny in 1577. 1599, landlord of the sold Wilimow Zvěstovice to the Good Spytice . In Zvěstovice a wooden court, which in the 17th century after the fire was the celebrations was replaced Spytice by a simple stone building that served as a new mansion. In 1659 Johann Dietrich von Ledebur acquired Zvěstovice along with other surrounding villages and added them to his rule Goltsch-Jenikau . In 1686 Zvěstovice was again separated from Goltsch-Jenikau and sold to the owner of the Hostačov estate, Johann Georg Funck von Funcken. In the first half of the 18th century Zvěstovice was again attached to the Goltsch-Jenikau rule.
In 1840 the village of Zwiestowitz in the Caslauer Kreis consisted of 25 houses in which 155 people lived, including eleven Protestant and one Jewish family. There was a manorial farm and a sheep farm in the village . The Catholic parish was Wilimow . Until the middle of the 19th century, Zwiestowitz remained subject to Goltsch-Jenikau.
After the abolition of patrimonial Zvěstovice formed from 1849 a district of the municipality Spytice in the judicial district of Habern . From 1868 the place belonged to the Časlau district . In 1869 Zvěstovice had 247 inhabitants and consisted of 25 houses. Zvěstovice broke away from Spytice in the 1870s and formed its own municipality. In 1900 Zvěstovice had 341 people, in 1910 there were 365. In 1930 Zvěstovice had 384 inhabitants and consisted of 61 houses. Since the territorial reform of 1960, the municipality has belonged to Okres Havlíčkův Brod . At the beginning of 1976 it was incorporated into Skryje and at the beginning of 1989 finally to Vilémov . From November 24, 1990, Zvěstovice forms its own municipality again. In the 2001 census, 68 people lived in the 49 houses of the community.
Attractions
- Evangelical cemetery chapel
- Cast iron cross at the municipal office
- Memorial stone for the fallen of the First World War
- Celtic fort on the Na Hradci
literature
- Historický lexikon obcí České republiky 1869–2005 , part 1, p. 560
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.uir.cz/obec/548626/Zvestovice
- ↑ Český statistický úřad - The population of the Czech municipalities as of January 1, 2019 (PDF; 7.4 MiB)
- ^ Johann Gottfried Sommer : The Kingdom of Bohemia; Represented statistically and topographically. Volume 11: Caslauer Kreis. Ehrlich, Prague 1843, p. 296.