Albrechtice (Karviná District)

Albrechtice ( German Albers village, Polish Olbrachcice ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located eight kilometers south of Karviná and belongs to Okres Karviná.

Geography

The place is located below the dam on the left bank of the Těrlicko Stonávka on the outskirts of Ostrava - Karviná coalfield.

Neighboring towns are Novy Svet, Důlský and Stonava in the north, Paseky Červenky, Pardubice and Chotěbuz in the east, in the southeast Stanislavice, Dolni Těrlicko in the south, Těrlicko, Pacalůvka and Životice in the southwest and Horni Sucha in the West.

History

Albrechtice was first documented in 1447. At this time the village in the Duchy of Cieszyn was the seat of a manorial site and vicarage. From 1461 Albers village was the property of the city of Cieszyn and in 1693 to the reign Karwin. 1828 was a Catholic school, which was in elementary school with Polish language lessons later. After the replacement of patrimonial rule the village to the political district of Freistadt was associated.

After the Munich Agreement in 1938 Olbrachcice Polish, from 1939 to 1945 belonged Albers village as part of the district of Teschen to the German Reich. After the Second World War, the city came back to Czechoslovakia and was until its dissolution in 1952, belonging to the Okres Fryštát. Between 1952 and 1960, the village was part of the Okres Český Těšín and then came to Okres Karviná.

The former typical of the region log houses are no longer available, the last two were demolished in the 1970s. A polygonal scouring of Pardubice has been implemented in the open-air museum in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm.

Community structure

For the community districts are not reported. To place we offer are the settlements Bělehrad, Červenky, Pardubice, Důlský, Novy Svet and Pacalůvka.

Attractions

  • Baroque shot wooden church at the cemetery, built in 1766 of oak and covered with wood shingles
  • Chapel in Pacalůvka, built in 1844
  • Catholic Church of St. Peter and Paul in 1938
  • Monument at the crash site of the Polish aviation pioneers Stanisław Franciszek Wigura and Żwirko (both † September 11, 1932 ), south of the village
  • Windmill
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