Detvianska Huta

Detvianska Huta (Slovak in the 19th century " Mikulášová "; Hungarian Zólyommiklós - Miklósfalu to 1907, but mainly Dettvahuta ) is a town in central Slovakia, with 720 inhabitants (as at 31 December 2011), which in Okres Detva, a part of the Banskobystrický kraj is located.

Geography

The municipality is located in the mountains Veporské Hills, part of the Slovak Ore Mountains. The municipal area is drained by tributaries of Ipeľ and Slatina. The center is located at an altitude of 821 m nm and is six kilometers from Hriňová, and 16 kilometers from Detva.

Administratively, the municipality has five parts of communes: Bratkovica, Detvianska Huta, Komárno, Vrchdobroč and Žabica.

Neighboring municipalities are Hriňová the west and north, Látky in the east, the south and Kotmanová Dobroč and Podkriváň in the southwest.

History

The community as such emerged in the second half of the 18th century from the individual farms Bratkovica and Komárno as well as from a settlement at a glass factory, which was founded on the occasion of the Herrschaftsguts of Vígľaš after making the necessary forests in Vígľašská Huta had already been made. The first inhabitants (14 families) arrived in 1763 from Moravia, specifically from the area of Brumov and Vsetín. After 1775, the hut and the settlement were named after Nikolaus Esterházy ( Mikloss Huta ), yet the cabin finished in 1801 their operation. 1828 were counted 142 houses and 1,185 inhabitants, who were employed in agriculture.

Until 1918, belonged to the lying in the county Sohl place the Kingdom of Hungary and came after Czechoslovakia or Slovakia today. Immediately after the Slovak National Uprising 28 inhabitants were deported to German concentration camp Buchenwald and Mauthausen.

Population

According to the 2011 census lived in Detvianska Huta 722 inhabitants, of whom 696 Slovaks, Czechs, two and a Magyar; four residents were of other ethnicity. 19 inhabitants did not know. 675 inhabitants belonged to the Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant Church of the four inhabitants 12 inhabitants were non-denominational and 31 inhabitants, the denomination has not been determined.

Results according to the census 2001 (779 inhabitants):

After Ethnicity:

  • 99.36 % Slovaks
  • 0.26% Czechs

After Confession:

  • 98.84 % Roman Catholic
  • 0.64% no religious affiliation
  • 0.39% Evangelical
  • 0.13 % no answer

Structures

  • Roman Catholic church in the Romanesque Revival style in the years 1842-1843
232434
de