Dlouhomilov

Dlouhomilov ( German Lomigsdorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located seven kilometers south of Šumperk and belongs to Okres Šumperk. The village Dlouhomilov is protected as a village zone.

Geography

Dlouhomilov extends the creek Loučka and two small tributaries in the Úsovská Highlands ( Ausseer hill country). To the north of the Dražník (506 m) and Malínský raise vrch (491 m ) and to the south the Shebna ( Upper Mountain, 476 m).

Neighboring towns are Dolni Studénky, Králec and Třemešek in the north, Nový Malín in the northeast, Dolni Olešná in the east, Horni Libina and Benkov the southeast, Medelské and Strupšín in the south, Dolni Brníčko and Brníčko the southwest, Kolšov in the west and Sudkov in the northwest.

History

The first mention of named after a Dlúhomil village dates from the year 1356. Dlouhomilov was the seat of several small Landadeliger that used the predicate of Dlouhomilov. Since 1385 the south to Medelské that has arisen from three yards, detectable. 1437 acquired the Lords of Tunkl the place and locked him in the reign Brníčko. In Dlouhomilov was a Erbgericht and several outdoor courtyards. Since 1490, the village belonged to the United dominion High City. Dlouhomilov had since the end of the 16th century vicarage for the nearby villages. During the Thirty Years War, the parish went out. In hooves register of 1677 are reported for 27 Dlouhomilov estate. Between 1767 and 1770 a new church was built, which was in 1785 raised to the Lokalie. The first village school in 1793 is proven. In the 19th century Dlouhomilov grew further south to the Loučka and formed with Medelské a closed settlement area. In the 1830s began in the vicinity of the mining of iron ore, which was delivered to the huts of Zöptau and Blansko. 1834 lived 648 people in the 80 houses of the village.

After the abolition of patrimonial Dlouhomilov / Lomigsdorf formed in 1850 with the district Medelsko / three courtyards, a municipality in the district chief city. 1853, the church and the parish church was raised. At the beginning of the 20th century Medelsko lost the status of a hamlet. 1910 were in Dlouhomilov 106 houses with 847 inhabitants. 1930, the village had 807 inhabitants, of whom seven were German. After the Munich Agreement in 1938 the community was annexed by the German Reich and belonged until 1945 to the district chief city. 1939 Lomigsdorf 700 inhabitants. After the Second World War, the community came back to Czechoslovakia. Several families left Dlouhomilov and moved to the border areas. In 1950 the community had 544 inhabitants, who lived in 141 houses. At the end of 1960, the Okres Zábřeh was dissolved and Dlouhomilov assigned to the Okres Šumperk. At the same time the incorporation of Benkov was. The community consisted Dlouhomilov 1991 from 151 houses with 472 inhabitants. In the 138 houses of the local part Dlouhomilov lived 434 people.

Community structure

The municipality consists of the villages Dlouhomilov Benkov ( Benke ) and Dlouhomilov ( Lomigsdorf ) and the local situation Medelské (three yards ).

Attractions

  • Castle ruins Brníčko, southwest of the village
  • Church of All Saints, the single-nave building was constructed 1767-1770 in place of an earlier building and was extended in 1832
  • Stone Cross from 1779
  • Statue of St. John of Nepomuk, created in 1839
  • Former Erbgericht
  • Several farmsteads in folk architecture
  • Bell tower in Benkov built in the 19th century
  • Pilgrimage chapel of St.. Florian in a grove at the Skalka above Medelské

Sons and daughters of the town

  • Jaroslav Kauer (1919-1944), Czechoslovak airmen, he was killed in aerial combat over England
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