Lampertice

Lampertice ( German Lampersdorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. You more than twelve kilometers north of Trutnov and belongs to Okres Trutnov.

Geography

Lampertice is located three kilometers east of Žacléř between the Raven Mountains and the Rehorngebirge. It is reached via a side street that runs from Bernartice after Žacléř.

Neighboring towns are Královec in the north, and Bernartice BECKOV the southeast, Zlata Olešnice in the south, Křenov ( Krinsdorf ) in the southwest and Žacléř in the West. Across the border to Poland, which is reached via the border crossing Královec - Lubawka, lie to the north and northwest Lubawka Niedamirów and Opawa.

History

Lampersdorf was first mentioned in 1521 as Lampertice. It is believed that the place name derived from a Lampert and the village is much older. For 1538 the spelling Lampersdorf is occupied. It was as a pin Silesian village to the Cistercian monastery Grüssau and was sold by it during the term of office of abbot Grüssau Kaspar Albert (1578-1611) together with three other nearby villages in Bohemia pin Bern village, Königshan and Potschendorf to the rule Schatzlar. Together with the rule Schatzlar came Lampersdorf and the three pin villages already mentioned in 1599 in the reign Trautenau. This sold Lampersdorf and Bern village, Königshan and Potschendorf turn to the monastery Grüssau. Emperor Rudolph II confirmed the purchase contract on the condition that they will continue to remain in Bohemia these village communities. 1617 leased abbot and convent Lampersdorf along with the three already mentioned pin villages at an annual interest rate of 1,000 thalers to Henry Kapler in Liebau. But the inhabitants of these villages would remain with the pin Grüssau. This is probably why Lampersdort and Bern village, Königshan and Potschendorf were confiscated by the rebels in 1619. After the Battle of White Mountain, the former pin villages were in turn handed over to the monastery Grüssau. Under Abbot George II came Berne Village 1622 to Jan Rudolf Trček of Lipa, Owner of the Manor at Schatzlar. Whose goods were confiscated after his death in 1635 by Emperor Leopold I.. The rule Schatzlar, coupled with the Lampersdorf remained, gave the Emperor 1636 the Jesuits of St. Anna in Vienna. As compensation for the four pin Bohemian villages the Emperor granted the pen Grüssau 9,000 floras.

Until 1790, the Lampersdorfer children attended school in Bern village. They were then taught in Lampersdorf, where in 1818 a first school building was erected, which was in 1878 replaced by a new building. Economic importance was from the 1830s, the mining of coal. After the abolition of patrimonial Bern village belonged from 1850 to the Judicial District Schatzlar or to the district Trautenau. As a result of the Munich Agreement in 1938 Lampersdorf annexed to the German Reich and belonged until 1945 to the district Trautenau. After the Second World War, the German inhabitants were expelled.

Community structure

For the Common Lampertice no further districts are reported.

Sons and daughters

  • Horst Siegel ( b. 1934 ), architect and university lecturer
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