Mokrouše

Mokrouše ( German Mokrusch, also Mokrausch ) is a municipality with 168 inhabitants in the Czech Republic. It is located ten kilometers south-east of the city center of Pilsen, Plzeň- město Okres belongs to. The land area is 275 ha

Geography

The place is located on the southern edge of the valley of the creek in Tymákovský 398 m above sea level. M. and is surrounded by hills and forests. In the northwest Mokrouše has grown together with Tymákov. Southeast runs the state road 183 from Rokycany after Šťáhlavy.

Neighboring towns are Rokycany in the northeast, Raková the southeast, Lhůta in the south, Sedlec and Stary Plzenec in the southwest and in the north Tymákov vest.

History

The first written record dates from 1410 when Margrave Jadolt bequeathed the city to the Prague Domkatikel. 1417 bought the place Bohuslav from Swan Hill, together with Cháchov and Tymákov and three years later was named by Bohuslav Riesenberg as the owner.

It was followed by the z Hrádku. 1493 the village was deserted, as Mikuláš and Jan Bochuchval z Hrádku by Vladislav II was allowed the tax assessment of a pond. 1543 was Sebastian Markwart z Hrádku on Nekmíř landlord on Tymákov, Radonicz, Chrachow and Mokrusch, who was the cathedral chapter transfer fee. Sebastian Markwart sold the desert village in 1557 to the city of Rokycany who built a mansion there.

After the end of the Thirty Years' War, the village was resettled in 1654 and lived 26 people in Mokrusch. The southern neighbor Cháchov was without form, and is now in the forest. 1751 mansion in a block house was extended and in 1757 had, which consists of 6 families Mokrusch 36 inhabitants. Until 1780, the number of residents increased to 119 and 1848, there were already 271

With the replacement of patrimonial Mokrouše 1850 was a separate municipality. Until 31 December 2006, the town belonged to Okres Plzeň- jih.

Community structure

For the community Mokrouše no districts are reported.

Attractions

  • Chapel on the village square, built in the second half of the 19th century
  • Homesteads in the Bohemian folk Baroque
  • Historical memory
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