Tisá

Tisa ( German Tissa, formerly Tisá ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It lies on the western edge of the Bohemian Switzerland in 548 m height. The place is known especially by the northerly sandstone labyrinth Tisa Walls.

History

The origin of the place was built by the Wartenberger Schenau castle, which was destroyed by the Hussites. Older is the district Rajec that is already detectable in 1186. The first written tradition of Tisá from 1541. A little later the Bünauer founded in the corridors of the former Schenau the place Schönstein. In the period 1554-1557 Günther von Bünau had a palace built in Schönstein to the was a Protestant church, school and a brewery.

During the Thirty Years' War in 1631, Croatian troops Schönstein and Tisá burned down and the same year the Swedes pillaged what was still left of both places. Schönstein was never rebuilt, its corridors came to Tisá. In the middle of the 18th century originated in Tisá several button factories.

Eiland was created in 1706 by the establishment of a glassworks by Maria Adelheid von Thun and was incorporated in 1961. The ten houses of Antonsthal were built since 1873 and belonged until 1970 to Petro Vice. The Rajec lying on the German border belongs since 1850 to Tisá and is now a dying place.

Tisa lives V.A. today on tourism. In the village there is a swimming pool in the brick pond.

Community structure

For Tisa no districts are reported. Basic settlement units are Antonínov ( Antonsthal ) Ostrov ( island ), Rájec ( Raiza ) and Tisa ( Tissa ). To Tisa also includes the monolayer Šenštejn ( Schönstein ).

The municipality is divided into the Katastralbezirke Ostrov u Tise and Tisa.

Population Development

Attractions

  • Tisa Walls ( Tiské stěny ): The Tisa Walls are a labyrinth of rocks with bizarre sandstone formations.
  • Chapel: The end of the 19th century built construction is currently in danger of collapsing.

Sons and daughters of the town

  • Ernst Werner (1920-1993), German historian
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