Trenčianske Stankovce

Trenčianské Stankovce is a municipality in Okres Trenčín Trenčín Region in the northwest of Slovakia. On December 31, 2010, the number of inhabitants amounted to 3,157 persons.

Geography

The municipality is located in Považské podolie ( Považie landscape ) on the left bank of the creek Waag Selecký creek, under the Považský Inovec, which rises to the south and southeast of the community. Trenčianské Stankovce located 10 kilometers south of the regional capital Trenčín along Route 507, off the main road 50

The municipality is divided into four parts of municipalities that make up today's community since 1972: Male Stankovce, Rozvadze, Sedličná and Veľké Stankovce.

History

The current municipal area is an old settlement site, such as in the district Dlhé a Krátke Hradištia which is not yet fully investigated.

The villages were in the Middle Ages as follows for the first time mentioned:

At the beginning of the 15th century, so far some place Stankovce divided into two parts: so 1410 is 1439 mentioned as Noghstankouecz the district Malé Stankovce as Parva Stank and district Veľké Stankovce.

The assignment of the individual districts is very diverse. Malé Stankovce after the division continues to possession of Stankov family, whose name is derived from the Slavic Stanislav and after its extinction to further lower nobleman families. Veľké Stankovce came, however, the manor of Trenschiner castle and since the late 16th century to the end of feudalism, the Grange in the neighboring Veľké Bierovce. The district Rozvadze was initially a property of the Earl of Bösing, then it came to local families, the end of the 16th century to the Trenčín castle, later under the administration of the Grange in Veľké Bierovce until 1746, as a Grange in the village was founded. Only the district Sedličná belonged all along the lower nobles.

In all the villages the main occupation of the inhabitants was agriculture and fishing, in addition also in smaller dimensions forestry and crafts.

Until 1918, were all places in the county to the Trenčín Kingdom of Hungary, after they came to the newly created Czechoslovakia, and now Slovakia. In 1972 the merger in the church today.

People

  • Ján Lipský (1766-1826), Slovak cartographer

Culture

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