Bratrušov

Bratrušov ( German Brattersdorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located five kilometers north of Šumperk and belongs to Okres Šumperk.

Geography

Bratrušov extends along the Bratrušovský brook in a valley in the mountain villages Hanns country. To the north rises the Smrk ( Ficht mountain, 742 m), in the northeast of Ořešník (702 m ) east of the Městské rocks ( 689 m) and west of the Lovak (606 m), Vašková hora (626 m) and the Chmelná ( hops mountain, 570 m ) and northwest of the Čapí vrch (Stork mountain, 646 m) and Ptačí vrch (622 m). Also in the northwest, above the valley of March the remains of the castle Nový hrad.

Neighboring towns are Lužná and Kopřivná in the north, and Osikov Rejchartice in the northeast, Rapotín in the east, Olomouc in the southeast, Temenice in the south, Hostice the southwest, Bohdíkov in the west and Raškov and Dvůr Raškov in the northwest.

History

The first written mention of the village was carried out in 1371 in the will of Margrave Johann Heinrich, who along with other villages attributed the place his son Prokop. Named is the place for a locator Bratruš. It is believed that the village was a Slavic settlement, which was expanded in the wake of German colonization in the 13th and 14th centuries to form an elongated Waldhufendorf. 1603 a Protestant church was consecrated, which was handed over to the Catholics in the recatholicization. 1784 was the collection of the parish church. In 1834 lived 809 people in 140 houses of Brattersdorf. The place was a purely agricultural village and there was a water mill.

After the abolition of patrimonial Brattersdorf / Bratrošov formed in 1850 a municipality in the district of Moravian Schönberg. In 1900 Brattersdorf had grown to 149 houses and had 1016 inhabitants, of whom 1014 belonged to the German ethnic group. 1930 lived in the village of 980 people, including 88 Czechs. As a result of the Munich Agreement in 1938 the community was annexed by the German Reich and belonged until 1945 to the district Moravian Schönberg. 1939 Brattersdorf 893 inhabitants. Between 1945 and 1948 onwards, the expulsion of the German inhabitants and the resettlement of Czechs. 1960 Osikov was incorporated. Between 1980 and 1990 the village was a suburb of Šumperk. Since 1990, the community is again and since 2004, she leads a coat of arms and banners.

Community structure

The municipality consists of the villages Bratrušov Bratrušov ( Brattersdorf ) and Osikov ( Aspen Village ).

Attractions

  • Church of All Saints, the Frührenaissancebau from 1603 in 1833 expanded to include an entrance hall in Empire style.
  • Chapel in Osikov

Pictures of Bratrušov

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