Dynín

Dynín until 1923 Dinin ( German Dinin ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located nine kilometers north-west of Lomnice nad Lužnicí in South Bohemia České Budějovice and belongs to the.

Geography

Dynín is located in the Trebon Basin in the land Pšeničná Blata. The village lies to the west of the pond Bošilecký fishpond at the mouth of the creek creek creek Neplachovský in the Bošilecký. To the southeast lies the Záblatský fishpond. To the west of the railway line Dynín České Budějovice - Veseli nad Lužnicí runs, behind the e 55/I/3 between České Budějovice and Veseli nad Lužnicí. South of the town there is an airfield.

Neighboring towns are Sedlíkovice, Sviny and Kundratice in the north, Bošilec and Vlkov in the northeast, Basta, Ponědrážka and U Chrtů in the east, Lhota, Ponědraž and Lhotecký Dvůr the southeast, Mazelov in the south, Ševětín, Švamberk and Neplachov the southwest, Radonice in the west and Hradina, Hvozdno, Pelejovice and Dolni Bukovsko in the northwest.

History

The first written mention of Dynyn took place in 1341, when Peter I. von Rosenberg left a part of the village of the Dominican Convent Ústí. Dynyn belongs together with Bošilec and Ponědraž the first possessions of the Rosenbergs in this area, the three villages formed the basis for establishing the rule Bukovsko. In Rosenberger land register of 1379 the village was listed as part of the estate Bukovsko. Later Dynín has been connected to the rule of Trebon. About Dynín led to the Linzerstraße of Ceske Budejovice to Prague an important medieval trade route. In times of war the place was thus affected by troop pull-throughs and looting. During the Thirty Years' War, the village was completely destroyed and burned down. In 1660, the new landlord of the Trebon, Johann Adolf Graf von Schwarzenberg had repopulate the desert village. In 1840 there was Dinin / Dinjn from 36 houses with 326 inhabitants. Vicarage was Boschiletz. Until the mid- 19th century, the village of the rule Wittingau always remained proportionally subservient.

After the abolition of patrimonial Dinin / Dinin formed in 1850 with the district Lhota a municipality in the district team Trebon / Wittingau and the jurisdiction Lomnice nad Lužnicí. Lhota broke up in 1867 going on. 1873 was built west of the village parallel to the railway line Imperial Street České Budějovice - Veseli nad Lužnicí, the station was an abundant kilometers north of the village built on an open field. 1910 lived in the town of 321 Czech -speaking inhabitants. During the 20th century, was at the train station the settlement Hradina. The official Czech village name was changed in 1923 to Dynín. In the same year a school, the building began in the spring has been inaugurated to St. Wenceslas was born in Dynín in an amazingly short construction period. The Fast of the school building was obviously the quality neglected, were in 1927 the wooden floors in the classrooms and hallways was so worn that it had to be renewed. After the abolition of Okres Trebon Dynín in 1948 part of the Okres Soběslav. This was disbanded in 1961 and the village associated with the České Budějovice. On 12 June 1960, the incorporation of Lhota with Záblatí 1.díl, to April 1, 1976 were still Neplachov and Bošilec as districts added. After the closure of the primary school, a spacious two kindergarten was opened in 1982 at the schoolhouse. Due to the withdrawal of children from the other communities in the catchment area was from 1991, only one kindergarten group. The historic center of Mazelov is a rural conservation area since 1990. Neplachov and Bošilec loosened itself after referenda on November 24, 1990 get rid of .. 1991 appropriated the JZD Dynín the schoolhouse the community who tried in vain to revive even the school system next to the kindergarten. In 1997, the City Council adopted the conversion of the school to a restaurant, which opened in 1999.

Community structure

The municipality consists of the villages of Dynín Dynín ( Dinin ) and Lhota as well as the settlements Hradina and Lhotecký Dvůr.

Attractions

  • Neo-baroque chapel of St.. Wenceslas in the town square, built in 1929
  • Homesteads in Blatastil the South Bohemian folk Baroque, built in the 19th century. The oldest building is a 1815 built barn.
  • Old School, built in 1923
  • Chapel on the way to Lhota
  • Chapel in Lhota
  • Hliníř peat bog on the same pond east of the village, nature reserve
  • Peat meadows Lhota u Dynína at Lhota, nature reserve
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