Horosedly

Horosedly ( German Horosedl, formerly Horosedlo ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located one mile southeast of Mirovice and belongs to Okres Pisek.

Geography

Nerestce is located on the left bank of the Skalice ( Miro witzer Bach) in the Central Bohemian hills. To the north rises the Haj (516 m), in the south of Hradec ( 477 m) and the Jezvinec ( 545 m). On the northern outskirts of the village, the state highway runs between I/19 Milevsko and Březnice one mile east the I / 4 between Prague and Strakonice. South leads the railway line Protivín - Zdice past the village, the nearest train station is Mirovice.

Neighboring towns are Boješice and Touškov in the north, Zalužany and serkov in the northeast, Lety and Pod Homolí in the east, Pazderna, Králova Lhota, Lažiště and Nový Dvůr the southeast, Dolni Nerestce, Horni Nerestce and Nad Řištinami in the south, U Vršeckého, Kakovice, Slavkovice and Mišovice the southwest, Kuchařův Mlýn, Sochovice and Zámostí in the west and vice Miro and Myslín in the northwest.

History

The first mention of Horusedly was in 1234 when the Bishop of Prague, John II of Dražice the village acquired by the Premonstratensian Monastery Mühlhausen. The owners of the domain changed often. In 1584 the Vladike Christoph Laubsky of Lub acquired ( Loubský z Lub ) Horusedly and had built a fortress. At the beginning of the 18th century, it was Johann Franz von Talmberg, 1713 Johann Josef Bieschin was Bieschin owner of the goods with the Horusedly Lehnhof Tauschkow and had rebuilt the fortress into a baroque palace. He sold the estate to the registrar of the royal Landtafel, Johann Josef von Meyern. From Meyern indebted to; on January 7, 1789 acquired Johann Nepomuk zu Schwarzenberg from the estate of a public auction and beat it to its Fideikommissherrschaft Worlik.

In 1837 the estate comprised exclusively Horosedlo the village of the same name. This consisted of 51 houses with 234 inhabitants, including two Israelite families. In the village there was a grand castle with the closed chapel of St.. John of Nepomuk, an estate, a sheep, a distillery, a mill and a Pottaschensiederei. Vicarage Miro joke .. Until the mid-19th century the estate Horosedlo formed part of the Fideikommissherrschaft Worlik including the Allodialgütern Zalužan, Zbenitz and Bukowan.

After the abolition of patrimonial Horosedly formed in 1850 in the municipality of Pisek District Commission and the Court of District Vice Miro. Between 1874 and 1876 the railway line Protivín - Zdice arose. On April 1, 1976 Nerestce was incorporated. On 1 January 1983, the annexation was made by Vice Miro. Since the beginning of 1992 Horosedly again forms a separate municipality.

Community structure

For the community Horosedly no districts are reported.

Personalities

  • Bedřich Šupčík (1898-1957), the turn Olympic champion from 1924 in 1924 married Marie Ledinská from Horosedly. After suffering a heart attack in 1948, the family moved from Prague in a quiet location Horosedly. After a little later following second infarction Šupčík could no longer exercise his travels as a Brandschutzeperte and fire extinguishers representatives and was invalids. Support from the State Committee for Physical Culture and Sports Šupčík was denied because of his membership in Sokol, so he took a job as an insurance agent for the improvement of his disability pension. After his third heart attack Šupčík died in hospital of Pisek. His last resting place he found on the Urnenhain to the New Cemetery in Mirovice.

Attractions

  • Castle Horosedly, the simple single-storey baroque building was built after 1713 for Johann Josef Bieschin to Bieschin Renaissance festivals. It forms the southwestern corner of the farmyard. In the course of the land reform of 1924 Frantisek Masek earned the courtyard with the Castle of the Schwarzenberg family. The area has since been owned by the Masek family
  • Chapel of St. John of Nepomuk, built in 1711 in the firmament for Johann Franz von Talmberg
  • Niche chapel of Sts. Cyril and Methodius in the village square
  • Statue of St. John of Nepomuk
  • Memorial to the fallen of World War I in the village square
  • Homesteads in folk architecture
  • Several roadside crosses
  • Natural Monument Nerestský lom, a former limestone quarry southeast of the village
  • Memorial plaque to Bedřich Šupčík at the municipal office, it was unveiled in 2003
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