Kolárovice

Kolárovice (Hungarian Kolaróc - to 1907 Kollárovic ) is a municipality in the north- west of Slovakia with 1814 inhabitants ( 31 December 2011), which belongs to Okres Bytča, a part of the Žilinský.

Geography

The municipality is located in Javorník Mountains in the valley of the brook Kolárovický creek. The 27.54 km ² large municipality in the southern part is hilly, mountainous in the northern part, where it rises to the main ridge of the Javorník Mountains. There are mainly brown soils and forests are scattered throughout the municipality. The center is located at an altitude of 390 m nm and is six kilometers from Bytča and 24 km from Zilina away.

Administratively divided the community into seven parts of municipalities, these are Babiše, Bršlica, Čiakov, Kolárovice, Korytné, Slopkov and Škoruby.

History

The town was first mentioned in 1312 as Henrici villa in writing, called after the name of the first judge who Henrich. The village originally belonged to the manor of Castle Hričov, and later to those of Bytča. 1784 were counted 439 houses and 2,020 inhabitants, in 1828 436 houses and 2,065 inhabitants. Main sources of income were tinkers, forestry and work in a saw.

Until 1918, belonged to the county located in the Trenčín place the Kingdom of Hungary and was then Czechoslovakia or Slovakia today. To date, the village has preserved its numerous individual settlements.

Population

According to the 2011 census lived in Kolárovice 1,826 inhabitants, of whom 1,807 Slovaks, Czechs and three poles. 15 inhabitants did not respond. 1,707 residents pleaded with the Roman Catholic Church, ten residents of the Seventh- day Adventist Church, seven inhabitants to the Evangelical Church AB, five inhabitants to the Jehovah's Witnesses, four residents to the Reformed Church, three residents to the Orthodox Church and two residents of the Evangelical Methodist Church. 12 inhabitants were of a different denomination. 32 residents were non-denominational and 56 inhabitants, the denomination is not determined.

Results of the census 2001 (1.915 inhabitants):

After Ethnicity:

  • 99.11 % Slovaks
  • 0.26% Czechs
  • 0.10% Poland
  • 0.05 % Roma

After Confession:

  • 95.30 % Roman Catholic
  • 2.04 % no answer
  • 1.57% no religious affiliation
  • 0.31% Evangelical

Structures

  • Roman Catholic Church in the late classical style from the years 1870-73
  • Parsonage in classical style from the first half of the 19th century
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