Kramarovci

Kramarovci ( German Sinnersdorf, Hungarian Határfalva ) is a village and a municipality located in the hilly and Rogašovci Goricko in the historical region of Prekmurje in Slovenia.

Geography

Once inhabited by a predominantly German-speaking population settlement in 2002 was only about 60 inhabitants. The village (280 m ) with its local hall the mouth of the creek in the Guizenhofer-Baches/Ocinjski Kutschenitza / Kučnica stream and the subsequent lowlands. The Grenzbach Kutschenitza one of the oldest national borders in Europe and today separates the Slovenian Prekmurje of the Austrian state of Styria.

The Mischwaldungen in the south of the local district extending to join neighboring village Füchselsdorf / Fikšinci and extend across the border to Rosenberg and hazel German village in the district of Bad Radkersburg.

The white hills / Beli Breg, with its vineyards and extending to the south ridge above the neighboring settlements Nuskova and Rogašovci round off the village district. The homes on the mountain villages Sinner / Kramarovci Breg other hand, are expected to already Füchselsdorf / Fikšinci.

Kramarovci is easiest on the main road No. 349, Cankova - Kuzma, accessible. The border crossing Kramarovci - Sankt Anna am Aigen was once, before the Schengen Agreement, used mainly by the border region inhabiting population.

History

The place was first mentioned in 1366 in records: "villa seu possessio Kramarfalua ". In the same year, the Kutschenitza -Bach is mentioned " riuulum Olsinch ". For 1499 the village name " Synesdorf " is documented and for 1627 in the Church of Visitation description for the parish of Saint Helena ( Sv Jelena, Pertoča ) noted that the parish system and the place Sinnersdorf inclusive. The parish was then supplied by the evangelical pastor Gregory Gerber from the Saxon Lichtenstein at Meissen.

The land register created at the initiative of the Hungarian magnate Batthyány family in 1697, the dominion Neuhaus / Dobra found the place " Sinistorff " to the estate of the rule belonging. The subjects also mentioned wore even then mainly German surname. In a visitation protocol of the Diocese of Gyor / Raab place names Sinnisdorf and Sinisdorff are for the year 1698 documented, is also noted that the settlement of the parish of Saint Helena was assigned and a sizable chunk of the population, under the pressure of the Counter-Reformation, already back to the Catholic had regained faith.

A study conducted in 1720 the population survey for the Eisenburger county in which the poorer inhabitants were ignored, recorded six taxable families for Sinnersdorf.

The new land register, which was created in 1751 for the Batthyánysche Dominium Neuhaus / Dobra, records the almost closed in possession of 7 dishes and 24 villages south of Raab and leads that belong to the ruling families by name. Thus Sinnersdorf belonged to the basic rule Neuhaus and had 15 humble families.

In 1890, the village is officially designated Határfalva and had 237 inhabitants, of whom 231 declared themselves as German and 6 as Slovenes. The place was in the district Muraszombat ( Slow Murska Sobota ) in the Hungarian county Vas / iron castle. In the census of 1910 the town was officially named Kramarovci, he had 258 inhabitants, namely: 225 German, 5 and 28 Slovenians Hungary.

The Treaty of Trianon hit the village on 4 June 1920, without the population was surveyed, the Kingdom of SHS to. For the city is now officially called 1921 Kramarovci following data were collected at the first Yugoslav census on 31 January found: 253 inhabitants, 248 German and 5 Slovenes, of these 253 residents, all known to the Catholic faith.

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