Prosenjakovci

Prosenjakovci (Hungarian Pártosfalva ) is a settlement in the municipality Moravske Toplice in Slovenia.

Geography

The village Prosenjakovci with its 178 inhabitants ( 2011), occupies the northeastern part of the community. She touches her district in the east of the border with Hungary and is bordered to the north by the neighboring towns Berkovci and Središče, on the west by Selo and in the south Pordašinci and Čikečka vas. The entire local area belongs to the Three Countries Park Raab Goričko Őrség.

The settlement (228 m oa ) is located in the wide valley of the brook Ratkovski (Hungarian Karkócz patak ). The houses of the village are grouped mainly around the intersection, No. 724, Kobilje - Križevci and No. 725, Martjanci - Prosenjakovci - border crossing - Magyarszombatfa in Hungary.

The village hall covers an area of ​​667 ha and has extended to the east and north, mushroom- rich forest areas. The agricultural soils are intensively farmed. On larger fields of wheat and corn are grown mainly on small, mainly potatoes, buckwheat, pumpkins for his own use and forage crops. On sunny locations vineyards and orchards is operated. Above the Kobiljski creek, on the south slope of the hill Notranje gorice, with 290 m oa one of the highest elevations in the district, a number of larger vineyards are created.

History

As " Proznyafalua " the village was first mentioned in 1448, at that time it belonged to the manorial Felsőlendva ( Oberlimbach, today degrees). For the year 1452 the place name Poroznyakfalwa has survived and in 1500 a Ortsadeliger is mentioned: " Georgio Proznyak de Proznyakffalwa ". In a church visitation in 1698 by the Archdeacon Stefan Kazo, for the Diocese of Raab / Győr, 25 Protestant subjects were counted in " Prosznyákfa ", all of which were after the parish of St. Nicholas in Lak ( today Selo ).

In 1890 the village was officially Pártosfalva and had 393 inhabitants: 340 Hungary, 44 Slovenes, 8 German and another ethnic group. The place belonged to the Hungarian throne District Muraszombat (now Murska Sobota ) the Eisenburger County. At the last Hungarian census in 1910, the settlement with 438 inhabitants reached its population peak: 380 Hungary, 48 Slovenes and 10 German.

The Treaty of Trianon struck the village to the Kingdom of SHS. For the city is now officially called Prosenjakovci following data were collected at the first Yugoslav census on 31 January 1921 determined: 298 Hungary, 117 Slovenians, 13 German and 7 other ethnicities; of these 435 residents known to 127 and 308 to the Catholic to the Protestant faith.

Worth seeing

In a park-like forest, 400 m southeast of the village, stands the ruinous castle Matzenau.

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