Radošovice (České Budějovice District)

Radošovice ( German Roschowitz, formerly Radoschowitz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located seven kilometers south-east of Netolice in South Bohemia České Budějovice and belongs to the.

Geography

Radošovice located in the foothills of the Blanský on the edge of Budweiser pool on a gentle hill. South-east of the village lies the pond Dehtář. In the east, the Na Středním rises (441 m ) south of the Zádušní vrch (454 m), in the southwest the Kamenná ( 485 m) and in the Pacific Northwest Na Klínu (451 m).

Neighboring towns are Němčice and Vlhlavy in the north, Malé Chrášťany and Pištín in the northeast, Tupesy and Břehov in the east, Dehtáře and Holubovská Basta in the southeast, Záboří in the south, Strýčice and Chvalovice the southwest, Babice in the west and Zvěřetice and Sedlovice in the northwest.

History

Evidence of an early settlement of the area are a group of four low mounds in Bory Forest - Na Perku at Záboří.

The first written mention of the village belonging to the Fixed Poděhusy Radoschowitz was on 26 May 1334 when King John of Luxembourg, the village eintauschte together with Dehtáře and Žabovřesky for 720 groschen to Peter I. von Rosenberg against the border castle Janovice. Below the village belonged to the possessions of the lords of Rosenberg. Jost von Rosenberg pledged the village along with Dehtáře to Peter Záleský of Prosty. Wok von Rosenberg was in 1484 southeast of the village create the big fish pond Dehtář, with which the village was flooded Hummo. When the plague epidemic of 1520/21, the village was deserted; it was in 1530 repopulated by German settlers from the Swabian Palatinate. In 1840 Roschowitz or Radoschowitz consisted of 34 houses with 256 inhabitants exclusively German. The village was also the easternmost layered bastion Wuhr. Vicarage was Střitzitz. Until the mid- 19th century, the village always the rule Krumlov remained submissive.

After the abolition of patrimonial Roschowitz / Radošovice formed in 1850 a municipality in the district team Budějovice / Budweis. 1914 lived in the town of 236 inhabitants, of which 189 German and 47 Czechs. After the Munich Agreement in 1938, the village was added to the German Reich and belonged until 1945 to the district Cesky Krumlov on the Vltava River. In 1930 lived in Roschowitz 207 people, in 1939 there were 187 After the end of World War II came Radošovice back to Czechoslovakia and became again part of the České Budějovice. The majority of the German population was expelled. In 1950, of Tupesy was the incorporation of Strýčice, ten years later. 1985 amalgamated with Žabovřesky Radošovice, Strýčice and Tupesy. They parted on 24 November 1990 after a referendum to get rid and formed their own community.

Community structure

The municipality consists of the villages Radošovice Radošovice ( Roschowitz ) and Tupesy ( Tupes ).

For Katastralbezirk Radošovice u Českých Budějovic not heard the village Strýčice, however, the district Tupesy.

Attractions

  • Chapel of the Virgin in the village square, built in 1823
  • Plague in the village square, it was originally located next to a barn on the outskirts and was redeveloped and, after 2000. Besides her, there is a memorial stone, reminiscent of the desolation of the place in the years 1530 and 1620-1630.
  • Shrine on the road to Strýčice, built in the mid-19th century
  • Several farms in the South Bohemian folk Baroque in Blata style with ornate stucco facades and eingeschossigem memory
  • Chapel in Tupesy
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