Rantířov

Rantířov ( German Fußdorf ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located six kilometers northwest of the city center of Jihlava and belongs to Okres Jihlava.

Geography

Rantířov located in the Bohemian- Moravian Highlands, on the right bank of the Jihlava in a flow loop. The Moravian village lies on the Jihlava formed by the historic border with Bohemia. To the south, the Blanka ( Vogelsberg, 603 m) and Pekelský raise vrch (Wolf Pit Mountain, 579 m), to the east of the U svatého Antonína ( Antoni mountain, 629 m). Through the town, the railway Veseli nad Lužnicí - Jihlava runs.

Neighboring towns are Vyskytná nad Jihlavou in the north, Plandry in the northeast, Staré Hory in the east, Horni Kosov and Hosov the southeast, Vysoká in the south, Pekelský Mlýn and Dvorce the southwest, Rounek in the West sowue Nový Rounek in the northwest.

History

The first written mention of the village dates from the foot 1359. Situated on a ford through the hedgehog settlement was in Altenberg silver mining district. Fußdorf was gepfarrt to Jihlava city church of St. Jakob. 1576 the site was designated as Fueßdorf or Ranczirzov. The Czech name is derived from a knightly family Ranožír, which belonged to the ancestors of the Lords of Praschma and 1225-1238 was detectable. Fußdorf originated as peasant settlement and quickly turned into a mountain village, whose estate included Iglauer citizens. At the end of the 14th century, the family possessed Pilgramer the entire village. As of 1373, the brothers Jacob and Johann Pilgramer hereditary judge of Fußdorf, who were among the wealthiest citizens of the city were. Margaret Pilgramer, which was since 1488 owner of Fußdorf, left in 1495 their revenue from the village of the Jihlava Dominicans and the village to the Council to Jihlava. The Jihlava Council held jointly with the Tuchmacherzunft and the Dominican monastery a long water dispute with Jaroslav Trček of Lipa, the owner of the Bohemian side. This was in 1576 settled by a convened by Emperor Maximilian Commission. In 1623 the city lost Jihlava as punishment for their part in the uprising goods in Fußdorf. The confiscated property was the Dominican monastery. After its cancellation Fußdorf was managed from 1783 by the religious fund. This leased the property in 1798 to Frederick and Marie Eleonore Goldlin they acquired commercially in 1800. Seven years later, the Jihlava Erbpostmeister Georg Prokop of Lilienthal acquired the village. For Good Fußdorf included a brewery, distillery, starch factory and a castle-like residence including 311 ha of land. Fußdorf was mostly populated by Germans and was part of the Jihlava linguistic island. 1842 was the site of 34 houses and 364 inhabitants had.

After the abolition of patrimonial Fusdorf formed in 1850 a district of the municipality in the district of Jihlava Hossau. After the Second World War, the German population was expelled. The owners of the domain František Šašek, which had already been expropriated by the Nazis in 1939, lost his possession again in 1948 by the communists. In 1948 the church was built in Rantířov Okres Jihlava - okolí. In 1989, the annexation to Jihlava, which existed until 1990. 1991 Vladimír Šašek received the goods back in restitution.

Local structure

For the community Rantířov no districts are reported. To Rantířov include the settlements Damle, also TAML ( Damling ) and Pekelský Mlýn.

Attractions

  • Zaječí skok ( Hasensprung ), rock formation and nature reserve at the Jihlava, northeast of the village
  • Statue of St. John of Nepomuk
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