Záboří (České Budějovice District)

Záboří ( German Sabor, formerly Saborsch or Saborz ) is a municipality in the Czech Republic. It is located 16 km northwest of Ceske Budejovice in South Bohemia České Budějovice and belongs to the.

Geography

Záboří is located in a pond landscape at the northeastern edge of the Blanský. The town is crossed by the creek creek Zaborsky. To the northeast are the ponds Dehtář and Posměch, fishpond in southern Kamenný and Roubíček. To the north rises the Zádušní vrch (454 m ) in the east of boron ( 455 m ) southeast of the Velky Bor (472 m) and the Doubí ( 496 m), in the south of Maly vršek ( 480 m), southwest of the Vysoká BETA (803 m ) in the west of Chrášťanský vrch (780 m ) and north-west the Buková hora (650 m) and the Kamenná ( 485 m).

Neighboring towns are Strýčice and Radošovice in the north, Dehtáře and Holubovská Basta in the northeast, Curna, Špicuk, Tesař, Kalouch, Jaronice and Křenovice in the east, Čakov, Borovka, Čakovec and Yankov in the southeast, Holašovice in the south, Lipanovice the southwest, Perglův Mlýn and Dobčice in the west and Dolni Chrášťany, Chvalovice and Babice in the northwest.

History

The first written mention of Zabore took place in 1263, when the knight Budivoj CEC of Železnice sold the village to the monastery Hohenfurth. The pandemic of the plague of 1520/21 had deserted the village. The lords of Rosenberg as patrons of the monastery were the deserted villages belonging to the monastery in the 1530s recolonize with Palatine of Swabia, by a German language island was formed. On February 28, 1822 abbot Isidore Teutschmann succeeded in the separation of the Monastery of the reign of Cesky Krumlov. In 1840 Sabor consisted of 28 houses with 256 inhabitants. The village belonged to the single- Bergmühle. Vicarage was Stritzitz. Until the mid-19th century the village to the pen reign Hohenfurth remained submissive.

After the abolition of patrimonial Saborz formed in 1850 with the districts Stritzitz and Hollschowitz a municipality in the district team Budějovice / Budweis. In 1869 the congregation joined Linden ( Lipanovice ) at the district Dobschitz ( Dobčice ) to Saborz. In 1914, the municipality had Saborz or Sabor / Zabór 803 inhabitants, of whom 792 German and eleven Czechs. In the village lived Saborz 246 German. After the Munich Agreement and the community Sabor Saborsch 1938 was added to the German Reich and belonged until 1945 to the district Cesky Krumlov on the Vltava River. In 1930 lived in the town of 875 people, in 1939 there were 817 After the end of World War II Záboří returned to Czechoslovakia and became again part of the České Budějovice. After 1946, the majority of the German population was expelled, lived in Záboří only three families. The village was repopulated with Czech settlers from the inland. Overall lived after the expulsion in Záboří, Dobčice and Lipanovice only 17 altan sit-down family. In 1950, the Vice My Dung of the district Strýčice after Radošovice was. 1964 Holašovice of Záboří was separated and added to the community Yankov.

Záboří 1995 was declared a conservation area of folk architecture, the districts Dobčice and Lipanovice hold this status since 1990. Feature of the townscape is the typical of the area folk architecture of the South Bohemian peasant Baroque. The center of the village is a village green with a chapel and pond around which the farms and the village smithy still was created.

Community structure

The municipality Záboří the villages Dobčice ( Dobschitz ) and Lipanovice ( Linden ) and the monolayer Perglův Mlýn include ( Bergmühle ).

Attractions

  • Many farms in the South Bohemian folk Baroque gable
  • Built chapel on the village green in 1841
  • Former village smithy
  • Along the creek Zaborsky is an avenue, at the beginning on the Anger 1852 a brick shrine with representation of the sufferings of Christ stands, which was built as a vault above the creek
  • Prehistoric burial in the forest Dřeviny on the road to Lipanovice
  • Chapel on the road to Čakov from 1843
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