Jezersko, Slovenia
| Jezersko Občina Jezersko |
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| — Town and Municipality — | |
| Location of the Municipality of Jezersko in Slovenia | |
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| Coordinates: 46°23′34″N 14°29′51″E / 46.39278°N 14.4975°ECoordinates: 46°23′34″N 14°29′51″E / 46.39278°N 14.4975°E | |
| Country | |
| Government | |
| • Mayor | Milan Kocjan |
| Area | |
| • Total | 68.8 km2 (26.6 sq mi) |
| Population (2002)[1] | |
| • Total | 638 |
| • Density | 9.3/km2 (24/sq mi) |
| Time zone | CET (UTC+01) |
| • Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+02) |
Jezersko (German: Seeland) is a municipality in northern Slovenia. Until 1919, it was part of Carinthia, administratively linked to Bad Eisenkapel; however, the residents did not consider themselves the "true" Carinthians.[2] Since 1995, Jezersko was part of the Municipality of Preddvor and became an independent municipality in 1998.[3] Since 2005, it has been part of the Upper Carniola statistical region.
Jezersko is located in the remote Kokra Valley in the Kamnik–Savinja Alps, close to the Seebergsattel pass and the border with Austria. The main activities that locals engage in are tourism, cattle breeding, and forestry.
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[edit] History
The name of the area derives from a glacial lake near the settlement of Zgornje Jezersko that started to disappear after an earthquake in 1348. However, it was still described by Johann Weikhard von Valvasor in 1689 as a large lake.[3] It gave the are its German name Seeland (literally "lake land", first recorded as Seelant in 1496), and its Slovene equivalent Jezersko, which came into use at the end of the 19th century. A document from 1391 mentions the church of "St. Oswald by the Lake" (Sv. Ožbolt pri Jezeru).
The village was part of the Duchy of Carinthia until 1918. It was the only settlement already ceded by the Carinthian Landtag assembly to the newly established State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, before it was officially adjudicated together with the Meža Valley and Dravograd to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes by the 1919 Treaty of Saint-Germain.
[edit] Tourism
Jezersko has a long tourist tradition. There is a 3-star hotel in Jezersko[4] as well as private accommodation in self-catering units at vacation farms.[5] The location of the village offers exceptional views of the surrounding mountains, and it is a starting point for mountain hiking routes to Grintovec, Kočna, and Veliki Vrh. The Ledine and Češka koča mountain huts are well known to mountain hikers.[6]
Lake Planšar (Sln. Planšarsko jezero) in Zgornje Jezersko is an artificial lake created after World War II.
A sheep festival called the Ovčji bal is held annually in mid-August.
In winter skiing is also possible.
[edit] Agriculture
Cattle breeding is extensive in Jezersko, both by private farms and larger corporations. Jezersko is also the place of the origin of the breed of sheep known as the Brillenschaf.
[edit] References
- ^ Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia, census of 2002
- ^ Kačičnik Gabrič, Alenka (2009). (in Slovene, with an abstract in English)Kronika (Zveza zgodovinskih društev Slovenije [Union of Historical Societies of Slovenia]) 57 (1): 29–46. ISSN 0023-4923. http://www.sistory.si/publikacije/prenos/?urn=SISTORY:ID:4084#page=33.
- ^ a b Alpe Adria Vita, d. o. o. (July 2009). "Priloga št. 1 k Strategiji razvoja in trženja sonaravnega turizma na Gorenjskem 2010 - 2015 [Annex No. 1 to the Strategy of the Development and Marketing of the Natural Tourism in the Upper Carniola 2010–2015]" (in Slovene). p. 128–129. http://www.bsc-kranj.si/resources/files/doc/SONARAVNI/Priloga_st_1_k_Aktivnosti_1a_-_Celotna_analiza_stanja_2.pdf.
- ^ Hotel Planika Jezersko
- ^ Makek vacation farm site
- ^ Slovenian Tourist Board
[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Jezersko municipality |
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