Slezské Rudoltice
Slezské Rudoltice | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates: 50°12′19″N 17°41′20″E / 50.20528°N 17.68889°E | |
Country | Czech Republic |
Region | Moravian-Silesian Region |
District | Bruntál District |
Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
Slezské Rudoltice (Template:Lang-de) is a village in Bruntál District, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic. Slezské Rudoltice municipality is situated where the Jindřichov upland meets Osoblaha plains. There is the narrow-gauge railway running through the village having three stops within the municipality borders – in Amalín, Slezské Rudoltice and Koberno. The first mention of the village is from 1255 as in 1676 it was promoted to a town. Currently it has a population of 633.
The dominant feature of the town is a chateau with unbelievable full history. A renaissance chateau was built in the middle of the 16th century on the place of a former fortress during the reign of Sup family of Fulštejn. In 1630 the chateau belonged to George of Hodice and during the reign of Albert of Hodice (born in 1706) the chateau experienced the most famous moments. Albert from Hodice loved luxury and he fitted up his chateau and also the park accordingly. During his reign the Rudoltice chateau became the cultural centre of Silesia and got known all over the Europe. In this time there were Karl Hanke and Karl Ditters from Dittersdorf playing in the chateau band. The chateau was visited by famous French philosopher Voltaire, the Prussian king Frederick II and the Austrian emperor Joseph II. After the death of the Hodice family the chateau fame came to an end – decorations were stolen or sold. After World War II the chateau belonged to the state and since 2008 it has belonged to the municipality which opened it to public.
The neo-roman Church of St. Catherine situated in Slezské Rudoltice where the remains of the Hodice family (inc. Albert of Hodice) are kept is also worth a visit. The Statue of the Virgin Mary from the Hodice era stands on the local square.
Very attractive and mysterious place is the abandoned village of Pelřimovy situated just on the Czech-Polish border. The village is the testimony of what damage may inflict strong nationalist relations. First of all in 1742 after the war between Austria and Prussia the village was divided into the Prussian and Austrian territory along the river Trója. After German population departure due to mutual distrust between communist Czechoslovakia and Poland there were almost all the houses on the Czech side of the village razed except two and originally gothic Church of St. George with a cemetery around it. In the Polish part of village, it is possible to visit a chateau accessible by a bridge over the stream Trója by the chateau chapel.
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