Hranice (Přerov District)
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Hranice (Script error: No such module "IPA".; Template:Langx) is a town in Přerov District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 18,000 inhabitants. The historic town centre is well preserved and is protected as an urban monument zone. The town is known for the Hranice Abyss, the deepest flooded pit cave in the world.
Administrative division
Hranice consists of nine municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):[1]
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- Hranice I-Město (14,836)
- Hranice II-Lhotka (91)
- Hranice III-Velká (443)
- Hranice IV-Drahotuše (1,514)
- Hranice V-Rybáře (25)
- Hranice VI-Valšovice (135)
- Hranice VII-Slavíč (298)
- Hranice VIII-Středolesí (71)
- Hranice IX-Uhřínov (56)
Středolesí and Uhřínov form an exclave of the municipal territory.
Etymology
The name Hranice literally means "border". It is sometimes called Hranice na Moravě ("Hranice in Moravia") to distinguish from other places with the same name.
Geography
Hranice is located about Script error: No such module "convert". northeast of Přerov and Script error: No such module "convert". east of Olomouc. It lies mostly in the Moravian Gate lowland. The exclave of the municipal territory lies already in the Nízký Jeseník mountain range and contains the highest point of Hranice, which is the hill Studená at Script error: No such module "convert". above sea level. The Bečva River flows through the town.
The deepest pit cave in the Czech Republic, Hranice Abyss with a length of Script error: No such module "convert"., is located by the town. With a water depth of Script error: No such module "convert"., it is also the deepest flooded abyss in the world.[2]
History
The first written mention of Hranice is in a falsificated document from 1169. According to the trusted sources, Hranice already existed at the end of the 12th century. In 1276, Hranice became a town. From the 1420s, the town became a property of the Cimburk family, and from 1499 a property of the Pernštejn family. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the estate often changed owners.[3]
Until 1918, Hranice was part of Austria-Hungary in the district with the same name, one of the 34 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Moravia.[4]
In the days of Austria-Hungary,[5] in the interbellum Czechoslovakia,[6] and during the communist era[7] the city hosted a large military academy. Notable graduates include Archduke Wilhelm of Austria and Herman Potočnik.[5]
Jewish population
The first Jews came in 1611, receiving in 1637 the right for a self-governed Jewish quarter, where a maximum of 120 Jewish families were permitted to reside. Besides those 17 houses, located around the present Janáčkova street (renamed from Židovská street), they were not allowed to purchase houses elsewhere. In 1728, 115 families resided in the Jewish quarter and in 1789 the community had reached the maximum of 120 families. The community reached its peak of 802 people in 1857 (13% of the entire town).[8] They had a significant role in the development of Hranice's industry: a textile plant established in 1844 (the largest factory until the mid-20th century), and distilleries (1827, 1836).[9]
Demographics
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Economy
The largest employer in the town is SSI Schäfer, manufacturer of metal structures with more than 1,000 employees. Other notable employers with more than 500 employees are Henniges Hranice (manufacturer of rubber products for automotive industry), KROK CZ (manufacturer of work clothes), and Hranice Hospital.[10]
In 1883, Antonín Kunz founded a company in Hranice that specialized in the production of windpumps and other pumps. The company became the largest factory for water pumps in Austria-Hungary. At the end of the 19th century, it also produced complete communal water systems that were in towns and cities in the whole Austria-Hungary. The Sigma Pumps company developed out of Kunz's company.[11]
Transport
The D1 motorway leading from Přerov to Ostrava bypasses the town in the north.
Hranice is a railway hub. The town is located on the railway lines Prague–Vsetín, continuing further to Slovakia and Hungary, and Brno–Bohumín, continuing further to Poland. The town is served by the stations Hranice na Moravě, Hranice na Moravě město and Drahotuše. In the municipal territory is also located the station Teplice nad Bečvou, which serves this neighbouring municipality of Teplice nad Bečvou.[12]
Sights
Since 1992, the historic town centre is protected as an urban monument zone.[3] The church of the Beheading of Saint John the Baptist is the landmark of the town square. The construction was finished in 1763. It is a massive Baroque-Neoclassical building with valuable decorations of the interior. The second significant building on the square is the old town hall. It served its purpose until 1998, when the offices moved to the premises of the castle. Today it serves as a library, a museum, and a concert hall.[13]
The Hranice Castle was formerly a Gothic castle of Cimburk lords. In 16th–17th centuries it was rebuilt in the Renaissance style.[3] Today it serves as the town hall, museum and gallery.[13][14]
The Jewish community is commemorated by several monuments. The original small synagogue was replaced in 1863 by new larger building in Moorish-Byzantine style. It is used for cultural purposes.[9] The Jewish cemetery was used until 1965. The oldest preserved tombstone is from 1685.[15]
The most valuable technical monument are the Hranice Viaducts. The three viaducts are Script error: No such module "convert". long. The oldest one was built in 1844–1846.[13]
Notable people
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- Daniel Strejc-Vetterus (1592–1669), priest of the Unity of the Brethren
- Aaron Chorin (1766–1844), Hungarian rabbi
- Baruch Placzek (1834–1922), rabbi and author
- Isidore Singer (1859–1939), author and editor
- Norbert Falk (1872–1932), Austrian journalist and screenwriter
- Franz Petrak (1886–1973), Austrian-Czech mycologist
- Albert Kutal (1904–1976), historian
- Helmut Otto Hofer (1912–1989), Austrian anatomist and zoologist
- Jiří Brdečka (1917–1982), writer
- Ivan Sviták (1925–1994), philosopher and poet
- Dalibor Janda (born 1962), singer
- Aleš Opata (born 1964), military leader
Twin towns – sister cities
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- Template:Flagicon Hlohovec, Slovakia
- Template:Flagicon Konstancin-Jeziorna, Poland
- Template:Flagicon Leidschendam-Voorburg, Netherlands
- Template:Flagicon Slovenske Konjice, Slovenia
See also
- The Confusions of Young Törless, a novel based on experience in the Hranice military academy
References
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- ↑ Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den österreichischen Postwertzeichen-Ausgaben 1867, 1883 und 1890, Wilhelm Klein, 1967
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