Vrbno (Hořín)

Vrbno u Mělníka
Village
Country  Czech Republic
Region Central Bohemian Region
District Mělník District
Municipality Hořín
Elevation 528 ft (161 m)
Population (2001)
  Total 98
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)

Vrbno is a village, part of the municipality of Hořín in the district of Mělník in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic, located approximately 2.5 km southwest of Hořín. The village lies in the left bank of the Vltava. There are 81 registered addresses and 98 permanent residents.[1]

History

Vrbno was founded probably in the 11th or 12th century in the area inhabited since the 5th millennium before Christ. Mentioned for the first time in 1241 it was the possession of the Queens of Bohemia who owned the castle of Mělník. Then in the 14th century it was enlarged by Queen Elisabeth of Bohemia, the wife of John of Bohemia, and divided between the Queen’s dominion of Mělník and the local noble family which sold its possession to the Knights of the Cross of the Red Star.[2] This division remained unchanged till the Revolution of 1848, and then Vrbno became a municipality with three cadastral areas. In 1932 there lived 496 permanent residents. Because of the decreasing number of inhabitants, it was united with adjacent municipalities of Hořín and Brozánky in 1960. During the European floods in 2002 the whole village was flooded, many buildings seriously damaged, the third part of addresses destroyed. Nevertheless the centre of Vrbno was put on the list of the Village Monuments Areas in 2004.[3] For its untouched picturesque atmosphere Vrbno became a place where many movies were taken, e.g. about Jules Maigret and Les Misérables.

Monuments

References

  1. For the number of addresses see the database of the Ministry of the Interior of the Czech Republic  11 September  2011, For the number of permanent residents, see the database of the Czech Statistical Office 2001
  2. Čepelák, Jiří (2004–2007). "Vrbno u Mělníka do poloviny 17. století" [Vrbno till the middle of the 17th century]. Středočeský sborník historický (Central Bohemian Historical Review) (in Czech, Latin, and German). 30-33: 3–43. ISSN 0585-4172.
  3. Národní památkový ústav ČR (Czech National Institute for Monuments's Preserve)- Monumnet, in Czech

Coordinates: 50°19′N 14°27′E / 50.317°N 14.450°E / 50.317; 14.450

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