Zgornja Kapla

Zgornja Kapla
Zgornja Kapla

Location in Slovenia

Coordinates: 46°37′47.49″N 15°21′37.2″E / 46.6298583°N 15.360333°E / 46.6298583; 15.360333Coordinates: 46°37′47.49″N 15°21′37.2″E / 46.6298583°N 15.360333°E / 46.6298583; 15.360333
Country Slovenia
Traditional region Styria
Statistical region Carinthia
Municipality Podvelka
Area
  Total 13.87 km2 (5.36 sq mi)
Elevation 828.5 m (2,718.2 ft)
Population (2002)
  Total 200
[1]

Zgornja Kapla (pronounced [ˈzɡoːrnja ˈkaːpla]) is a dispersed settlement in the hills north of the Drava River in the Municipality of Podvelka in Slovenia, on the border with Austria.[2]

Name

The name Zgornja Kapla literally means 'upper Kapla', distinguishing the settlement from neighboring Spodnja Kapla (literally, 'lower Kapla'). Like other settlements named Kapla (e.g., Kapla in the Municipality of Tabor) and similar names (e.g., Kaplja vas, Kapljišče, and Železna Kapla in Austria), the name is derived from the Slovene common noun *kapla 'chapel' (< *kapela < MHG and OHG kappella < Latin cappella 'chapel'), referring to a local religious structure.[3]

Mass graves

Zgornja Kapla is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves associated with the Second World War. All of the victims were murdered in May 1945 by the Jože Lacko Detachment of the Partisan forces. The Zgornji Pavlič Mass Grave (Slovene: Grobišče Zgornji Pavlič) is located in the woods about 100 m south of the Zgornji Pavlič farm (at Zgornja Kapla no. 16). It contains the remains of about 45 Hungarian civilians.[4] The Pušnik Chapel-Shrine Grave (Grobišče pri Pušnikovi kapeli) is located about 150 m northeast of the Kure farm (Zgornja Kapla no. 65). It contains the remains of a Slovene that was murdered because he had been mobilized into the German military.[5] The Sršen 3 Grave (Grobišče Sršen 3) lies on the edge of a woods about 130 m below the abandoned farm at Zgornja Kapla no. 57 and 200 m east of the Stojan farm. It contains the remains of a person murdered on suspicion of being an informant.[6]

Church

The parish church in the settlement is dedicated to Saint Catherine and belongs to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Maribor. It is first mentioned in written documents dating to 1389. The current building dates to after 1813, when the old church burned down.[7]

References

External links


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