Vítkovice (Ostrava) Explained

Vítkovice
Settlement Type:Administrative District of Ostrava
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Czech Republic
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Moravia-Silesia
Subdivision Type3:District
Subdivision Name3:Ostrava-City
Subdivision Type4:Municipality
Subdivision Name4:Ostrava
Coordinates:49.8156°N 18.2667°W
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Petr Dlabal (ČSSD)
Area Total Km2:6.48
Population As Of:2021
Population Total:7653
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone1:CET
Utc Offset1:+1
Timezone1 Dst:CEST
Utc Offset1 Dst:+2
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:703 00
Website:http://www.vitkovice.ostrava.cz/

Vítkovice (German: Witkowitz, Polish: Witkowice) is an administrative district of the city of Ostrava, capital of the Moravian-Silesian Region in the Czech Republic. Situated on the left bank of the Ostravice River in the Moravian part of the city, Vítkovice was a town in its own right until its incorporation in 1924.

History

The settlement of Witchendorff in the March of Moravia was first mentioned in a 1357 deed by the Lords of Paskov, probably named after the nobleman Witek von Wigstein, who was enfeoffed by the Bishops of Olomouc with nearby Šostýn (Schauenstein) Castle in 1369. In 1435 it was given in pawn with the Lordship of Hukvaldy by Emperor Sigismund to the former Hussite leader Nikolaus Sokol of Lamberg.Vítkovice, initially agricultural village, witnessed heavy industrialization after 1828, when the Olomouc archbishop Archduke Rudolf of Austria at the instigation of geologist Franz Xaver Riepl had an iron and steel mill (Rudolfshütte) built, the first in the Austrian Empire to use the puddling technique. Since then the village became an important industrial center of the region.

The iron works were continuously enlarged and finally purchased by the Viennese banker Salomon Mayer von Rothschild in 1843. He also financed the extension of the Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway from Vienna to Ostrava with a branch-off to his steel mill, which was completed in 1855. His Rothschild heirs in 1873 founded the Witkowitzer Bergbau- und Hüttengewerkschaft, the largest iron and steel works in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. During the German occupation of Czechoslovakia their possessions were "aryanized" and taken over by the Reichswerke Hermann Göring conglomerate. At the ironworks, the Germans operated a forced labour "education" camp,[1] and a subcamp of a forced labour "education" camp from Moravská Ostrava.[2] After the war they were socialised as the Vítkovické železárny Klement Gottwald n.p. (VŽKG) by the Czechoslovak state.

Vítkovice from 1850 was an independent municipality. In 1908 it was granted town rights by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, in 1924 it became a part of Greater Ostrava.[3]

Sights

The most important landmarks of Vítkovice are:

Notable people

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Arbeitserziehungslager Mährisch Ostrau-Witkowitz. Bundesarchiv.de. 13 November 2021. de.
  2. Web site: Außenkommando "U strouhy" des Arbeitserziehungslagers Mährisch Ostrau. Bundesarchiv.de. 13 November 2021. de.
  3. Hosák et al. 1980, 715-716.