Brno-Vinohrady
Brno-Vinohrady (Hantec: Vincky) is a municipal district on the eastern side of Brno Czechia. The autonomous district was established on 24 November 1990. The population as of 2011 is 13,361.[1] Vinohrady is situated in the vineyard track V Hlavách.
Characteristics
The vast majority of Vinohrady is made up of about 50 coloured panel houses (Czech: paneláky), which are visible from many parts of Brno. It is surrounded by Brno-Líšeň to the east and southeast, Brno-Židenice to the southwest, Brno-Maloměřice and Obřany to the northwest, and the village of Kanice to the north.
History
Based on archeological research, humans have been present in the area since around 500,000 years ago, during the Old Palaeolithic Period. The area was long without any development, and the southern slopes were used to grow vineyards.
The current-day territory of Vinohrady was made part of the city of Brno on 16 April 1919. In 1943, Germans established a branch of the factory Flugmotorenwerke Ostmark (predecessor of current-day Zetor). There was a colony of 20 wooden houses on the hill, which inhabitants of Brno began to call Hamburg because the bulk of its inhabitants came from Hamburg.[2] The colony was hit during the Allied bombing at the end of the Second World War. After the liberation of Brno and the subsequent expulsion of Germans, the colony was left deserted for a couple of years before being reoccupied by survivors of the war, including those who had been in Nazi prisons and concentration camps.
The demise of Hamburg occurred in the 1980s in connection with the construction of the present-day housing estate. Residents protested the construction unsuccessfully and the estate was completed in 1989.
References
- Historický lexikon obcí České republiky 1869-2011: III. Počet obyvatel a domů podle krajů, okresů, obcí, částí obcí a historických osad / lokalit v letech 1869 - 2011: Okres Brno-město[online]. Český statistický úřad, 2015-12-21 [cit. 2019-01-04]. Dostupné online.
- "Encyklopedie dějin města Brna". encyklopedie.brna.cz. 2004. Retrieved 2019-02-23.