Troubky-Zdislavice
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Troubky-Zdislavice
Troubky-Zdislavice is a municipality in Kroměříž District in the Zlín Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 400 inhabitants. Administrative parts The municipality is made up of the villages of Troubky and Zdislavice. Geography Troubky-Zdislavice is located about southwest of Kroměříž and west of Zlín. It lies in a hllia and mainly agricultural landscape in the Litenčice Hills. The highest point is at above sea level. The Olšinka stream flows through the municipality. History The first written mention of Troubky (german: Troubek) is from 1281 and of Zdislavice (''Zdislawitz'') is from 1349. For centuries, Troubky was divided into two parts, one held by the local Lords of Zdounky and the second by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Olomouc, bishops of Olomouc. Zdislavice often changed owners and was held by a hundred of various lower nobles. The almost last of them and one of the most notable owners was the Dubský family. The two villages were merged or unoffic ...
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Marie Von Ebner-Eschenbach
Countess Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach ( cs, Marie von Ebner-Eschenbachová, german: link=no, Marie Freifrau von Ebner-Eschenbach; 13 September 183012 March 1916) was an Austrian writer. Noted for her psychological novels, she is regarded as one of the most important German-language writers of the latter portion of the 19th century. Biography Early life and family She was born at the castle of the Dubský von Třebomyslice family in Zdislawitz near Kroměříž in Moravia (present Zdislavice in the Czech Republic), the daughter of Baron (from 1843: Count) Franz Joseph Dubsky von Trebomyslicz, a nobleman whose family roots are deeply Catholic and Bohemian, and his wife Maria Rosalia Therese, ''née'' Baroness von Vockel, who came from a noble Protestant-Saxon background. Marie lost her mother in early infancy, but received a careful intellectual training from two stepmothers, first Baroness Eugenie von Bartenstein, and then her second step-mother, Countess Xaverine von Kolowrat-Krako ...
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