Oščadnica ( hu, Ócsad) is a large village and municipality in
Čadca District
Čadca District (''okres Čadca'') is a district in
the Žilina Region of northern central Slovakia, in the Kysuce region. It had been established in 1923 and the current borders exist from 1996. Forest covers 58% of the district area. It is one of ...
, in the
Žilina Region of northern
Slovakia. It has 22 outlying settlements. The village is now an established tourist destination, offering private lodgings and agrobusiness. During the winter a ski resort located southeast of the village, Oščadnica-Veľká Rača, is a popular destination.
Within the village are plenty of bars and restaurants serving traditional Slovak food, along with typical Western fast foods.
Location
Oščadnica lies in the northwestern part of Slovakia, below the Veľká Rača massif (1,236 m above sea level), the highest peak of the
Kysucké Beskydy Mountains and the entire
Kysuce region. The settlement begins in the vicinity of the confluence of the
Kysuca
The Kysuca ( hu, Kiszuca) is a river in northern Slovakia. It is a right tributary to the Váh. The river gives name to the informal Kysuce region. It is long and its basin size is .
Its source is near the village of Makov. At first, the river ...
river with the Oščadnica river and continues along it through a relatively narrow valley 13 km long. The
Žilina - Čadca road and the Žilina - Český Těšín railway line lead through the western edge of the Kysuce valley, providing connections with large cities in the vicinity.
History
Kysuce was not systematically settled until the 17th century, prior to which the region as a whole was inhabited quite sparsely. Although the first written mention of Oščadnica dates back to 1579, seasonal mountain huts were probably present in the area by 1500, with dwellings in the valley of today's village established by 1600. The territory initially belonged to the
Budatín estate, and later to the
Strečno estate. A census from 1658 states that Oščadnica was one of the larger villages, with a sawmill and a grain mill already operating there. The local population subsisted mainly on cattle and sheep breeding, lumbering, shingle production, and flax cultivation. In 1720 the village had three mills, and by 1828, nearly 3,000 inhabitants. In 1804 a
Baroque
The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including t ...
-classicist style church was built on the site of a wooden church from 1788.
Isolated geographically, Kysuce was historically one of the poorer areas of the
Kingdom of Hungary. As in the surrounding villages, an economic stimulus for Oščadnica was the extension of the
Košice-Bohumín Railway in 1871. The railway helped to facilitate the transport of goods and people to regional markets and economic centers. Being located along one of the arteries to industrializing
Moravia and
Silesia helped to position the region for future economic development. However, insufficient economic opportunities relative to population growth and the Hungarian government's
Magyarization
Magyarization ( , also ''Hungarization'', ''Hungarianization''; hu, magyarosítás), after "Magyar"—the Hungarian autonym—was an assimilation or acculturation process by which non-Hungarian nationals living in Austro-Hungarian Transleithan ...
policies of the late nineteenth - early twentieth centuries encouraged emigration out of the area, notably to the
United States.
In the post-1989 transition to a capitalist economy, the emergence of the nearby Veľká Rača ski resort as a tourist destination has come with significant environmental impacts.
Monuments
In the village there is the Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary (built 1804); a Calvary (built 1948); a manor house built 1910-1913 by Prussian junker Count Ballester, which since 1976 has housed an art gallery ( sk, Kysucká galéria); and a Lourdes Cave.
[https://snowparadise.sk/en/turistika/ ]
Geography
The municipality lies at an altitude of 474 metres and covers an area of 58.634 km
2. It has a population of about 5,700 people.
References
External links
* https://www.oscadnica.sk/
{{DEFAULTSORT:Oscadnica
Villages and municipalities in Čadca District
Ski areas and resorts in Slovakia