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Maleč (Czechia)

Havlíčkův Brod okres, Vysočina region

Last modified: 2018-05-25 by kryštof huk
Keywords: malec | sea-dog |
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[Maleč flag] image by Jarig Bakker, 19 Dec 2007
adopted 28 Jan 2007; design: Karel Musílek See also:

Maleč municipality flag

Here is the flag of Maleč, a municipality in Vysocina region (okres Havlíčkův Brod) in Czechia. It was adopted 28 January 2007, designed by Karel Musílek, and published at the municipal site.
Description: three vertical stripes of red, white and blue, proportioned 6:1:1; at the hoist two equilateral yellow triangles; in center a white sea-dog.
The triangles represent the Železných hor (iron mountains).
The sea-dog is from the arms of Pánu na Předboři a na Malči (Předboř is a hamlet near Maleč; Panna is the Virgin Mary).
The blue stripe (wave in the Coat of Arms) is for the river Doubrava.
The Coat of Arms is largely identical.

Some info from the English page:
The town of Maleč lies at the edge of the Protected Landscape Area Železné hory (the Iron Mountains), situated about 6 km northwest of Chotěboř, at 392 m above sea level. It is in this area that the Iron Mountains' ridges begin to rise. The local landscape is dominated by a nearby hill called Bučina. Looking southeast of Maleč, your eyes will be taken by the oblong shape of another hill, Hradiště. The creek running through the town is called Blatnický potok and feeds a pond known as Hluboký. Flowing out of the pond, the creek makes its way to the town of Víska, where it joins the Doubrava River.

The first written mention of the town dates back to the year 1278 when the area was built up with a farmstead and a village that was owned by the monastery in Vilémov. In the 16th century, the local fortress was the property of the family lines of the Přibíks from Otoslavice and of the Otmars from Holohlavy. In the subsequent centuries, there were several owners ranging from Barbora Chuchelská from Nestajov to Jan Adam from Auersperg. It was his offspring František who sold the estate, in 1862, to František Ladislav Rieger, a then notable Czech political figure. The written form of the town's name changed in the course of time too. It was only recently that the name Maleč was formed.

The most significant cultural monument in the town is a Baroque chateau that was built by reconstructing a late Renaissance building from 1700. Its original plan was that of an early Baroque structure with a rectangular layout. The main entrance is decorated with a chronogram engraved in the frieze above an arched gateway. In the 18th century, the chateau was enlarged with single-story wings. Another reconstruction took place in 1827 when the left wing was raised with the second story; the right wing remained unfinished. The Empire reconstruction changed the appearance of the chateau entirely - the only reminder of the original Baroque structure that was left in place was the stucco decoration of the ceiling on the second floor. The chateau is surrounded with a park with a lake and full-grown trees. The park is fenced with a wall complete with a bastion and a gate embellished with statutes. Next to the chateau (in the village square) are two sandstone Baroque statutes - of St. John of Nepomuk and the Virgin Mary. Between them there is a humble wooden belfry. The Chapel of Jesus, standing out in the slope above the town, is another Baroque monument. At the edge of Maleč, in the direction of Libice nad Doubravou, you can find an evangelic church that was built in the New Roman style in 1891.

Today, Maleč has 692 inhabitants and governs other local districts: Blatnice, Dolní and Horní Lhotka, Hranice and Předboř. The town has its own health care center, general store and a pub. It is located on a yellow-marked tourist path that starts in Chotěboř and passes through Rochňovec.
Jarig Bakker, 19 Dec 2007


Maleč Coat of Arms

[Maleč coat of arms] image by Jarig Bakker, 19 Dec 2007