Libeliče
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pinguin89
Antarctica1.138 bijdragen
sep. 2020
This border village has a decent road connection with Dravograd and also with Austria. Right at the village center there is a parking lot for visitors. It can serve as a starting point to nearby hiking destinations, or you can take a walk through the village itself and admire the remaining traditional architecture. One point of interest of particular importance is the 12th-century rotunda of St. Michael at the village cemetery, one of only three remaining ossuaries in Slovenia.
Today the village is famous for its patriotic history exactly a century ago, even though there is no memorial as such but the events are documented by a local museum inside the rectory (open on appointment only, consult the Carinthian Regional Museum for more details). After the 1920 Carinthian plebiscite, Libeliče was initially placed under Austrian administration. As a large majority of villagers had voted for Yugoslavia, they were unwilling to accept the outcome and started a rebellion on the first day, such as cutting the border barbed wire, removing border stones, smuggling of books and newspapers from Yugoslavia, organizing non-violent rallies, deliberate ignoring of any Austrian laws passed after the plebiscite, etc. The rebellion had lasted for approx. 2 years until the governments of Austria and Yugoslavia finally agreed on territorial exchanges and Libeliče was ceded to Yugoslavia on October 1, 1922.
In front of the village's voluntary fire brigade there is an exhibited fire engine, which is also closely related to the 1920s events. When Austrian officials finally left the village, as an "act of revenge" they carried with them just everything from public institutions that was possible to carry away, including this fire engine that villagers were particularly proud of. So they stroke back approx. half a year later when in a well planned action they illegally entered Austria, broke into a garage in the neighbouring village of Bach (Potoče) and took the "stolen" fire engine back to Libeliče.
Today the village is famous for its patriotic history exactly a century ago, even though there is no memorial as such but the events are documented by a local museum inside the rectory (open on appointment only, consult the Carinthian Regional Museum for more details). After the 1920 Carinthian plebiscite, Libeliče was initially placed under Austrian administration. As a large majority of villagers had voted for Yugoslavia, they were unwilling to accept the outcome and started a rebellion on the first day, such as cutting the border barbed wire, removing border stones, smuggling of books and newspapers from Yugoslavia, organizing non-violent rallies, deliberate ignoring of any Austrian laws passed after the plebiscite, etc. The rebellion had lasted for approx. 2 years until the governments of Austria and Yugoslavia finally agreed on territorial exchanges and Libeliče was ceded to Yugoslavia on October 1, 1922.
In front of the village's voluntary fire brigade there is an exhibited fire engine, which is also closely related to the 1920s events. When Austrian officials finally left the village, as an "act of revenge" they carried with them just everything from public institutions that was possible to carry away, including this fire engine that villagers were particularly proud of. So they stroke back approx. half a year later when in a well planned action they illegally entered Austria, broke into a garage in the neighbouring village of Bach (Potoče) and took the "stolen" fire engine back to Libeliče.
Geschreven op 18 augustus 2021
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