Historie zaniklých cihelen břeclavského okresu po roce 1945 – Lednice-Nejdek, Drnholec, Pohořelice, Mikulov, Vlasatice, Dolní Dunajovice, Velké Bílovice

Title in English History of Defunct Brickworks in the Břeclav District after 1945 – Lednice-Nejdek, Drnholec, Pohořelice, Mikulov, Vlasatice, Dolní Dunajovice, Velké Bílovic
Authors

LYČKA Daniel

Year of publication 2017
Type Article in Periodical (without peer review)
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Description The second part of the study on the extinct brickworks in the Břeclav district is based primarily on preserved archival sources from 1945–1948, deposited in the Břeclav District State Archive in Mikulov and in the Brno-venkov DistrictState Archive in Rajhrad. It consists mainly of the preserved postwar correspondence between individual institutions [District National Committee (ONV) in Mikulov, Land National Committee (ZNV) in Brno, Municipal National Committees (MNV), etc.]. The sources are namely the A2 fund of ONV in Mikulov (Continuous Kiln of the Kreps company, 1945, Pohorelice Brickworks 1947 and Pisk Brickworks in Mikulov 1948–1952 and Confiscation of the property of Otta Pisk), four boxes of documentation to the construction of brickworks in Pohořelice from the fund of the Municipal National Committee in Pohorelice and the A7 fund of ONV in Židlochovice: Brickworks 1949–1957. The history of the brick- work in Velké Bílovice is described the original article of Jaroslava Harhajová, supplemented by archival materials from the Liechtenstein funds and the A 4 fund of ONV in Břeclav: Velké Bílovice – Mikešová brickwork 1945–1955. That information was supplemented by a study of photographs, maps and testimony of contemporary witnesses. Thus the study maps the history of brickworks after 1945 in the municipalities: Nejdek u Lednice, Drnholec, Mikulov, Pohořelice, Vlasatice, Dolní Dunajovice and Velké Bílovice. The addendum contains postwar lists of existing and already defunct brickworks in the Mikulov district. Individual brickworks have often undergone similar developments after the war, all eventually ceased their production in the second half of the 1940s, or in the 1950s, and nowadays usually only filledin and overgrown clay pits remain.
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