Jeseník nad Odrou


Jeseník nad Odrou is a village and municipality in Nový Jičín District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. There are springs in the area that provide drinkable mineral water. It composes of five parts which were formerly independent villages: Jeseník nad Odrou, Blahutovice, Polouvsí, Hůrka and Hrabětice.

History

The first written mention of the settlement comes from 1383.

War Events

During March 1938 four of the five villages that now form the municipality were occupied and annexed by Nazi Germany, becoming an integral part of the Third Reich. The rest of Czech lands were occupied the year after, forming the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in 1939. This protectorate included also the last part of the municipality, the Hůrka village. Jewish population of the municipality fled or was murdered during the Holocaust, while the German population was expelled after World War II, and the villages were repopulated by migrants from Czechoslovakia, Ukraine and Romania.
Former citizen of the municipality are now remembered by a Memorial of Reconciliation, jointly funded from Czech and German sources as well as the former German inhabitants of Jeseník nad Odrou.

Catastrophic floods in 2009

On the night of 24–25 June 2009, the village was hit by a sudden flood caused by a consecutive series of violent cloudbursts. Three people were killed and it caused extensive damage. Jeseník nad Odrou was the area in the Czech Republic most affected by these floods.

Village of the Year title

In 2013, the village received the honorary title of "Village of the Year" given for a successful care for the municipality.