Oľšavica

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Oľšavica
Slovakia15Spis288.JPG
Coordinates: 49°05′00″N 20°45′12″E / 49.08333°N 20.75333°E / 49.08333; 20.75333Coordinates: 49°05′00″N 20°45′12″E / 49.08333°N 20.75333°E / 49.08333; 20.75333
Area
 • Total17.6 km2 (6.8 sq mi)
Population
 • Total291 (2,011)
Websitewww.olsavica.sk

Oľšavica (Hungarian: Nagyolsva) is a village and obec in Levoča District in the Prešov Region of central-eastern Slovakia.[1]

History[]

The village was first mentioned in 1300[2] or 1308. From the village's establishment, villagers have followed the Greek Catholic faith; in 1700 there were 348 Greek Catholics out of 351 people living in the village. It is located in the Slovak Catholic Metropolitan Archeparchy of Prešov. Two natives of the village, brothers Šimon Štefan and Michal Manuel Olšavský, made their hometown famous as bishops of the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo in the eighteenth century. In the late nineteenth century, many villagers emigrated to the United States.[1]

In 1944, the village was the site of a mass rescue of some 50 refugees, including 35 Jews who escaped the Holocaust in Slovakia, due to the exhortations of local Slovak Catholic priest Michal Mašlej, who was held in high esteem by the farmers. Preaching that it was their Christian duty to help refugees, Mašlej arranged for persecuted families to hide with various parishioners, and hid the Hartmann family in his personal residence. When German troops had to be quartered in the village, he made sure that they were not placed with any of the families involved in the rescue effort.[3][4] Mašlej's efforts were supported by his Bishop, Pavel Peter Gojdič. When Mašlej was concerned about the danger to his congregants, Gojdič told him: "The support to the persecuted results of charity and it is your duty according to your capacity to help and to provide shelter to the threatened by deportation".[5] Researcher Nina Paulovičová compared Oľšavica to Nieuwlande and Le Chambon-sur-Lignon—other villages where the population banded together to hide Jews—adding that it was "remarkable" that no one informed on the fugitives and none of them were arrested.[4] Mašlej was recognized as Righteous among the Nations by the Israeli official Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem, in 1997.[3]

Geography[]

The Greek Catholic church in Oľšavica

Oľšavica lies at an altitude of 800 metres (2,600 ft)[1] and covers an area of 17.6 square kilometres (6.8 sq mi).[6] Geographically, it is dominated by the nearby Spišská hill, at 1,065 metres (3,494 ft). It is bordered by Brutovce to the east, Tichý Potok to the north, Nižné Repaše to the west, Pavľany to the south, and Poproč to the southeast.[1]

Population[]

Its population has decreased from 808 in 1910 to 291 on the 2011 census.[7]

Population development[8]
Year 1994 1999 2014 2019 2020
Population 343 325 312 289 275

Data are year-end. The time zone is CET.

Landmarks and tourist attraction[]

The church in the village was built in 1861 and is consecrated to Our Lady of Protection.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Šturák, Peter. Ľudové zvyky a obyčaje pri slávení cirkevných sviatkov v gréckokatolíckych farnostiach v Levočských vrchoch na pozadíich histórie (PDF). Znak, Symbol a Rituál V Tradíciách a Prejavoch Ľudovej Zbožnosti. Prešovská univerzita v Prešove, Gréckokatolícka teologická fakulta. pp. 40–44. ISBN 978-80-555-0774-3.
  2. ^ Vlastivedný slovník obcí na Slovensku (in Slovak). Slovak Academy of Sciences, Veda. 1977.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Michal Mašlej". The Righteous Among the Nations Database. Yad Vashem. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Paulovičová, Nina (2012). Rescue of Jews in the Slovak State (1939–1945) (PhD thesis). Edmonton: University of Alberta. p. 301. doi:10.7939/R33H33.
  5. ^ Borza, Peter (28 December 2012). "Activities of Bishop Paul Peter Gojdic in favour of Jews in Slovakia during the Holocaust" (PDF). E-Theologos. Theological revue of Greek Catholic Theological Faculty. 3 (2): 158–165. doi:10.2478/v10154-012-0013-x. S2CID 72163121.
  6. ^ "Registre obnovenej evidencie pozemkov, Prešovský kraj" (PDF).  [sk]. p. 3. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  7. ^ Kyšela, Štefan (2015). "The Population Development in the Levoča Mountains (Slovakia)" (PDF). Acta Facultatis Studiorum Humanitatis et Naturae. 27 (1): 117. ISSN 1336-6157.
  8. ^ "Statistic of Slovak places by Dušan Kreheľ – Export". Retrieved 27 June 2021.
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