Branoslavci
Place in Styria, Slovenia
46°31′29.06″N 16°7′32.91″E / 46.5247389°N 16.1258083°E / 46.5247389; 16.1258083 (2002)
Branoslavci (pronounced [ˈbɾaːnɔslau̯tsi], German: Malleggendorf[2]) is a village in the Municipality of Ljutomer in northeastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Styria and is now included in the Mura Statistical Region.[3]
There is a small Neo-Gothic chapel in the centre of the village. It was built in the late 19th century.[4]
In the south of the settlement is a large mansion known as Branek Castle (Slovene: Grad Branek). The surviving building is a two-storey early 20th-century adaptation after a major fire in 1925 of what was a 16th-century castle, which had in turn developed on the site of a tower of an early Slavic defence enclosure.[5]
References
- ^ Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia
- ^ Leksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 4: Štajersko. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna. 1904. p. 182.
- ^ Ljutomer municipal site
- ^ Slovenian Ministry of Culture register of national heritage reference number 19961
- ^ Slovenian Ministry of Culture register of national heritage reference number 8853
External links
- Branoslavci on Geopedia
- v
- t
- e
Municipality of Ljutomer
Administrative seat: Ljutomer
- Babinci
- Bodislavci
- Branoslavci
- Bučkovci
- Cezanjevci
- Cuber
- Cven
- Desnjak
- Drakovci
- Globoka
- Godemarci
- Gresovščak
- Grlava
- Ilovci
- Jeruzalem
- Krapje
- Krištanci
- Kuršinci
- Mala Nedelja
- Mekotnjak
- Moravci v Slovenskih Goricah
- Mota
- Noršinci pri Ljutomeru
- Nunska Graba
- Plešivica
- Podgradje
- Precetinci
- Presika
- Pristava
- Radomerje
- Radomerščak
- Radoslavci
- Rinčetova Graba
- Šalinci
- Sitarovci
- Slamnjak
- Spodnji Kamenščak
- Stara Cesta
- Stročja Vas
- Vidanovci
- Vogričevci
- Železne Dveri
- Zgornji Kamenščak
- Cvetko Golar
- Manko Golar
- Karol Grossmann
- Franz Miklosich
- Miro Steržaj
- Ante Trstenjak
- Stanko Vraz