Vištuk

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Vištuk is a village and municipality in western Slovakia in Pezinok District in the Bratislava region. The town is located north of Senec and east of Modra.

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[edit] History

Archeologists found remains of settlements from roughly 5000 BC. The modern history of the village begins in 1244, when it is first mentioned under the name Vyscha. At that time the village was very new. The entire region has been decimated during the 1241-42 Mongol invasion, and subsequently resettled by German vinemakers.

After another decline in the first half of the 16th century, the town has experienced explosive growth, thanks to an influx of Croatian settlers in 1540. Vištuk, thanks to its location at the merger of three creeks, has built several water reservoirs, the largest of which is surviving until today. By the end of the 16th Century, the village was one of the largest in the Červený Kameň county. In 1573, the town has built its Roman Catholic church of Holy Trinity, in the place of an older, gothic church. Roughly at the same time, a smaller church was built, later rebuilt into a chappel.

The village's golden age took a sharp turn in 1705, when it was burned to the ground during the Battle of Budmerice, during the Francis II Rákóczi rebellion. The town was rebuilt, only to be burned down three more times in the 18th century. During that time, Anton Benčič, a Catholic priest, translator and one of the first proponents of the Slovak language, was born in Vištuk in 1745.

In the 19th and 20th century the village grew somewhat, mainly thanks to its vineyards. In 1920, th current name, Vištuk, was codified.

[edit] Infrastructure and Industry

Vištuk has centralized water and gas distribution, but not a sewage system. The village lies outside of main roads, and is thus only serviced by local intercity busses. It does not have direct access to a railway.

There is a school and a medical doctor in the village, the latter being present twice per week for adults and once per week for children.

The village has shifted its focus from small businesses to tourism. It sits on the so-called "Low Carpathian Mountains Vine Route", which connects all major vine producing towns in the area. The town's Muller Thurgau vines are considered to be of above average quality. The town's annual farmer's market ties into the vine making, and has been drawing many visitors to the village every year.

In addition, the village has created a natural area, including a unique nesting place for Swallows. It consists of a sandstone wall with hundrads of holes that the Swallows use for nesting in the spring.

[edit] Culture and Entertainment

The village has its own folk band, Vištučanka, established in 1990. The band's managers have aggresivelly worked to develop the band up to par with much more established bands from neighboring villages. In addition, the town has a library and a movie theater, which has one to two showings every month.

The town's soccer club, established in 1931, is playing in Slovakia's lowest, sixth division soccer league. The soccer field is being occasionally used for other sporting events, such as a recent soccer tournament promoting ethnic tolerance.

[edit] Demographics

As of 2004, Vištuk had 1382 inabitants: 677 men and 705 women. 98.4% were of Slovak ethnicity. Of all inhabitants, 90% were Roman Catholic, 1.3% were Evangelical Catholic and 5.9% were atheist. Of the 434 houses in the village, 366 were permanently occupied.

[edit] External links


edit Municipalities of Pezinok District Flag of Slovakia

Modra | Pezinok | Svätý Jur
Báhoň | Budmerice | Častá | Doľany | Dubová | Jablonec | Limbach | Píla | Slovenský Grob | Šenkvice | Štefanová | Viničné | Vinosady | Vištuk

In other languages