Detva

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Detva
Coat-of-arms N/A
Region (kraj) Banská Bystrica Region
District (okres) Detva District
Location 48°33′05″N, 19°25′06″E
Altitude 400 m
Population 15,043 (as of 2004)
Area 68.088 km²
Time Zone
• Summer DST
CET: UTC+1
CEST: UTC+2
Telephone prefix +421-45
Postal code 962 11
Car registration plate DT
Detva location map

Detva (Hungarian: Gyetva) is a town in central Slovakia with a population of 15,000. It is situated at the Poľana mountain.

[edit] History

Detva in winter.
Detva in winter.

Detva was created as a village of bondage in a deep-forested area belonging to Zvolenská Slatina and Očová upon instruction of the owner of the Vigľaš dominium Ladislaus Csáky in 1636-1638. The first settlers were coal producers from Ľubietová, followed by Walachian-type settlers from northern and eastern parts of Slovakia and immigrants from other surrounding villages. In 1787, Ján Vagač founded the first known manufactory producing bryndza cheese. The settlement became an oppidum (market town) in 1811 and a town in 1965. In 1996 the town of Detva became the seat of new Detva district.

It was developed as a large newly cleared land and this character has been preserved up to present, despite the fact that a part of the newly cleared lands were separated from Detva - Hriňová (before 1863), Detvianska Huta (in ?), Korytárky (in 1955; part of Kriváň until 1993) and Kriváň (in 1955). Logging and wood processing, sheep breeding and peasantry had been the main source of bread and butter of the Detvans. Hard living conditions at distant isolated newly cleared lands and self-sufficiency in providing of basic living needs determined the formation of the original material and spiritual culture of local inhabitants and thanks to this Detva had become one of the symbols of the modern Slovak nation.

In 1955 Detva experienced a significant change. A factory for military machinery and strategic constructions was built in the town's woods for security purposes. This factory, called Podpolianske strojárne Detva (PPS) at that time, produced UNC machinery, aka "Universal" on Western European markets. Machinery such as front loaders and skid steer loaders used to reach an annual production of 4,000. The factory enlarged the population of Detva from 3,500 to over 12,000, employing over 70% of Detva's population. However, after the Velvet Revolution and the split of Czechoslovakia, infamous illegal and non-transparent privatization, typical of then Central and Eastern European states, took place. Detva's PPS factory had to put its production on halt and to downsize its workforce from 8,000 in 1993 to 1,000 in 2005. Nowadays, Detva faces the highest unemployment in Slovakia - it reaches some 30%.

[edit] Town parts

  • Detva (proper)
  • Detva - sídlisko
  • Kostolná
  • Krné
  • Piešť I
  • Piešť II
  • Skliarovo
  • Zapriechody

[edit] External links


edit Municipalities of Detva District Flag of Slovakia

Detva | Hriňová
Detvianska Huta | Dúbravy | Horný Tisovník | Klokoč | Korytárky | Kriváň | Látky | Podkriváň | Slatinské Lazy | Stará Huta | Stožok | Vígľaš | Vígľašská Huta-Kalinka


Coordinates: 48°34′N, 19°25′E