Koroška Bela

Koroška Bela
Koroška Bela - view toward NE, with Karavanke in background.
Koroška Bela
Location in Slovenia
Coordinates:
Country Slovenia
Region Upper Carniola
Municipality Jesenice
Elevation 595 m (1,952 ft)
Population (2002)
 • Total 2,206
[1]

Koroška Bela (German: Kärntner Vellach) is a settlement in the municipality of Jesenice in northwestern Slovenia. While its name ("Carinthian White") refers to historic Carinthia, it has long been located in the Upper Carniolan region rather than in present-day Slovene Carinthia. The village has long been a center of iron mining and processing; until recently a majority of its inhabitants were employed in the steel industry.

Contents

Location

Koroška Bela is the first part of the municipality of Jesenice (Slovenia) that one encounters when approaching from the southeast, the direction of Ljubljana. The village is located in a valley between four hills: Malnež and Obesenk (to the east), and Alnica and Strana (northwest). The valley is closed off to the north by mount Belščica, part of the Karavanke/Karawanken Alps; to the south it opens into Belsko Field, which borders the river Sava.

On the east side of the village runs the Bela creek, the source of which is below the peak of Belščica, between Potoško and Olipovo hills. In the lower western part ot the village, the border with the neighboring settlement of Javornik runs parallel to bridges over the Javornik creek, though there is a friendly, long-running quarrel with Javornik over the exact boundary line.

History

The oldest settlement in the area of the modern Jesenice municipality, Koroška Bela was founded by the Bishopric of Brixen around the year 1000, at approximately the same time as nearby Bled. Slovenes had settled the surrounding area by the late 10th century, as attested both by archaeological and documentary evidence, notably the land deeds of peasants donating their lands to clergy or nobility, which record Slavic placenames by this date. During the 11th century, settements in the Bled region included Grad, Zagorice, Želeče, Mlino, Koritno, Bodešče, Selo, Kupljenik, Rečica, Radovna, Podhom, Poljšica, Blejska Dobrava, Sebenje, and others.

Some local peasants remained free until after 1100, but gradually all farms in the area came under feudal control. The principal landlord was the see of Brixen, which in the 13th century began converting some of their serfs into semi-freemen, living on so-called "census" farms. During the 13th century, Koroška Bela was among the larger settlements of the Bled lordship; a 1253 urbar (survey-book) lists 15 such farms.[2]

In the second half of the 14th century, the peasants' level of feudal obligation began to grow, with the introductions of the tithe and of mandatory servitude. High levels of debt began to lead to evictions. In 1515, the peasants of Radovljica, Bled and Bohinj revolted unsuccessfully. The leaders of the insurgency were killed, and all participating households were taxed the "rebels' pfennig" in perpetuity, the financial pressure leading to additional revolts; around 100 minor and four major ones are recorded, as well as civil petitions to the Habsburg authorities for relief. In 1557, records show that three farmers (Luka Ambrožič, Ambrož Vidič, and Jurij Pretnar) and the village assembly filed a complaint due to harsh duties imposed on them.

The historian Valvasor briefly mentions Koroška Bela in his 1689 The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola (under its German name of Karner Velach) as a hamlet below snowy mountains, inhabited by miners and iron ore-teamsters. By this period, local peasants owed the gentry 18 days of servitude a year, including the performance of such tasks as preparing firewood, shoveling snow, cleaning produce, and clearing pastures. One could buy out one's service obligations at a rate of three crowns a day. Circumstances began to improve during the late-18th century, with the reforms of Maria Theresia and Joseph II, by the reign of the former of which iron ore was being mined above the village, on the slopes of Belščica and on Ajdna.

On 27 June 1761, the entire village of 60 houses burned down, including the church. In 1789, torrential rains led to a major landslide; the hill Cikla slid into the village along the course of the creek Bela, burying 47 houses and many unfortunate residents.[3]

During the late-18th century Franco-Austrian wars, Habsburg authorities had difficulties drafting soldiers in the area. Many young unmarried men had instead gone into hiding in the woods; the Austrian governor Indermauer awarded local peasant Janez Čop a letter of manumission for successfully apprehending draft dodgers.

While the front lines with Italy during WWI ran well to the south, Koroška Bela did not escape the war, being - on August 14, 1917 - badly damaged in an Italian air raid.

The village's more recent history has been closely interrelated with that of Jesenice, with which it has gradually become more and more intertwined. The newest (early 1980s-vintage) facilities of the Acroni steelmill complex were built outside the center of Jesenice at Belsko field, directly below the village. A smaller facility (now closed) was located in the southwestern part of the village, adjacent to the railroad and the Javornik train station.

The village supports a cultural society, Možnar[4] ("Mortar"), whose members fire mortars on special occasions. In 2004, at the ceremony marking the 1000th anniversary of Bled and concurrent opening of the Črni Kal Viaduct its members joined the RTV Slovenia symphony orchesra for a mortar-assisted performance of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture.

Church of St Ingenuin and St Albuin

Main article:" Church of St. Ingenuin and St. Albuin

The village church is dedicated to St. Ingenuin and St. Albuin, bishops of Säben Abbey from the 6th and 10th centuries respectively. The chapel of nearby Bled Castle is also dedicated to the saints.

An original gothic church dated to 1361, but was rebuilt and expanded in 1754, and again after a fire in 1761, the work being completed in 1771. It was made a parish church in 1875, and contains frescoes by Matej Sternen.[5]

References

External links