Huncovce
Village and Municipality in Prešov Region, Slovakia
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Huncovce (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈɦuntsɔwtse]; Hungarian: Hunfalva, til 1902: Hunfalu, German: Hunsdorf, Hunszdorf, Hundsdorf in der Zips, Hunzdorf, Hunesdorf,[4] Rusyn: Гунцовце, Yiddish: אונסדאָרףֿ Unsdorf, Hebrew: אונסדורף, Latin: Villa Canis, Hunisvilla) is a village and municipality in Kežmarok District in the Prešov Region of north Slovakia.
Huncovce | |
|---|---|
Location of Huncovce in the Prešov Region Location of Huncovce in Slovakia | |
| Coordinates: 49.12°N 20.38°E | |
| Country | |
| Region | |
| District | Kežmarok District |
| First mentioned | 1257 |
| Area | |
• Total | 13.23 km2 (5.11 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 641 m (2,103 ft) |
| Population | |
• Total | 3,209 |
| Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
| • Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
| Postal code | 599 2[2] |
| Area code | +421 52[2] |
| Vehicle registration plate (until 2022) | KK |
| Website | www |
Geography
The municipality lies at an altitude of 641 metres (2,103 ft)[2] and covers an area of 13.23 km2 (5.11 sq mi) (2024).[5]
History
Huncovce was first mentioned in 1257 as a farming settlement, the property of Hungarian noblemen. German craftsmen and lumberjacks later settled there, and the town received rights to become a city. At the beginning of the 19th century, about half of the residents were Jews, and the rest Christian Germans and Slovaks, who were generally either Lutheran or Catholic.[6] The village belonged to a German language island. Before the establishment of independent Czechoslovakia in 1918, Huncovce was part of Szepes County within the Kingdom of Hungary. From 1939 to 1945, it was part of the Slovak Republic. On 28 January 1945, the Red Army dislodged the Wehrmacht from Huncovce in the course of the Western Carpathian offensive and it was once again part of Czechoslovakia. The German population was expelled in 1945.
Jewish community
The first Jews to reside in Huncovce were from Moravia, settling there in the latter half of the 16th century. Later, survivors of the Khmelnitsky pogroms of 1648-1649 arrived, essentially as refugees. Jewish settlement in the region was technically prohibited by law, and therefore nearly all Jews in the Spis region resided in or around Huncovce during this period. The community continued to grow through the 18th and into the 19th century; though it remained small with only 30 families in the 18th century, by 1828 it had grown to 939 members (though this did include Jews from several other nearby settlements and villages).
In the 19th century, Huncovce became an important regional centre of Torah learning, and a renowned yeshiva, where in the mid-century up to 350 boys studied, was built and led by Rabbi Yechezkel Wolf Segel.
In the interbellum period, the Jewish population had begun to dwindle; by 1919, there were fewer than 275 Jews remaining (the entire community, including non-Jews, numbered less than 500 at this time). During this period, most of the Jews made a living in commerce and small business (e.g., grocers and butchers), and some tradesmen (e.g., tailors and carpenters).
WWII and the Holocaust essentially put an end to Jewish life in Huncovce. On March 14 and 15, 1939, many of the German residents of the village (who had joined Nazi organizations) rounded up about 200 Jews and drove them out of the village to the no-man's land on the Slovakian-Hungarian border. They were held without shelter and in cramped and difficult conditions for two weeks, after which they were allowed to return to their homes. Two years later, the Jews' businesses were expropriated from them by Nazis and collaborators, with the young men sent to perform forced labour. Deportations began in 1942, with most Jews sent to concentration camps and extermination camps, though some were sent to Lublin-area ghettoes. Some hid in the forests, alone or with Slovaks – some of these were able to return to the village after the war, but the Jewish community could not rebuild its social structure, and its community buildings were damaged.
Today no Jewish community exists, but the local government declared the remaining cemetery a protected historical site, and the yeshiva building still stands.[7]
Population
| Year | 1994 | 2004 | 2014 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count | 1939 | 2396 | 3014 | 3209 |
| Difference | +23.56% | +25.79% | +6.46% |
| Year | 2023 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Count | 3162 | 3209 |
| Difference | +1.48% |
It has a population of 3209 people (31 December 2024).[9]
Ethnicity
In year 2021 was 3055 people by ethnicity 2891 as Slovak, 1025 as Romani, 119 as Not found out, 8 as Other, 7 as Rusyn, 4 as Polish, 4 as German, 3 as Czech, 3 as Russian, 1 as Italian, 1 as Romanian, 1 as Austrian and 1 as Hungarian.
Note on population: The difference between the population numbers above and in the census (here and below) is that the population numbers above are mostly made up of permanent residents, etc.; and the census should indicate the place where people actually mainly live.
For example, a student is a citizen of a village because they have permanent residence there (they lived there as a child and has parents), but most of the time he studies at a university in the city.
Religion
| Religion | Number | Fraction |
|---|---|---|
| Roman Catholic Church | 2096 | 68.61% |
| None | 802 | 26.25% |
| Not found out | 54 | 1.77% |
| Greek Catholic Church | 36 | 1.18% |
| Evangelical Church | 34 | 1.11% |
| Total | 3055 |
In year 2021 was 3055 people by religion 2096 from Roman Catholic Church, 802 from None, 54 from Not found out, 36 from Greek Catholic Church, 34 from Evangelical Church, 11 from Christian Congregations in Slovakia, 5 from Eastern Orthodox Church, 5 from Jehovah's Witnesses, 3 from Buddhism, 2 from Other and not ascertained christian church, 2 from Ad hoc movements, 1 from Jewish community, 1 from Islam, 1 from Other, 1 from Hinduism and 1 from Apostolic Church.
People
- David Friesenhausen (1750, Friesenhausen - 1828, Gyulafehérvár/Alba Iulia), a Jewish Bavarian-Hungarian Talmudist, scientist, mathematician, Hebrew-language writer; lived here[13]
- Solomon Winter (Hungarian: Winter Salamon; 1778, ?, in the Szepes - ), Jewish Hungarian philanthropist; lived and died here