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Šenčur Sports Park

Šenčur
Sencur Slovenia.JPG
Šenčur is located in Slovenia
Šenčur
Šenčur
Location in Slovenia
Coordinates: 46°14′34.94″N 14°25′5.19″E / 46.2430389°N 14.4181083°E / 46.2430389; 14.4181083Coordinates: 46°14′34.94″N 14°25′5.19″E / 46.2430389°N 14.4181083°E / 46.2430389; 14.4181083
Country Flag of Slovenia.svg Slovenia
Traditional Region Upper Carniola
Statistical region Upper Carniola
Municipality Šenčur
Area
 • Total 9.8 km2 (3.8 sq mi)
Elevation 402.5 m (1,320.5 ft)
Population (2012)
 • Total 3,121
Šenčur Sports Park
Full name Športni park Šenčur
Location Šenčur, Slovenia
Capacity 540
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Yes
Tenants
NK Šenčur

Šenčur (pronounced [ʃɛnˈtʃuːɾ]; in older sources also Šentjur,German: Sankt Georgen or Sankt Georgen im Felde) is a settlement in the Upper Carniola region of Slovenia. It is the seat of the Municipality of Šenčur.

Šenčur was mentioned in written sources in 1221 as de Sancto Georio (and as ad sanctum Georium and ecclesiam sancti Georgii in 1238, and as aput Sanctum Georium in 1264). The Slovene name Šentčur is a contraction of the colloquial name for Saint George, the patron saint of the local church: šent Jur > *Šenťur > Šenčur. In the 19th century, the settlement was known as Sankt Georgen (im Felde) in German.

The Šenčur area was already inhabited in late antiquity; archaeological finds include a Roman sarcophagus from the 4th century AD. Medieval sources mention Šenčur in 1221 in connection with the knight Friedrich of Šenčur (Fridericus de Sancto Georio).

During the Middle Ages, Šenčur was subordinate to the Dominican monastery in Velesovo. In 1458, almost half of the peasants (21) were subordinated to the monastery. In 1471 and 1472, the settlement came under Ottoman attack twice. With the abolition of the monastery in 1782, most of the peasants came under different landlords.

Šenčur was the scene of the Šenčur Events (Slovene: Šenčurski dogodki) on 22 May 1932. This was a political incident in which members of the banned Slovene People’s Party prevented a march by the newly founded Yugoslav Radical Peasants' Democracy, calling out slogans against the 6 January Dictatorship and in support of the United Slovenia program. As a result, several Upper Carniolan leaders of the Slovene People’s Party were arrested and imprisoned, including Matija Škerbec.


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