Brno-Kohoutovice

The territory of the modern city district of Brno-Kohoutovice originally belonged to the cadastres of five former municipalities, which are Kohoutovice (almost the entire cadastral territory of Kohoutovice and the adjacent part of Pisárky bounded in the north by the streets Libušina třída and Libušino údolí, and in the southeast by the middle of the course of the Kohoutovice stream), Old Brno ( part of Pisárky south of the center of the course of the Kohoutovice stream), Jundrov (the northern part of the local part of Pisárky, and part of the local part of the modern cadastral territory of Jundrov), Bosonohy (houses along Pavlovská Street) and Žebětín (a narrow, almost undeveloped strip of land on the western edge of the modern cadastral Kohoutovice, with the local grove, while the division into these five cadastral territories remained unchanged from 1892 until the radical cadastral reform of Brno in the second half of the 20th century.

On April 16, 1919, Kohoutovice and Jundrov, together with a number of other suburban municipalities, were permanently annexed to Brno.

On the contrary, Kohoutovice lost the parcel with today's number 2957, which was attached to the Žebětín cadastre.

According to this agreement, the city district of Brno-Jundrov acquired a smaller part of Pisárky with buildings on the western side of Veslařská street, while the city district of Brno-Kohoutovice acquired a smaller southern part of the cadastral territory of Jundrov, including garden plots near Mladá Hora.

The Pisárky part of the urban area is made up of houses which, with one exception, are located on the northern slope of Antonína Procházky and Libušino údolí streets, and several panel houses adjacent to the northeastern part of the Kohoutovice cadastre on the southern side of Libušino údolí, and then the isolated building of the local hunting lodge located further south.