Dravlje

Dravlje (pronounced [ˈdɾaːu̯ljɛ]; German: Draule[2][3]) is a former village in the City Municipality of Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia.

Dravlje is an elongated settlement at a transition from gravelly to clay soil that also corresponded to a border between cultivated fields (to the east) and meadows (to the south and west).

The name presumably refers to internal colonization of Slovenia before the 13th century, when people from the Drava Valley moved to the area.

The church was built starting in 1646 (but not completed until 1682)[1] in thanksgiving for the end of a plague epidemic that lasted several years.

They are the work of Matej Tomec (1814–1885) and were removed from the chapel-shrine on Klagenfurt Street (Slovene: Celovška cesta)[4] when it was destroyed in 1956.

Saint Roch's Church