In the past, Luhačovické Zálesí was a peculiar ethnographic area with twenty seven villages around the famous Moravian spa Luhačovice. Zálesí was mentioned on the Komenský´s map of Moravia in the 17th century for the fi rst time. Its territory was larger at that time, it reached up to the town of Vsetín whose inhabitants were counted among “people from Zálesí”. Later on, the area was reduced, especially on behalf of the ethnographic areas of Wallachia, Moravian Slovakia and Hana. The neighbouring signifi cant ethnographic areas infl uenced the local form of the folk culture in which one can fi nd plenty of common elements, mutual infl uences and overlapping.
C1 – timbered barn of the homestead of Vojtěch Jurák from Doubravy
C2 – timbered barn of the homestead of Josef Lysoněk from Doubravy
C3 – timbered hayloft of the homestead of Josef Lysoněk from Doubravy
C4 – kiln-house for fruit drying of Antonín Minařík from Doubravy
C5 – kiln-house for fruit drying of Josef Chmela from Velký Ořechov
C6 – homestead of Antonín Mališka from Provodov
C7 – homestead of Anna Mrázková from Doubravy
C13 – timbered two-storey chamber of the homestead No.14 from Pozlovice
C14 – homestead of Alois Bětík from Podhradí
C15 – kiln-house for fruit drying of Alois Marášek from Hřivínův Újezd