Klinja Vas
Name
The Slovene name Klinja Vas and the German name Klindorf both literally mean 'Klin village'. Klin was a surname recorded in the land registry of 1574, and so the name means 'village where the Klin family lives'. The surname Klin (along with similar surnames like Klinar) is believed to be derived from the Slovene common noun klin 'triangular, wedge-shaped piece of land'.
History
Klinja Vas was a Gottschee German village. It is one of the oldest settlements in Gottschee. According to the land registry of 1574 it had eight full farms divided into 16 half-farms with 20 landowners, corresponding to a population between 80 and 85. In 1770 there were 33 houses in the settlement. The village reached its prewar maximum population in 1921, with 43 houses and 223 people. Before the Second World War, six ethnic Slovene families also lived in the village, which had 50 houses and a population of 163. The economy of Klinja Vas was connected with farming and woodcutting, and there were also several blacksmiths, carpenters, and joiners in the settlement. There were also two inns in the village, belonging to the Michitsch and Schober families. At the time, there was some emigration from the village to Canada. The ethnic German residents of the village, numbering 118 people from 29 families, were evicted during the Second World War. The village came under Partisan aerial bombardment on 24 April 1945 in an attack aimed at a German post in neighboring Mahovnik. After the war, only 17 houses remained habitable and there was a population of 73. New settlers came to the village from the areas of Ribnica, Loški Potok, and Dry Carniola (Slovene: Suha krajina). There is a large hog farm east of the village today, where many of the villagers work.