About the village
Mutenice is situated in an undulating landscape of south-east Moravia, Moravske Slovacko, Dolnacko, at an altitude of 170-265 m, 11 km far from
Hodonin. The area to the north from Mutenice, mainly hillsides with a south aspect, is famous for its extensive vineyards. Mutenice is one of
the largest villages of Hodonin district because of its cadastre area and planted vineyards area. Mutěnic peculiarity is a locality with
almost five hundred wine cellars in the village part called "BUDY". The wine cellar Zarybnicky is a part of this area, it is also simply
under the above mentioned locality = "POD BUDAMA".
Some facts from the history
Mutenice village arose probably due to an external settlement in which The Knights Templars participated and they probably owned Mutenice
together with Cejkovice in the 13th century. At the end of the 15th and beginning of the 16th century there was an enlargement of villages,
vineyards were free estates, the village was also growing large and rich. Wine growing and the village Mutenice boomed most at the beginning
of the 17th century. After the Battle of the White Mountain there were fights, people suffered, and the village was becoming poor.
In 1618 there were 940 residents in 94 houses in Mutenice, after the war in 1648 only 150 residents in 24 houses remained. Count Bedrich Oppersdorf,
who was a commissioner of the Brno region in 1657-1667, and in 1697 he was appointed the highest master of the robes, had considerable merit in
adjusting legal relations bases and imprinted a character which lasted as late as 1848. T. G. Masaryk, the first Czech president, lived there shortly too.