Lahomno


Lahomno is a settlement in the Municipality of Laško in eastern Slovenia. It lies in the valley of Lahomnica Creek, a minor left tributary of the Savinja River east of Laško. The area was traditionally part of the Styria region. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Savinja Statistical Region.

Name

Lahomno was first attested in written sources in 1209 and 1212–27 as Lachomel. The name is believed to be derived from *Vlaxomьno selo, based on a nickname for Vladislav. Accentual and morphological evidence makes it unlikely that the name is connected with Slovene Lah 'Vlach, Romance-language speaker'.

Mass graves

Lahomno is the site of four unmarked or mass graves from the end of the Second World War. The Lahomščica 1 and 2 graves both lie along Lahomščica Creek and each contain the remains of one person, probably a Croatian, buried in the first half of May 1945. The first grave is located by the first tree to the right of the bridge on the path to Marija Gradec. The second grave is located opposite the Lešnik farm and before the side road to Harje. The Lahomščica 3 Mass Grave lies on the left bank of Reka Creek, a tributary of the Lahomščica. It contained the remains of seven Ustaša soldiers that were disinterred in 1990. The Lahomno No. 62 Mass Grave lies along the road by the farm at Lahomno No. 62, by a hornbeam hedge. It contains the remains of three people.