Pocinovice () is a municipality and village in Domaà ¾lice District in the Plzeà  Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 600 inhabitants.
Pocinovice consists of two municipal parts (in brackets population according to the 2021 census):
The initial name of the village was PoÃÂinovice. The name was derived from the personal name PoÃÂin, meaning "the village of PoÃÂin's people". The name was distorted due to Germanisation of the region.
Pocinovice is located about southwest of Klatovy, southeast of Domaà ¾lice and south of Plzeà Â. It lies on the border between the Cham-Furth Depression and à  vihov Highlands. The highest point is the hill Jezvinec at above sea level. The AndÃÂlice Stream flows through the municipality.
The top of Jezvinec and its surroundings is protected as the Jezvinec Nature Reserve. It has an area of . It is protected due the abundant occurrence of lunaria rediviva and other endangered forest plant species.
The first written mention of Pocinovice is in a deed of King John of Bohemia from 1325. It was the largest village of the Chodsko microregion, inhabited by the Chods.
Pocinovice is located on the railway line KlatovyâÂÂDomaà ¾lice.
The historic core of Pocinovice is protected as a village monument zone. It is valuable for its preserved set of timbered cottages from the 19th century, typical of the Chodsko ethnographical region.
The main landmark of Pocinovice is the Church of Saint Anne. It was built in the late Baroque style in 1805âÂÂ1806.
In the forest in the northern part of the municipality is a pilgrimage site called Dobrá Voda. It is formed by a spring of water, the Chapel of Our Lady of Lourdes, and the Chapel of Our Lady of Sorrows. Originally, the Chapel of Our Lady of Lourdes was a wooden chapel from the 17th century, but in 1872 it was replaced by a new wooden building, and in 1908, after the wooden chapel burned down, it was replaced by the current brick building. The Chapel of Our Lady of Sorrows was built in 1872âÂÂ1873. The way from the village to the pilgrimage site is lined with the Stations of the Cross from 1882.