Łodygowice

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Łodygowice
Coat of arms of Łodygowice
Łodygowice (Poland)
Łodygowice
Łodygowice
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Silesia
Powiat : Żywiec
Area : 17.82  km²
Geographic location : 49 ° 44 '  N , 19 ° 8'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 43 '48 "  N , 19 ° 8' 22"  E
Residents : 6925 (2008)
Postal code : 34-325
Telephone code : (+48) 33
License plate : SZY
Gmina
Gminatype: Rural community
Gmina structure: 4 school offices
Surface: 35.2 km²
Residents: 14,495
(Jun. 30, 2019)
Population density : 412 inhabitants / km²
Community number  ( GUS ): 2417082
administration
Address: ul. Piłsudskiego 75
34-325 Łodygowice
Website : www.lodygowice.pl



Łodygowice ( German : Lodygowitz , older Lodwigsdorf ) is a village and seat of the municipality of the same name in the powiat Żywiecki of the Silesian Voivodeship in Poland .

geography

Łodygowice is located in the Saybuscher Basin ( Kotlina Żywiecka ) on the Żylica under the Little Beskids ( Beskid Mały , in the northeast).

The village has an area of ​​1782 hectares .

history

Together with other neighboring villages Wilkowice and Pietrzykowice it belonged to the Cistercian Abbey Rauden .

The place was first mentioned on May 16, 1310 as Loduicouiche and on April 22, 1364 as Ludovicivilla . The parish of Villa Ludvici in the Auschwitz deanery of the Krakow diocese was first mentioned in a document in 1373. In 1445 it was also mentioned as Lodwigsdorf ( Deutsche Ostsiedlung ?).

Politically, the village originally belonged to the Duchy of Teschen , after being part of the Duchy of Auschwitz in 1315 during the period of Polish particularism . Since 1327 consisted fiefdom of the Kingdom of Bohemia . The area of Żywiec with the village was pulled out of the Duchy of Auschwitz in the 1450s under unexplained circumstances. It finally belonged to Poland from 1465.

In 1467 the Saybusch rule came into being in the possession of the Komorowski family. In 1618 the Łodygowice manor was spun off with the villages: Łodygowice, Glemieniec, Bierna , Huciska, Rybarzowice , Buczkowice , Szczyrk , Godziszka , Wilkowice , Mikuszowice and Bystra .

When Poland was first partitioned , Łodygowice became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804).

In 1918, after the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, Łodygowice became part of Poland. This was only interrupted by the occupation of Poland by the Wehrmacht in World War II .

From 1975 to 1998 Łodygowice belonged to the Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship .

local community

The rural municipality of Łodygowice includes the four localities with a Schulzenamt : Bierna , Łodygowice, Pietrzykowice and Zarzecze .

Sons and daughters of the place

Footnotes

  1. population. Size and Structure by Territorial Division. As of June 30, 2019. Główny Urząd Statystyczny (GUS) (PDF files; 0.99 MiB), accessed December 24, 2019 .
  2. ^ UG Łydogywice: Statute Sołectwa Łodygowice. In: uglodygowice.bip.org.pl. 2006, accessed December 7, 2010 (Polish).
  3. W. Wattenbach (red.): Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T.2 Documents of the monasteries Rauden and Himmelwitz, the Dominicans in the city of Ratibor . Josef Max & Comp., Breslau 1859, p. 25 (Latin, online ).
  4. W. Wattenbach (red.): Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T.2 Documents of the monasteries Rauden and Himmelwitz, the Dominicans in the city of Ratibor . Josef Max & Comp., Breslau 1859, p. 33 (Latin, online ).
  5. ^ Tomasz Jurek (editor): Słownik Historyczno-Geograficzny Ziem Polskich w Średniowieczu. Edycja elektroniczna. Retrieved December 22, 2016 .
  6. ^ Krzysztof Rafał Prokop: Księstwa oświęcimskie i zatorskie wobec Korony Polskiej w latach 1438-1513. Dzieje polityczne . PAU , Kraków 2002, ISBN 83-8885731-2 , p. 175-183 (Polish).
  7. Dz.U. 1975 no 17 poz. 92 (Polish) (PDF file; 783 kB)