Dąbrówka (Nowy Sącz)

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Dąbrówka
Dąbrówka does not have a coat of arms
Dąbrówka (Poland)
Dąbrówka
Dąbrówka
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lesser Poland
Powiat : Nowy Sącz
Gmina : Nowy Sącz
Area : 4.05  km²
Geographic location : 49 ° 35 '  N , 20 ° 42'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 35 '26 "  N , 20 ° 41' 30"  E
Height : 305 m npm
Residents : 1454 (2018)
Postal code : 33-300
Telephone code : (+48) 18
License plate : KN



Dąbrówka is a district of Nowy Sącz in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship in Poland , around 4 km south of the city center.

history

The place was first mentioned in 1375 as Dambrowa . The common topographical name denotes an oak forest. From 1410 it belonged to the Norbertans in Nowy Sącz ( named Dąbrowa abbatis in 1530 ) and two years later they transferred the village from Polish to Neumarkt law .

Politically and administratively, the village belonged to the Kingdom of Poland (from 1569 the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania ), Krakow Voivodeship , Sącz District.

Dąbrówka and Biegonice , as well as the colonies of Dąbrówka Niemiecka and Laufendorf with their regular buildings, between Old Sandez and New Sandez in the middle of the 19th century

When Poland was first partitioned , Dąbrówka became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804). In 1785, twelve Jewish families were settled in the Emaus or Nowa Jerozolima (New Jerusalem) colony as part of the Josephine colonization , but it was abandoned shortly afterwards. In 1787, German Lutherans were recruited in their place. New Dąbrówka , later Dąbrówka Niemiecka , was closer to New Sandez, north of the old village known as Dąbrówka Polska . The Protestants belonged to the parish in Nowy Sącz. After the abolition of patrimonial they formed two separate parishes in the Nowy Sącz district . In 1900 they had a total area of ​​543 hectares. Dąbrówka Niemiecka had 105 houses and 864 inhabitants, of which 734 were Polish-speaking and 117 German-speaking, apart from 694 Roman Catholics, there were 82 Jews and 88 inhabitants of other faiths. Dąbrówka Polska had 69 houses and 464 inhabitants, all of whom were Polish-speaking and Roman Catholic.

In 1918, after the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, both places became part of Poland. In 1921 there were 124 people in the census in Dąbrówka Niemiecka who gave German nationality, almost a quarter of all information and the largest number in the powiat Nowosądecki . 1923 Dąbrówka Niemiecka was incorporated as a district of Nowy Sącz. The main street of the colony was renamed Grunwaldzka after the Battle of Tannenberg (1410) . The area is now comprised by the Kaduk district (the former suburb of Nowy Sącz, whose name means collapse ). Dąbrówka Polska did not follow until 1977.

Attractions

  • Former Lutheran cemetery on Orkana Street;

Individual evidence

  1. a b Tomasz Jurek (editor): DĄBROWA ( pl ) In: Słownik Historyczno-Geograficzny Ziem Polskich w Średniowieczu. Edycja elektroniczna . PAN . 2010-2016. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
  2. Schematism of the Evangelical Church in Augsb. and Helvet. Confession in the kingdoms and countries represented in the Austrian Imperial Council . Vienna 1875, p. 190 ( online ).
  3. Ludwig Patryn (Ed.): Community encyclopedia of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Reichsrat, edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1900, XII. Galicia . Vienna 1907 ( online ).
  4. Główny Urząd Statystyczny: Skorowidz miejscowości Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. Województwo krakowskie i Śląsk Cieszyński . Warszawa 1925, p. 24 [PDF: 34] (Polish, Woj.krakowskie i Sląsk Cieszynski miejscowości.pdf ).
  5. KADUKOWA HISTORIA - jak to z Kadukiem w Nowym Sączu było (Polish)
  6. Nowy Sącz: wszyscy zapomnieli o cmentarzu przy ul.Orkana (Polish)