Stubendorf

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Stubendorf
Izbicko
Coat of arms of Gmina Izbicko
Stubendorf Izbicko (Poland)
Stubendorf Izbicko
Stubendorf
Izbicko
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Opole
Powiat : Strzelecki
Gmina : Stubendorf
Area : 10.79  km²
Geographic location : 50 ° 34 ′  N , 18 ° 9 ′  E Coordinates: 50 ° 34 ′ 0 ″  N , 18 ° 9 ′ 0 ″  E
Residents : 1100
Postal code : 47-180
Telephone code : (+48) 77
License plate : EAST
Economy and Transport
Street : DK 94 Opole - Bytom
Next international airport : Wroclaw
Katowice



Stubendorf ( Polish Izbicko ) is a village and capital of the rural community of the same name in the Upper Silesian powiat Strzelecki in the Opole Voivodeship , which has been bilingual (Polish and German) since 2006.

geography

The street village Stubendorf is 15 kilometers southwest of Opole and 10 kilometers northwest of Strzelce Opolskie (Groß Strehlitz) in the Silesian lowlands.

history

Parish church of Stubendorf (drawing from the 18th century)

The first written mention of the place name comes from a document of the Breslau bishop Johann III. Romka from November 17, 1295, in which the parish of Istbisco or Yczbczko was confirmed. In 1318 the local parish church was mentioned, which belonged to the Archipresbyterat Groß Strehlitz. Originally the Vorwerk Stubendorf belonged to the Opole dukes and from 1556 came into the possession of various noble families, most recently from 1811 to 1945 by those of Strachwitz .

New place-name sign, since 2009
Stubendorf Castle in the 18th century.
Stubendorf Castle in the 19th century

Stubendorf had been Prussian since 1742 and from 1816 belonged to the district of Groß Strehlitz .

After the referendum in Upper Silesia in 1921, which resulted in 439 votes (69.4%) in favor of remaining with Germany in Dorf and Gut Stubendorf, the Third Polish Uprising broke out in the region. The local Strachwitz Castle was set on fire and ravaged by insurgents. The place remained in the Weimar Republic and came to Poland as Izbicko after the Second World War in 1945 .

Population development

The population of Stubendorf including the manor district:

year Residents
1844 503
1855 713
1861 757
year Residents
1910 961
1933 1028
1939 1104

Attractions

  • The Catholic parish church of St. John the Baptist was originally made of wood and received a stone tower in 1829. The neo-Romanesque nave followed in 1852, and a transept and a new choir were added in 1908. The massive tower with a pyramid roof was also given its present shape at that time. The church stands in the middle of the local cemetery, on which there is a Baroque Nepomuk statue from the 18th century.
  • The classicist building of the Stubendorfer Palace was destroyed in 1921 and then renewed in neo-baroque style in 1923–1932. Since then, with its mansard roof over the two-storey central building, which is crowned by a gable , and the protruding, single-storey side risers , it has been reminiscent of its historical Baroque form, handed down in drawings by Friedrich Bernhard Werner .

Personalities

local community

The rural community of Stubendorf covers an area of ​​84 km² and eleven villages with around 5500 inhabitants.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c cf. diecezja.opole.pl ; down. on August 15, 2008
  2. a b izbicko.pl ( Memento of September 25, 2007 in the Internet Archive ); down. on August 15, 2008
  3. See results of the referendum ; down. on October 17, 2008
  4. Sources of population figures :
    1844: [1] - 1855, 1861: [2] - 1933, 1939: [3] - 1910: [4]
  5. Cf. Felix Triest: Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien. Wroclaw 1865