Jedlińsk

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Jedlińsk
Jedlińsk coat of arms
Jedlińsk (Poland)
Jedlińsk
Jedlińsk
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Mazovia
Powiat : Radome
Geographic location : 51 ° 31 '  N , 21 ° 7'  E Coordinates: 51 ° 30 '43 "  N , 21 ° 7' 13"  E
Residents : see Gmina
Postal code : 26-660
Telephone code : (+48) 48
License plate : WRA
Economy and Transport
Rail route : Warsaw – Radom
Gmina
Gminatype: Rural community
Gmina structure: 31 school authorities
Surface: 138.72 km²
Residents: 14,529
(Jun. 30, 2019)
Population density : 105 inhabitants / km²
Community number  ( GUS ): 1425052
administration
Address: ul.Warecka 19
26-660 Jedlińsk
Website : www.jedlinsk.pl



Jedlińsk is a village and seat of the rural municipality of the same name in the powiat Radomski of the Masovian Voivodeship , Poland .

history

The name Jedlińsk is derived from the numerous fir trees that surround the medieval settlement.

In the years 1442–1457 the owners of the town of Mikołaj and Zbigniew Czajków from Jawor des Dębno coat of arms, the sons of Zawisza from Oleśnica, a subtenant of the Sandomierz region.

In the 16th century, the Jedliński family of the Nabram coat of arms became the owners of the village, which the town founded in 1530 under the prerogative of King Sigismund I the Elder. From 1540 the city had the sword right. In the years 1560–1630 Jedlińsk served as an important center of Calvinism, which led the community and the school in competition with the Rakow Academy. Many Scots settled in the city. After the city was taken over by the Catholics , the Calvinists left the city, which then fell into disrepair.

In the years 1630–1669 it remained in the possession of the Witowski family. The Swedish invasion in 1655 caused the destruction of the city. In the second half of the 17th and 18th centuries, the local secondary school was under the Cracow Academy. After Witowski, the property was taken over by Aleksander Załuski, Teresa Witowska's husband. After him Jedlińsk was owned by Józef Sołtyk, from 1731 Franciszek in Słupów Szembek, from 1747 Teresa von Działyński Sikorska, from 1752 Stanisław Andrzej Załuski, son of Aleksander. Until 1793 the village belonged to Franciszek Lanckoroński, who sold Jedlińsk to Wilhelm Jacobson.

In 1794 Tadeusz Kościuszko was drafted near the village and moved with the army to Warsaw. Then the owner was Tomasz Dangiel and then General Mikołaj Bronikowski. On June 11, 1809, a battle between the Duchy of Warsaw and the Austrians took place here (Battle of Jedlinski). The grave of the fallen is on the road to Wola Gutowska. In 1860 the Gothic hospital church of St. Adalbert became. In 1869 Jedlińsk lost its town charter and became a small settlement. In August 1890 a dangerous fire broke out in Jedlińsk.

The Jedlin Landgesellschaft has been operating in Jedlińsk since 1994, thanks to which the Jedlin Land Museum named after Jan Kloczkowski was founded.

local community

The following 31 localities with a Schulzenamt belong to the rural community of Jedlińsk :

Beer wce
Bierwiecka Wola
Boża Wola
Czarny Ług
Górna Wola
Gutów
Janki
Jankowice
Jedlanka
Jedlińsk
Jeziorno
Kamińsk
Klwatka Szlachecka
Klwaty
Kruszyna
Lisów
Ludwików
Mokrosęk
Narty
Nowa Wola
Nowe Zawady
Piaseczno
Piaski
Piastów
Płasków
Romanów
Starlings Zawady
Urbanów
Wielogóra
Wierzchowiny
Wola Gutowska
Wsola

Other places in the municipality are:

Bród
Budki Wierzchowskie
Czarna Rola
Godzisz
Gryzów
Jankowice-Kolonia
Józefów
Józefówek
Kępiny
Klwaty-Ludwików
Marcelów
Moczydło
Obózek

traffic

The Kruszyna, Wola Bierwicka and Bartodzieje stops on the Warszawa – Kraków railway line are located in the municipality .

Personalities

References

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 .