Kamienna Góra (rural community)

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Gmina Kamienna Góra
Coat of arms of the rural municipality of Kamienna Góra
Gmina Kamienna Góra (Poland)
Gmina Kamienna Góra
Gmina Kamienna Góra
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lower Silesia
Powiat : Kamienna Góra
Geographic location : 50 ° 47 '  N , 16 ° 2'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 47 '0 "  N , 16 ° 2' 0"  E
Residents : see Gmina
Postal code : 58-400
Telephone code : (+48) 75
License plate : DKA
Economy and Transport
Street : Legnica - Trutnov
Rail route : Sędzisław – Lubawka
Next international airport : Wroclaw
Gmina
Gminatype: Rural community
Surface: 158.1 km²
Residents: 9019
(Jun. 30, 2019)
Population density : 57 inhabitants / km²
Community number  ( GUS ): 0207022
Administration (as of 2014)
Wójt : Patryk Straus
Address: al. Wojska Polskiego 10
58-400 Kamienna Góra
Website : www.gminakamiennagora.pl



The Gmina wiejska Kamienna Góra [ kaˈmʲɛnːa ˈgura ] is an independent rural community in Poland in the powiat Kamienna Góra in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship . Its seat is in the city of Kamienna Góra ( German Landeshut in Silesia ). The rural community, to which the city of Kamienna Góra itself does not belong, has an area of ​​158 km², on which (as of June 30, 2019) 9019 people live. The municipality is part of the Neisse Euroregion .

geography

Map of the rural community

The rural community is located in Lower Silesia , about 20 kilometers southeast of Jelenia Góra ( Hirschberg ). Its area surrounds the city of Kamienna Góra to 98 percent.

history

The Protestant church in Schreibendorf, seven kilometers west of Landeshut (formerly in the Duchy of Schweidnitz-Jauer ; called Pisarzowice since 1945) was converted into a Catholic church on February 6, 1654 as part of the re-Catholicization of Silesia. The district of Niederschreibendorf belonged to the Protestant Heinrich von Planitz and Oberschreibendorf (often referred to in the literature as writing village) to the Catholic squire Christoph von Zedlitz (1630–1690).

From 1975 to 1998 the rural community of Kamienna Góra belonged to the Jelenia Góra Voivodeship .

Community structure

The rural community of Kamienna Góra consists of the following localities with school offices :

  • Czadrów ( Oberzieder )
  • Czarnów ( Rothenzechau )
  • Dobromyśl ( Kindelsdorf )
  • Debrznik ( Krausendorf )
  • Gorzeszów ( Görtelsdorf )
  • Janiszów ( Johnsdorf )
  • Kochanów ( Trautliebersdorf )
  • Krzeszów ( Grüssau )
  • Krzeszówek ( Neuen / Alt-Grüssau )
  • Leszczyniec ( Haselbach )
  • Nowa Białka ( Neuweistritz )
  • Ogorzelec ( urban Dittersbach )
  • Olszyny ( Erlendorf )
  • Pisarzowice ( Schreibendorf ), formerly also Niederschreibendorf and Oberschreibendorf
  • Przedwojów ( Reichhennersdorf )
  • Ptaszków ( Vogelsdorf )
  • Raszów ( Reussendorf )
  • Rędziny ( Wüstenröhrsdorf; 1937–45: Röhrsdorf (Riesengeb.) )
  • Szarocin ( Pfaffendorf )

Another place of the rural community is Betlejem .

Web links

Commons : Gmina Kamienna Góra  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  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. Michael Sachs: The flight of the evangelical wife Anna Magdalena von Reibnitz (1664– ~ 1745) with her five children from Silesia, threatened by forced Catholicization, in 1703 - a mood picture from the age of the Counter Reformation and Pietism. In: Medical historical messages. Journal for the history of science and specialist prose research. Volume 34, 2015 (2016), pp. 221–263, here: p. 221, note 1, and p. 239, note 41.
  3. Gustav Trogisch: Schreibendorf. Local news. Schreiberhau-Diesdorfer Rescue Centers, Diesdorf near Kuhnern 1887.
  4. Michael Sachs: The flight of the evangelical wife Anna Magdalena von Reibnitz (1664– ~ 1745) with her five children from Silesia, threatened by forced Catholicization, in 1703 - a mood picture from the age of the Counter Reformation and Pietism. In: Medical historical messages. Journal for the history of science and specialist prose research. Volume 34, 2015 (2016), pp. 221–263, here: p. 221, note 1.