Konary (Przeworno)

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Konary
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Konary (Poland)
Konary
Konary
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lower Silesia
Powiat : Strzelin
Gmina : Przeworno
Geographic location : 50 ° 39 '  N , 17 ° 9'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 39 '10 "  N , 17 ° 9' 2"  E
Residents :



Konary [ kɔ'narɨ ] (German Kunern) is a village in the powiat Strzeliński in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland , which belongs to the municipality of Przeworno ( Prieborn ).

geography

Konary is located about 9 km northeast of Ziębice ( Münsterberg ).

Political Affiliation

Konary belonged as Kunern to the Principality of Münsterberg in Silesia . In Prussian times the place belonged to the Münsterberg district , from October 1, 1932 to the Strehlen district and, after the Second World War, to the Republic of Poland ; here as part of the Powiat Strzeliński ( Strehlen ) initially to the Wroclaw Voivodeship, from 1975 to 1998 to the Wałbrzych Voivodeship and since 1999 to the Lower Silesian Voivodeship.

history

Kunern was the old ancestral seat of the von Sebottendorf family (first mentioned there in 1374), in 1548 the property was reorganized into two parts. Share I went to the Imperial Lieutenant Flaschke in 1656, to the Seidlitz family in 1683, to the von Landskron family in 1696 and finally back to the von Sebottendorf family in 1709. Share II remained with the Sebottendorfs until 1654, only to come back to the Sebottendorf family via the Rapazky von Rapaz, Schimonsky, Nimptsch, Hoberg and Kottulinsky in 1712. The Prince-Bishop's Government Councilor Abraham Friedrich von Sebottendorf then sold all of Kuhnern in 1721 to Johann Ernst von Lohenstein, who finally sold it in 1737 to his son-in-law Palle Max von Gaffron and Oberstradam (born August 12, 1714 in Schleswig). His descendant Hermann (1797-1870) was raised to the Prussian baron class with the predicate Gaffron-Kunern in 1840 . When his son Theodor von Gaffron-Kunern sold Kunern to the House of Saxony-Weimar in 1882, the descendants lost the title of baron. Kunern then remained in the possession of middle-class families until 1945.

The last mansion in Konary ( Kunern ) was rebuilt in the 18th century by the Gaffron and Lohenstein families. It burned down on December 13, 1921 and was rebuilt soon after. It initially fell into disrepair after 1945, but was then extensively renovated and has been a listed building since 1979.

church

Kunern belonged to the Evangelical Church in Schreibendorf . The few Catholic residents belonged to the church in Berzdorf.

Residents

year Residents
1785 208
1840 312 (of which 32 are Catholic)
1901 258
1913 209
1941 385

Manor Merzdorf

Merzdorf (also Märzdorf) belonged to the Münsterberg district, came to the Münchhof district in 1874 and together with it on October 1, 1932 to the Strehlen district. It was then connected to the municipality of Haltauf and finally united with Kunern on April 1, 1937. The manor Merzdorf is said to have been mentioned for the first time in 1234. In 1479 the von Walditz family was confirmed as the owner. After 1505 parts of it came to the Sebottendorf, Kreckwitz and Keul, until it came back completely to the Dresky family in 1587. 1616 to the Nimptsch, 1630 to the Krocker, 1721 to the Löwenstein, then to the Sebottendorf. Sophie Teresia von Bock, née von Ohl and Adlerskron, bought it in 1749 and sold it to Barbara Sophie von Taubadel in 1754 . Then it came to her husband Carl Sylvius von Goldfluss and in 1800 to the family von Gaffron and Oberstradam . She first sold it to Friedrich von Minckwitz in 1820, bought it again in 1832, sold it to Albert Heller in 1834, only to buy it again in 1841. In 1882 the property finally passed to the House of Saxony-Weimar and until the Second World War it belonged to middle-class families.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ↑ Successful ownership according to: Zimmermann, Friedrich Albert, Entries for the Description of Silesia, Volume 4, Brieg 1785, pp. 63–65
  2. Knie, Johann Georg, Alphabetical-statistical-topographical overview of the villages, towns, cities and other places of the royal family. Preuss. Province of Silesia, Breslau, 1845, p. 406
  3. ^ Successful ownership according to: Zimmermann, Friedrich Albert, Entries for the Description of Silesia, Volume 4, Brieg 1785, pp. 68–69