Nowa Wieś (Czudec)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nowa Wieś
Nowa Wieś does not have a coat of arms
Nowa Wieś (Poland)
Nowa Wieś
Nowa Wieś
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Subcarpathian
Powiat : Strzyżowski
Gmina : Czudec
Area : 10.07  km²
Geographic location : 49 ° 57 '  N , 21 ° 50'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 56 '44 "  N , 21 ° 50' 17"  E
Residents : 851 (2011)
Postal code : 38-120
Telephone code : (+48) 17
License plate : RSR



Nowa Wieś (formerly Nowa Wieś Czudecka ) is a village with a Schulzenamt of the municipality of Czudec in the powiat Strzyżowski of the Subcarpathian Voivodeship in Poland .

Nepomuk statue in Nowa Wieś

geography

The place is in the Strzyżów Mountains , at the mouth of the Pstrągówka brook in the Wisłok . The neighboring towns are Przedmieście Czudeckie and Czudec in the north, Zaborów in the east, Łętownia and Glinik Charzewski in the south, and Pstrągowa in the east.

history

The place in the goods of Kunice (see Wielopole Skrzyńskie # history ) was around the year 1400 (or 1405) as the newly founded village under the German name Neuendorf (versus Tzus [Czucz] est edificata una villa que vocatur Nuendorf ... Nuendorff ) first mentioned in a document. Later the Polish-language mentions Nowa Wyessz (1445) and Nowa Wyesch (1479) followed. In addition to Schuffnerhaw and in contrast to Busserhaw ( Pstrągówka ?) And Noblicshaw ( Siedliska-Bogusz ?) In the same manuscript, there are no doubts about the identification today, but the proportion of German population in the place is difficult to determine or only presumably.

The first known owner in the early 15th century was Mikołaj Machhoptz (primo Nuendorff tenet Incola Machhopcz) , probably the ancestor of the Machowski family, who owned the village in the 15th century.

The village belonged to the Sandomir Voivodeship , Pilzno District , from 1569 in the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania . During the first partition of Poland , Nowa Wieś became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804).

After the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Habsburg monarchy , Nowa Wieś came to Poland in 1918. This was only interrupted by the German occupation of Poland in World War II . From 1975 to 1998 Nowa Wieś was part of the Rzeszów Voivodeship .

The local Roman Catholic parish was created in 1988 when it was separated from the mother parish in Czudec.

Individual evidence

  1. Dz.U. 1954 no 49 poz. 245
  2. Barbara Czopek-Kopciuch: Adaptacje niemieckich nazw miejscowych w języku polskim [The adaptation of German ON in Polish]. Prace Instytutu Języka Polskiego . Polska Akademia Nauk . Instytut Języka Polskiego, 1995, ISBN 83-8557933-8 , ISSN  0208-4074 , p. 81 (Polish, online ).
  3. The manuscript, incorrectly dated to 1488, was also included as an appendix to the book Liber beneficiorum dioecesis Cracoviensis (1470–1480) by the historian and geographer Jan Długosz .
  4. ^ A b Walther Kuhn: German settlements near Brzostek . In: Historical Society (Ed.): German Scientific Journal for Poland . No. 13, 1928, p. 60. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  5. a b c History of the village on the side of the Strzyżowski Powiat
  6. A. Myszka: Słownik toponimów powiatu strzyżowskiego . Rzeszów 2006, p. 23 (Polish, online [PDF]).
  7. Wojciech Blajer, Uwagi o stanie badań nad enklawami średniowiecznego osadnictwa niemieckiego między Wisłoką i Sanem [remarks on the status of research on the enclaves of medieval German settlement between Wisłoka and Sanzes ], [in: 2007 ] Późne, Karzesachsków 75, 85-87.

Web links

Commons : Nowa Wieś  - collection of images, videos and audio files