Nowa Wieś Mała (Grodków)

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Nowa Wieś Mała
Klein Neudorf
Nowa Wieś Mała Klein Neudorf does not have a coat of arms
Nowa Wieś Mała Klein Neudorf (Poland)
Nowa Wieś Mała Klein Neudorf
Nowa Wieś Mała
Klein Neudorf
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Opole
Powiat : Brzeg
Gmina : Grodków
Geographic location : 50 ° 41 '  N , 17 ° 23'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 40 '36 "  N , 17 ° 23' 10"  E
Height : 175 m npm
Residents : 371 (March 31, 2011)
Postal code : 49-200
Telephone code : (+48) 77
License plate : IF
Economy and Transport
Street : Ext. 401 Nysa - Brzeg
Next international airport : Wroclaw



Nowa Wieś Mała (German Klein Neudorf ) is a village in the municipality of Grodków (Grottkau) in the Opole Voivodeship in Poland .

geography

Geographical location

The street village Nowa Wieś Mała is located in the west of the historical region of Upper Silesia in the Grottkauer Land. Nowa Wieś Mała is located two kilometers south of the parish seat Grodków , about 26 kilometers southwest of the county seat Brzeg ( Brieg ) and about forty kilometers west of the voivodship Opole.

Nowa Wieś Mała lies in the Nizina Śląska ( Silesian Plain ) within the Równina Grodkowska ( Grottkau Plain ). The Voivodeship Road Droga wojewódzka 401 runs through the village . The Nysa – Brzeg railway runs west of the village .

Neighboring places

Neighboring villages of Nowa Wieś Mała are in the north the municipality seat Grodków ( Grottkau ) and in the south Stary Grodków ( Alt Grottkau ).

history

Road cross from 1933
Street part in the village center

Klein Neudorf was founded around 1250 under German law and first mentioned in 1271 as Nova villa . The village owned a Scholzengut and was tithed to the Kamenz monastery . In 1324 it belonged to a Hermann von Adelungisbach. In 1343 Nova villa was acquired by the city of Grottkau, with whom it came to the episcopal principality of Neisse in 1344 . In 1579 the town of Grottkau ruled the village.

After the First Silesian War in 1742, Klein Neudorf and most of the Principality of Neisse fell to Prussia .

After the reorganization of the province of Silesia , the rural community of Klein Neudorf belonged to the district of Grottkau in the administrative district of Opole from 1816 . In 1855, 320 people lived in Klein Neudorf. In 1874 the district of Alt Grottkau was founded, to which Klein Neudorf was incorporated. The first head of office was the manor owner and Lieutenant Scupin from Klein Neudorf. In 1885 Klein Neudorf had 236 inhabitants.

In 1902/03 the village was sold to the Provincial Education Institute. In 1912 the buildings went to the Province of Upper Silesia, which set up a welfare and educational institution in the buildings. In 1933 there were 360 ​​inhabitants in Klein Neudorf, in 1939 there were 289. Until the end of the war in 1945 the place belonged to the district of Grottkau .

As a result of the Second World War, Klein Neudorf fell under Polish administration in 1945, like most of Silesia . Subsequently, the place was renamed Nowa Wieś Mała and joined the Silesian Voivodeship. In 1950 it was incorporated into the Opole Voivodeship. In 1999 the place came to the newly founded Powiat Brzeski ( Brieg district ).

Attractions

  • Crossroads from 1933
  • Old memory

societies

  • Football club LZS Nowa Wieś Mała

literature

  • Bernhard W. Scholz: The spiritual principality Neisse . 2011 Böhlau Verlag Cologne Weimar Vienna, ISBN 978-3-412-20628-4 , p. 363
  • G. Wilczek: Greetings from the Grottkauer Lande . Federal Association of Grottkau eV - home group district and city of Grottkau / Upper Silesia. 1996, p. 134

Web links

Commons : Nowa Wieś Mała (Grodków)  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. CIS 2011: Ludność w miejscowościach statystycznych według ekonomicznych grup wieku (Polish), March 31, 2011, accessed on January 27, 2019
  2. Cf. Felix Triest: Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien. Breslau 1865, p. 1177 ( preview in Google book search).
  3. Alt Grottkau district
  4. Grottkau district. In: agoff.de, AGoFF , accessed on January 27, 2020.
  5. ^ Administrative history - Grottkau district ( Memento from September 3, 2017 in the Internet Archive )