Ołtaszyn

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Ołtaszyn ( German Duke hooves until January 26, 1937 Oltaschin ) is a district of Wroclaw .

Geographical location

Oltashin in the southern outskirts of Wroclaw, about five kilometers south of the city center, on a map from 1905

The village is located in Lower Silesia in the Silesian lowlands, about five kilometers south of the center of Wroclaw .

history

Village church

Olzantino (1204), Oltetschin (1349) and Oltaschen (18th century) are older forms of the village name . From 1349 until the secularization in 1810, the farming village with a Catholic parish church belonged to the Breslau Cathedral Monastery in the Duchy of Breslau . The village had a Catholic school in the 19th century.

On January 26, 1937, Oltaschin was renamed Herzogshufen . By the year 1945 Duke hooves belonged to the District Hoinstein in district Wroclaw in district Breslau the Prussian province of Silesia of the German Reich .

Towards the end of the Second World War , Herzogshufen was occupied by the Red Army in the spring of 1945 . In the summer of 1945 the place under the name Ołtaszyn, like almost all of Silesia, became part of the People's Republic of Poland according to the Potsdam Agreement . In the period that followed, the German population, unless they had already been evacuated or fled, was expelled from Herzogshufen .

Population development until 1945

year Residents Remarks
1816 0 305
1825 0323 73 of them Evangelicals
1840 0333 84 of them Evangelicals
1852 0435
1871 0500
1933 1204
1939 1384

Attractions

  • John Nepomuk statue from the first half of the eighteenth century.

Parish

The Catholic village church was a branch of the parish of beggars . The evangelicals were parish at St. Salvator outside Breslau.

literature

  • Johann Georg Knie : Alphabetical-statistical-topographical overview of the villages, towns, cities and other places of the royal family. Preusz. Province of Silesia . 2nd edition, Breslau 1845, p. 461.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Johann Georg Knie : Alphabetical-statistical-topographical overview of the villages, towns, cities and other places of the royal family. Preusz. Province of Silesia . 2nd edition, Breslau 1845, p. 461.
  2. ^ Johann Ernst Fabri : New geographical magazine . 4. Bamd, 4th piece, Halle 1787, p. 80, item 124.
  3. ^ A b c Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. sch_breslau.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  4. Alexander August Mützell and Leopold Krug : New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state . Volume 3: Kr – O , Halle 1822, p. 316, item 525.
  5. ^ Johann Georg Knie : Alphabetical-statistical-topographical overview of the villages, spots, towns and other places of the royal family. Prussia. Province of Silesia, including the Margraviate of Upper Lusatia, which now belongs entirely to the province, and the County of Glatz; together with the attached evidence of the division of the country into the various branches of civil administration . Breslau 1830, p. 534.
  6. ^ Kraatz: Topographical-statistical manual of the Prussian state . Berlin 1856, p. 442.
  7. ^ Gustav Neumann: Geography of the Prussian State . 2nd edition, Volume 2, Berlin 1874, pp. 195–196, item 11.
  8. Michał Zalewski: Figura św. Jana Nepomucena na Ołtaszynie we Wrocławiu. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 3, 2019 ; Retrieved July 3, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / kapliczki.org