Podolsze

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Podolsze
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Podolsze (Poland)
Podolsze
Podolsze
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lesser Poland
Powiat : Oświęcim
Gmina : Zator
Area : 10.85  km²
Geographic location : 50 ° 1 '  N , 19 ° 26'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 0 '44 "  N , 19 ° 26' 5"  E
Height : 226 m npm
Residents : 1416 (2016)
Postal code : 32-640
Telephone code : (+48) 33
License plate : KOS



Podolsze is a village with a Schulzenamt of the municipality Zator in the powiat Oświęcimski of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship in Poland .

Village center

geography

Podolsze is the largest and most populous village in the municipality. It has an area of ​​1085 ha .

The place is located on the right, southern bank of the Vistula at the mouth of the Skawa River .

Neighboring towns are Jankowice in the north, Smolice in the east, Palczowice in the southeast, the city of Zator in the south, Przeciszów in the west and Las in the northwest.

history

In 1569, King Sigismund II confirmed the privileges of the town of Zator, including one from 1292, when the village of Podolsze was mentioned. The topographical name is derived from pod olchą (under alder ) with the suffix -e.

Politically, the village originally belonged to the Duchy of Auschwitz , which existed from 1315 during the period of Polish particularism . Since 1327 consisted suzerainty of the Kingdom of Bohemia . Since 1445 it belonged to the Duchy of Zator , which was sold to the Polish king in 1494. In 1564 Podolsze was fully incorporated as part of the new Silesian District of the Krakow Voivodeship to the Kingdom of Poland , from 1569 the Polish-Lithuanian aristocratic republic .

In 1420, Duke Casimir I assigned it to a knight Rachwald . Since 1482 it belonged to the Mikołaj Porębski. Later (16th / 17th century) it belonged to the Myszkowski family and then to the Krakow Dominicans.

During the first partition of Poland , Podolsze became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804). From 1782 it belonged to the Myslenice district (1819 with the seat in Wadowice ). After the abolition of patrimonial , after 1850 it formed a parish in the Wadowice District , later in the Oświęcim District .

In 1918, after the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, Podolsze became part of Poland and the Krakow Voivodeship . This was only interrupted by the occupation of Poland by the Wehrmacht in World War II . It then belonged to the district of Bielitz in the administrative district of Katowice in the province of Silesia (since 1941 province of Upper Silesia ).

From 1975 to 1998 Podolsze was part of the Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Podolsze. Retrieved May 2, 2016 .
  2. Kazimierz Rymut , Barbara Czopek-Kopciuch: Nazwy miejscowe Polski: historia, pochodzenie, zmiany . 9 (Po-Q). Polska Akademia Nauk . Instytut Języka Polskiego, Kraków 2013, p. 60 (Polish, online ).
  3. Dz.U. 1975 no 17 poz. 92 (Polish) (PDF file; 783 kB)

Web links

Commons : Podolsze  - collection of images, videos and audio files