Pudliszki

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Pudliszki
Pudliszki does not have a coat of arms
Pudliszki (Poland)
Pudliszki
Pudliszki
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Greater Poland
Powiat : Gostyński
Gmina : Krobia
Geographic location : 51 ° 46 ′  N , 16 ° 56 ′  E Coordinates: 51 ° 46 ′ 0 ″  N , 16 ° 56 ′ 0 ″  E
Residents : 2331 (2010)
Postal code : 63-842
Telephone code : (+48) 65
License plate : PGS
Economy and Transport
Street : Rydzyna - Krobia
Next international airport : Poznań-Ławica



Pudliszki [ pu'dliʃci ] ( German Pudlischki , 1939–45 Großgarten ) is a village in Poland in the Greater Poland Voivodeship in the municipality of Krobia .

Geographical location

Pudliszki is located about five kilometers west of the town of Krobia on the left bank of the small river Polski Rów , a right tributary of the Barycz in the Leszno area.

history

Not far from the village are urn graves from the Kurgan culture . In eleven open graves, sickles , bracelets and needles from around 700 to 400 BC were found as grave goods . BC as well as traces of a fortification wall from the 10th century. During this time, Scandinavians of the Awdańce family , later the Lelewit, settled. In the 13th century the area became the property of a Cistercian monastery . At the end of the 14th and beginning of the 15th centuries, Marcin Pudliszko received the area between the villages of Kokoszk and Adamów for his services in the war. Documents later confirmed the existence of a village. So in 1688 Krzysztofow Gorzeński sold the village to Andrzej Gostyński . In the first half of the 18th century Andrzej Wilczyński inherited the village and leased it to Wojciech Morawski . Wilczyński later mortgaged the land, and Morawski then bought it. In 1783, Morawski's son Franciszek Morawski was born. He later was general, adjutant to Jan Henryk Dąbrowski , ambassador and minister of war. In 1823 Pudliszki became the property of the Łubieńscy family . Her youngest son Feliks Łubieński was later Minister of Law in the Duchy of Warsaw .

Culture and sights

Buildings

In 1823 the classicist palace was rebuilt under Józef Łubieński . The palace had a basement and a habitable attic. During the time of Jósef Łubieński, Adam Mickiewicz was received in 1831 , and Cyprian Kamil Norwid in 1842 and 1846 . The palace was later rebuilt many times. It is currently in good condition and partly inhabited. The roof is four-sided. The facade is formed by a risalit that is divided into three parts by pilasters according to the Ionic order .

Sports

A stadium was built in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It is used by the Zjednoczeni sports club, among others .

Economy and Infrastructure

Established businesses

The main company is Pudliszki SA . The history of food production in Pudliszki looks back on a long tradition. So Józef Łubieński founded one of the first sugar factories in Greater Poland . The later owner Kennemann closed the sugar factory and opened a more profitable distillery . In 1919 the agricultural engineer Stanisław Fenrych bought the factory. The neighbors, who knew the company's poor condition, said that it was more likely that pears grow in the pasture ( gruszki na wierzbie , a Polish phrase to express the impossible) than that it could make a profit. He replied that this should then be done, and two years later his company was profitable. So Fenrych decided that he would use pears in a green pasture as his company logo, and it continues to do so today. In the first years production took place in the basement of the palace. As early as 1923, production began in a newly built factory with 200 employees. In 1927 the factory financed the trip to London for two professors from the Piast University in Poznan . There they should get to know the production techniques of ketchup. By adopting this technology, it was possible to start production in Pudliszki. In the 1930s , despite the recession , around 800 people worked here. Products have been exported to the USA, France and Germany. During the Second World War , the workers at the factory secretly supported the inmates and relatives of Nazi camps. After the end of the war, the company was nationalized. Despite everything, investments were made and the company expanded. In 1994 the company was converted into a public limited company. In 1997 the HJ Heinz Company acquired the majority of the stock corporation. This led to increased investments, among other things, in environmental protection. Today the company is mainly engaged in processing tomatoes and other vegetables. With a production of around 6,100 tons of tomato paste, the company is the market leader in Poland.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Główny Urząd Statystyczny, Portret miejscowości statystycznych w gminie Krobia (powiat gostyński, województwo wielkopolskie) w 2010 r. Online query