Rogóżka

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rogóżka
Rogóżka does not have a coat of arms
Rogóżka (Poland)
Rogóżka
Rogóżka
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lower Silesia
Powiat : Kłodzko
Gmina : Stronie Śląskie
Geographic location : 50 ° 17 '  N , 16 ° 49'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 17 '0 "  N , 16 ° 48' 38"  E
Height : 540-740 m npm
Residents : 0
Postal code : 57-550
Telephone code : (+48) 74
License plate : DKL
Economy and Transport
Street : Konradów –Rogóżka
Next international airport : Wroclaw



Rogóżka (German Wolmsdorf ) is a desolate village in the powiat Kłodzki in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland . The area belongs to the urban and rural municipality Stronie Śląskie .

geography

Rogóżka is located in the southeast of the Kłodzko Basin in the northern foothills of the Kłodzko Snow Mountains . Neighboring towns are Kąty Bystrzyckie and Stronie Śląskie in the northeast, Sienna and Janowa Góra in the south, Biała Woda in the southwest, Marcinków and Czatków ( Tschihak ) in the west and Konradów in the northwest.

history

Wolmsdorf limestone quarry, dated 1934

Wolmsdorf was first mentioned in 1346 as Wolframsdorf . It belonged to the Karpenstein dominion in the Glatzer Land and was owned by the Crown of Bohemia . In 1684, the Bohemian Chamber sold Wolfsdorf as well as the villages of Oberthalheim, Voigtsdorf , Leuthen , Karpenstein , Konradswalde and Winkeldorf, which also belonged to the Landecker district, to the Glatzer regent of the imperial chamber estates and imperial councilor Sigmund Hofmann († 1698), who was named by the emperor “von Leuchtenstern “Had been raised to the nobility. His grandson Leopold Reichsgraf von Leuchtenstern sold Wolmsdorf and Winkeldorf to Count Georg Olivier von Wallis , who already had extensive possessions in the County of Glatz and connected Wolmsdorf with the rule of Seitenberg .

After the Silesian Wars , Wolmsdorf and the County of Glatz fell to Prussia in 1763 with the Peace of Hubertusburg . In 1783 Stephan Olivier von Wallis sold all the properties inherited from his father to the hereditary land management director Friedrich Wilhelm Graf von Schlabrendorf on Stolz und Hassitz. Although in 1789 he sold the rulers Seitenberg and Plomnitz to the royal judiciary Franz von Mutius on Gellenau and Altwasser , he kept the villages Wolmsdorf, Winkeldorf, Weißwasser and Martinsberg for himself and incorporated them into his rule Kunzendorf . After the reorganization of Prussia, Wolmsdorf belonged to the province of Silesia from 1815 and was initially incorporated into the district of Glatz . In 1818 it was reorganized into the newly formed Habelschwerdt district , with which it remained connected until 1945. From the end of the 19th century, Wolmsdorf developed into a summer resort. In 1939 there were 124 inhabitants.

As a result of the Second World War , Wolmsdorf, like almost all of Silesia, fell to Poland and was renamed Rogóżka . The German residents were expelled. The newly settled residents were partly displaced from eastern Poland , which had fallen to the Soviet Union . After production in the limestone quarries came to a standstill in the post-war years, the residents gradually left the place, so that the houses and farms were left to decay. At the end of the 1970s, Rogóżka was no longer considered to be inhabited. In the years 1975-1998 Rogóżka belonged to the Wałbrzych Voivodeship (German Waldenburg ).

Church conditions

Ruins of the St. Ignatius Chapel

Wolmsdorf initially belonged to the parish church “St. Cross ”in Konradswalde. After almost all of the inhabitants professed their Lutheran faith, Konradswalde and the villages dedicated to it became a branch of the then Catholic parish of Neuwaltersdorf in 1559 by order of the then pledgee of the County of Glatz, Duke Ernst of Bavaria . The pastor there was obliged to alternately perform the services in the two churches. After the Lutheran doctrine expanded, a Lutheran pastor was appointed to Konradswalde in 1571. In 1604 he was relieved of his office on imperial orders and Konradswalde and all the parish villages were handed over to the Catholic pastor of Neuwaltersdorf as a branch. During the time of the Bohemian uprising in 1618 , the Catholic priests were expelled from the inhabitants, and Lutheran pastors were again employed in Konradswalde and Neuwaltersdorf. After the recapture of the County of Glatz by the imperial troops in 1622/23, a Catholic priest was installed in Neuwaltersdorf, to whom Konradswalde and the associated villages were assigned as a branch. At the request of the then landlord Johann Anton von Frobel, the parish of Konradswalde was rebuilt in 1737 with the permission of the Archbishop of Prague Manderscheid-Blankenheim and Wolmsdorf together with Heudorf and Tschihak were again dedicated to this. The Neuwaltersdorfer Johann Heinrich Less was appointed pastor, who held the office until 1761.

Attractions

  • Ruins of the St. Ignatius Chapel. The chapel was built in 1765 on the site of an earlier wooden chapel and was first consecrated in honor of St. Mary and St. Francis Xavier.
  • The stalactite cave discovered in 1885 was called Wolmsdorferhöhle . Because of the limestone quarrying at the time, it has not been accessible since 1962 for safety reasons.

Personalities

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Arno Herzig , Małgorzata Ruchniewicz : History of the Glatzer country . Hamburg-Wrocław 2006. ISBN 3-934632-12-2 , p. 457