Słupice (Pakosławice)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Słupice
Schlaupitz
Słupice Schlaupitz does not have a coat of arms
Słupice Schlaupitz (Poland)
Słupice Schlaupitz
Słupice
Schlaupitz
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Opole
Powiat : Nysa
Gmina : Pakoslawice
Geographic location : 50 ° 33 '  N , 17 ° 14'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 32 '46 "  N , 17 ° 13' 55"  E
Height : 240-280 m npm
Residents : 78 (March 31, 2011)
Postal code : 48-314
Telephone code : (+48) 77
License plate : ONY
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Wroclaw Airport



Słupice (German Schlaupitz , 1936–1945 Schlaubental ) is a village in the rural municipality of Pakosławice in Poland . It is located in the powiat Nyski (Neisse district) in the Opole Voivodeship .

geography

Geographical location

The street village of Słupice is located in the southwest of the historical region of Upper Silesia . The place is about twelve kilometers west of the municipality Pakosławice , about eleven kilometers northwest of the district town Nysa and about 60 kilometers southwest of the voivodeship capital Opole .

Słupice is located in the Nizina Śląska ( Silesian Plain ) within the Równina Grodkowska ( Grottkau Plain ). The Korzkiew ( Korkwitzer Bach ) flows through the place , a left tributary of the Glatzer Neisse . This is dammed southeast of the village to Jezioro Korzkiew .

District

The hamlet of Spiny ( Spienau ) is part of Słupice .

Neighboring places

Neighboring places of Słupice are in the northeast Biechów ( Bechau ), in the southeast Nowaki ( Nowag ), in the southwest Karłowice Wielkie ( Groß-Karlowitz ) and in the northwest Kłodobok ( Klodebach ).

history

Wayside chapel

In the work Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis from the years 1295-1305, the place is mentioned for the first time as a sloop slope . In 1369 it was mentioned as Slupisch as well as in 1398 Aldindorff and 1401 Slupicz . The German place name is derived from the former location in the forest and the old Slavic place name Slupicze and means roughly Phalheim .

After the First Silesian War in 1742, Schlaupitz and most of Silesia fell to Prussia .

After the reorganization of the province of Silesia , the rural community of Schlaupitz belonged to the district of Neisse in the administrative district of Opole from 1816 . In 1845 there were 28 houses and 237 people in the village, two of them Protestant. In 1855 there were 269 people living in the village. In 1865 there were 23 gardeners and eight cottages and a water mill in the village . The residents of Groß-Karlowitz were trained and parish. In 1874 the district of Bechau was founded, which consisted of the rural communities of Bechau, Guttwitz, Rottwitz and Schlaupitz and the manor districts of Bechau, Rottwitz and Schlaupitz. In 1885 Schlaupitz had 227 inhabitants.

In 1933 214 people lived in Schlaupitz. On August 18, 1936, the place was renamed Schlaubental in the course of a wave of renaming during the Nazi era . In 1939 Schlaubental had 182 inhabitants. Until 1945 the place was in the district of Neisse .

In 1945 Schlaubental came under Polish administration and was renamed Słupice , the population was expelled. In 1950 Słupice came to the Opole Voivodeship. In 1999 the place came to the re-established Powiat Nyski .

Attractions

  • Stone wayside chapel

Web links

Commons : Słupice (Pakosławice)  - 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 14, 2020
  2. Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis
  3. a b Johann Georg Knie : Alphabetical-statistical-topographical overview of the villages, towns, cities and other places of the royal family. Preuss. Province of Silesia. Breslau 1845, p. 592.
  4. ^ Heinrich Adamy : The Silesian place names. Their origin and meaning - a picture from the past. Priebatsch, Breslau 1889, p. 45
  5. Cf. Felix Triest: Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien. Breslau 1865, p. 999.
  6. ^ Territorial district of Bechau
  7. AGoFF circle Neisse
  8. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Neisse district (Polish Nysa). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).