Sackenhoym

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Sackenhoym
Grabówka
Sackenhoym Grabówka does not have a coat of arms
Sackenhoym Grabówka (Poland)
Sackenhoym Grabówka
Sackenhoym
Grabówka
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Opole
Powiat : Kędzierzyn-Koźle (Kandrzin-Cosel)
Gmina : Birawa
Geographic location : 50 ° 17 '  N , 18 ° 16'  E Coordinates: 50 ° 16 '50 "  N , 18 ° 16' 27"  E
Residents : 216 ()
Postal code : 47-223
Telephone code : (+48) 77
License plate : OK
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Katowice



Sackenhoym (Polish Grabówka ) is a village in Upper Silesia . Sackenhoym is located in the Birawa municipality in the powiat Kędzierzyńsko-Kozielski (Kandrzin-Cosel district) in the Opole Voivodeship in Poland .

geography

Townscape
Wayside chapel

Sackenhoym is located three kilometers east of the municipality of Birawa , 10 kilometers southeast of the district town of Kędzierzyn-Koźle (Kandrzin-Cosel) and 50 kilometers southeast of the voivodeship capital Opole .

history

The place was founded as a colony in the second half of the 18th century. In 1774 the colony was first mentioned as Colonie Sackenhoym . In 1865 Sackenhoym had 29 cottage jobs.

In the referendum in Upper Silesia on March 20, 1921, 73 eligible voters voted for Upper Silesia to remain with Germany and 109 for membership in Poland. Sackenhoym remained with the German Empire after the division of Upper Silesia . Until 1945 the place was in the district of Cosel .

In 1945 the previously German town came under Polish administration and was renamed Grabówka and joined the Silesian Voivodeship. In 1950 the place came to the Opole Voivodeship . In 1999 the place came to the newly founded Powiat Kędzierzyńsko-Kozielski . On April 23, 2007 , German was introduced as the second official language in the Birawa municipality to which Grabówka belongs. On January 10, 2011, the place was also given the official German place name Sackenhoym .

Attractions

  • Wayside chapel

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Official website of the community ( memento of February 20, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on May 17, 2012
  2. Gerard Cell Bread: The social structure in the Upper Silesian villages in 1819 , research Ostmitteleuropa, 1987
  3. ^ Felix Triest : Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien, Volume 2 , J. Thorbecke, 1984
  4. Felix Triest : Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien , Breslau 1865
  5. ^ Results of the referendum in Upper Silesia of 1921: Literature , table in digital form ( Memento from January 15, 2017 in the Internet Archive )