Sadoleś
Sadoleś | ||
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Mazovia | |
Powiat : | Węgrowski | |
Gmina : | Sadowne | |
Geographic location : | 52 ° 39 ' N , 21 ° 52' E | |
Residents : | 302 (2011) | |
Postal code : | 07-140 | |
Telephone code : | (+48) 25 | |
License plate : | WWE |
Sadoleś is a village with a Schulzenamt of the rural community Sadowne in powiat Węgrowski of the Masovian Voivodeship in Poland .
history
The place was first mentioned in 1643. The name is derived from the local word for gray, crooked, scruffy .
During the Third Partition of Poland , Sadoleś was annexed to the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire on the northern edge of the new West Galicia in 1795 . In 1809 it came to the Duchy of Warsaw and in 1815 to the newly formed Russian-dominated Congress Poland . In 1831 German colonists founded the evangelical branch of Węgrów on the property of Count Zamoisky in Sadoles . In 1836 there were 44 colonist families in Sadoleś.
After the end of the First World War , Sadoleś came to Poland. In the 1921 census, 294 residents declared themselves Polish, 137 German and 10 Jewish. During the Second World War it belonged to the Warsaw District in the Generalgouvernement . From 1975 to 1998 Sadoleś was part of the Siedlce Voivodeship .
Personalities
- Stanisław Wycech (1902–2008), Polish war veteran in World War I, the last Polish veteran of this war still alive on the day of his death;
Web links
- Sadoleś . In: Filip Sulimierski, Władysław Walewski (eds.): Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich . tape 10 : Rukszenice – Sochaczew . Walewskiego, Warsaw 1889, p. 203 (Polish, edu.pl ).