Siegenthal

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Old tombstones

The colony Siegenthal (Polish Zwycięska Dolina ) is an abandoned village in the Bieszczady in the area of ​​the municipality Ustrzyki Dolne in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship in Poland .

It is located in a wooded part of the Beskids in the extreme south-east of Poland on the Strwiąż in a hilly area 4 km behind Ustrzyki Dolne on the road to the former colony Obersdorf bei Krościenko .

history

The village was founded in 1783 by German settlers from Magdeburg in the course of the Josephine colonization after the settlement patent of Emperor Joseph II . The place, laid out as a forest hoof village, was part of the village of Brzegi Dolne and was part of the Sanok district in the so-called Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria until 1914 . Then it belonged to the powiat Dobromil until 1939 . The evangelical parish was parish in Bandrów until 1940 .

The colony was liquidated from 1946 . Individual tombstones from the former Protestant cemetery have been preserved.

Population

1784–1852: Bardua, baker, Berstler, Bräuer, Chanelles, Eberwein, Eisig, Frombach, Frambach, Görlitz, Götz, Günther, Haas, Hilbrunner, Hoffmann, Keller, Koch, Krebs, Lutz, Linder, Mattern, Raab, Schofer, Schwarz, Schweitzer, Wulle.

literature

  • M. Daum: Local family book Bandrów / Galizien. 1999.

Individual evidence

  1. “… Przemyśl and Sanok in the district authorities of the same name also show German settlers in 1786. In the district administration of Lisko the colony of Bandrow is mentioned in 1783/4 and Deutschberehy-Siegenthal in 1788. “[in:] Raimund Friedrich Kaindl: History of the Germans in the Carpathian countries .

Coordinates: 49 ° 28 '  N , 22 ° 38'  E