Taciszów
Taciszów Tati Show |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Silesia | |
Powiat : | Gliwicki (Gleiwitz) | |
Gmina : | Rudziniec (Rudzinitz) | |
Geographic location : | 50 ° 22 ' N , 18 ° 32' E | |
Residents : | ||
Telephone code : | (+48) 032 | |
License plate : | SGL | |
Economy and Transport | ||
Rail route : | Gliwice – Kędzierzyn-Koźle | |
Next international airport : | Katowice-Pyrzowice |
Taciszów (German Tatischau ) is a place in Upper Silesia . It is located in the municipality of Rudziniec (Rudzinitz) in the powiat Gliwicki (district of Gliwice) in the Silesian Voivodeship .
geography
Taciszów is eight kilometers east of the township seat Rudziniec (Rudzinitz), 15 kilometers northwest of the district town Gliwice (Gleiwitz) and 37 kilometers west of the voivodeship capital Katowice .
To the east is the large basin of the Dzierżno reservoir , to the north runs the Gliwice Canal, which replaces the course of the Klodnitz at this point .
history
The place was created in the 13th century at the latest. 1295–1305 the place was first mentioned in a document as "Taczisow" in the Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis ( Tithe Register of the Diocese of Breslau) .
The place was mentioned in 1783 in the book Additions to the Description of Silesia as Tatischau and was in the Tost district of the Principality of Opole . At that time it had 68 residents, a farm , two fresh fires and 19 gardeners . In the middle of the 18th century the village was owned by Count Tenczin, his widow owned it from 1777 to 1778, and her son Joh. Erdmann Count Tenczin from 1778 to 1779. This was followed as the owner Gustav von Strachwitz (1779–1783), Lieutenant General Paul von Werner (1783–1785), his son August (1785–1790), Heinrich Leopold Graf von Seherr-Thoß (1790–1803). Von Strachwitz had two fresh fires built in Tatischau. In 1805 the nearby Klodnitz Canal was opened. In 1840 a cutting machine was put into operation. In 1865 Tatischau consisted of an estate and a village. The estate was part of the Bitschin estate. At that time, the place had seven dominant positions, eight gardener positions and 20 housekeeping positions, as well as a hut clerk building, an iron store and a lordly sub-forestry. The inhabitants lived mainly from work as ironworkers.
In the referendum in Upper Silesia on March 20, 1921, 116 local voters voted for Upper Silesia to remain with Germany and 169 for membership of Poland. Tatischau remained with the German Empire after the division of Upper Silesia . In 1936 the place was renamed Vatershausen in the course of a wave of renaming during the Nazi era . In 1939 the Gliwice Canal was opened. Until 1945 the place was in the district of Tost-Gleiwitz .
In 1945 the previously German town came under Polish administration and was then attached to the Silesian Voivodeship and renamed the Polish Taciszów . 1950 the place came to the Voivodeship Katowice. In 1999 the place came to the re-established Powiat Gliwicki and the Silesian Voivodeship.
Buildings
- Path chapel with bell tower
- Cemetery chapel
- Bell tower
- Felczyński Bell Foundry
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Friedrich Albert Zimmermann: Additions to the Description of Silesia , Volume 2 , Brieg 1783
- ↑ Hermann Adolph Fechner: History of the Silesian mining and metallurgy in the time of Frederick the Great, Frederick William II and Frederick William III. 1741-1806. , 1903
- ↑ Felix Triest : Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien , Breslau 1865
- ^ Results of the referendum in Upper Silesia in 1921: Literature , table in digital form