Tarnawka (Markowa)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tarnawka
Coat of arms is missing
Help on coat of arms
Tarnawka (Poland)
Tarnawka
Tarnawka
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Subcarpathian
Powiat : Łańcucki
Gmina : Markova
Geographic location : 49 ° 57 '  N , 22 ° 17'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 57 '3 "  N , 22 ° 16' 45"  E
Residents : 475 (2013)
Postal code : 37-121
Telephone code : (+48) 17
License plate : RLA



Tarnawka is a village with a Schulzenamt in the municipality of Markowa in the Powiat Łańcucki of the Subcarpathian Voivodeship in Poland .

geography

The place is located in the Dynów Mountains , on the Tarnawka stream, a left tributary of the Mleczka, about 12 km south of Łańcut and 20 km southeast of Rzeszów .

Neighboring towns are Husów in the north, Chodakówka in the northeast, Sietesz in the east, Manasterz and Hadle Kańczuckie in the southeast, Hadle Szklarskie in the south, and Zabratówka and Grzegorzówka in the southwest.

history

The place was founded in the late 14th or early 15th century by the noble Pilecki family, probably under Wallachian law , after the locator - Ładomir Wołoszyn - received the village of Hodle Pole (the name Pole indicated an empty desert; today Hadle Kańczuckie and Szklarskie).

Until the Vistula campaign (1947), the majority of the village was Ruthenian . The first Greek Catholic (after 1946 Roman Catholic) church was built in 1628.

During the first partition of Poland , Tarnawka became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804). After the abolition of patrimonial with serfdom , it formed a municipality in the district and judicial district of Przeworsk from 1850 . In 1900 the community had 709 hectares, 210 houses with 1,081 inhabitants, the majority of whom were Greek-Catholic (778) and Ruthenian-speaking (795), except for the Roman Catholic (222) and Polish-speaking (205) and 81 German-speaking (actually Yiddish-speaking) ) Jews.

In 1918, after the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the place became part of Poland. This was only interrupted by the occupation of Poland by the Wehrmacht in World War II .

From 1975 to 1998 Tarnawka was part of the Rzeszów Voivodeship .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Uzasadnienie heraldyczno-historyczne projektów symboli gminy Markowa ( pl )
  2. Ludwig Patryn (Ed.): Community encyclopedia of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Reichsrat, edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1900, XII. Galicia . Vienna 1907 ( online ).