Trzebosz

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Trzebosz
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Trzebosz (Poland)
Trzebosz
Trzebosz
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Greater Poland
Powiat : Rawicz
Gmina : Bojanowo
Geographic location : 51 ° 41 ′  N , 16 ° 44 ′  E Coordinates: 51 ° 40 ′ 41 ″  N , 16 ° 43 ′ 55 ″  E
Residents :
Postal code : 63-940
Telephone code : (+48) 95
License plate : PRE



Triebusch Castle

Trzebosz ( German Triebusch ) is a place in the Powiat Rawicki of the Greater Poland Voivodeship .

history

In 1406 the village of Triebusch was founded under German law. After being conquered in the First Silesian War, Triebusch came to Brandenburg-Prussia as part of the former principality of Wohlau , one of the Silesian subduchies . In 1741 the Prussian administration formed the districts of Steinau-Raudten and Wohlau from the old Silesian soft images of Raudten, Steinau and Wohlau , to which Triebsch came.

During the district reform of January 1, 1818, Triebusch, like many other localities in the district, moved to the district of Guhrau . The Triebusch manor owned, among others, the Bothmer family from 1700 to 1766 and the Prussian Minister of State Friedrich Christoph von Görne (1734-1817) from 1776 to 1779. Then the place came to Karl Sylvius von Königsdorff from 1780 to 1821 and his heirs ( until 1863). Subsequently, Count Otto Gustav Alexander von der Schulenburg owned the Triebusch manor until 1885. The new owner was Günther Reichsgraf Finck von Finckenstein , the previous entrant in Reitwein , Lebus district .

On November 8, 1919, the province of Silesia was divided into the provinces of Lower and Upper Silesia . Triebusch, like the whole Guhrau district, came to the former. When the Treaty of Versailles came into force on January 10, 1920, the rural communities of Gabel, Katschkau, Roniken and Triebusch as well as the manor districts of Gabel, Roniken and Triebusch fell from the Guhrau district to the re-established Poland , Poznan Voivodeship . This also changed the local Protestant parish from the Old Prussian Church Province of Silesia to the Church Province of Posen , which was then reconstituted in 1921 as the Uniate Evangelical Church in Poland .

Personalities

  • Heinrich Wiese (* around 1850), German clergyman, royal district school inspector and Protestant pastor in Triebusch (1881–1890)

literature

  • Erich Schultze: Triebuscher Chronicle: History of the village of Triebusch, district of Guhrau , self-published, 1906.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Roland Gehrke: State Parliament and the Public: Provincial Parliamentarism in Silesia 1825-1845 . Böhlau Verlag, Cologne 2009, ISBN 978-3-412-20413-6 , pp. 45 ( partially digitized ).
  2. ^ Territorial changes in Germany
  3. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Breslau 1817, No. XLV . New division and demarcation of the circles in the Breslau government department of October 31, 1817. Breslau, p. 476 ff . ( Digitized version ).