Wola Radziszowska

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Wola Radziszowska
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Wola Radziszowska (Poland)
Wola Radziszowska
Wola Radziszowska
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lesser Poland
Powiat : Kraków
Gmina : Skawina
Geographic location : 49 ° 55 '  N , 19 ° 48'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 54 '36 "  N , 19 ° 47' 57"  E
Height : 235-392 m npm
Residents : 2407 (2012)
Telephone code : (+48) 12
License plate : KRA



View of the village

Wola Radziszowska is a village with a Schulzenamt of the municipality of Skawina in the Powiat Krakowski of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship in Poland .

geography

The place is located on the Cedron or Skawinka River , southwest of the Bronaczowa Forest .

The neighboring towns are Polanka Hallera in the northwest, Radziszów in the northeast, Krzywaczka in the southeast, Biertowice in the south, Podolany and Zarzyce Małe in the southwest.

history

The area between the rivers Skawa in the west and Skawinka in the east was separated from Lesser Poland in 1274 and attached to the Duchy of Opole . The already existing village of Wola was divided into two parts: the part on the left bank became Silesian, the other remained with the Duchy of Krakow . Shortly afterwards, Duke Wladislaus I gave or sold the village to the Tyniec Abbey . The Benedictines had owned the neighboring village of Radziszów earlier and transferred both villages to German law under the common mayor Iohannes de Radesow et Wola . The mayor took part in the Krakow uprising of Bailiff Albert and had to leave the property in 1311 (Polish part). Probably at the turn of the 13th to the 14th century, two parishes were also established. The parish of Novo Radissow was first mentioned in the Peterspfennigregister of 1326 in the deanery Zator of the Krakow diocese (while Radziszów was Antiquo Radissow ). In the middle of the 15th century, it was also called Brunaczowa Wolia . The then disappeared village of Brunaczów was located a little east of Wola, on the Harbutówka river, under the forest, named after the village of Bronaczowa . The abandoned grounds of Brunaczów were probably divided between Wola, Radziszów, Głogoczów and Mogilany at that time.

From 1327 the border on the Skawinka / Cedron river was international between the kingdoms of Bohemia and Poland , when Duke John I of Auschwitz paid homage to the Bohemian King John of Luxembourg . Since 1445 the Silesian part of the village belonged to the Duchy of Zator , this was sold to Poland in 1494 and completely incorporated in 1564.

During the first partition of Poland , Wola Radziszowska came to the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 (from 1804).

In 1918, after the end of the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, Wola Radziszowska came to Poland. This was only interrupted by the occupation of Poland by the Wehrmacht in World War II . It then belonged to the General Government .

From 1975 to 1998 Wola Radziszowska was part of the Kraków Voivodeship .

Attractions

  • Wooden church from the turn of the 15th to the 16th century

Web links

Commons : Wola Radziszowska  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Julian Zinkow: Wokół Kalwarii Zebrzydowskiej i lanckorona . Wydawnictwo "CALVARIANUM", Kalwaria Zebrzydowska 2000, ISBN 83-8739541-2 , p. 197-303 (Polish).
  2. January Ptaśnik (editor): Monumenta Poloniae Vaticana T.1 Acta Apostolicae Camerae. Vol. 1, 1207-1344 . Sums. Academiae Litterarum Cracoviensis, Cracoviae 1913, pp. 127-131 ( online ).
  3. Dz.U. 1975 no 17 poz. 92 (Polish) (PDF file; 783 kB)