Wrzosówka (Lądek-Zdrój)
Wrzosówka | ||
---|---|---|
Help on coat of arms |
|
|
Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Lower Silesia | |
Powiat : | Kłodzko | |
Gmina : | Lądek-Zdrój | |
Geographic location : | 50 ° 23 ' N , 16 ° 54' E | |
Height : | 700 m npm | |
Residents : | ||
Postal code : | 57-540 | |
Telephone code : | (+48) 74 | |
License plate : | DKL | |
Economy and Transport | ||
Street : | Lądek-Zdrój –Wrzosówka | |
Next international airport : | Wroclaw |
Wrzosówka (German Heidelberg ; also Heidelberg b. Landeck ) is a depopulated village in the southeast of the powiat Kłodzki in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland. It is located four kilometers northeast of Lądek-Zdrój ( Bad Landeck ), to whose municipality it belongs.
geography
Wrzosówka is located in the southeast of the Glatzer Kessel on the southern slope of the Reichensteiner Mountains . It can be reached via an access road that leaves Lądek-Zdrój in the east and ends in Wrzosówka. The border with the Czech Republic runs one kilometer to the east. Neighboring towns are Lutynia and Ułęże ( About Schaar ) in the south, Ladek-Zdroj and Wójtówka the southwest and Orłowiec in the northwest. Across the border is the village of Travná .
history
Heidelberg was mentioned in 1517 with a Hegerei ( forester's house ). It was a Bohemian chamber village and belonged to the Landecker district in the Glatzer country . It was destroyed during the Thirty Years War and then rebuilt. In 1684 the Bohemian Chamber sold Heidelberg together with Voigtsdorf , Oberthalheim, Winkeldorf , Leuthen , Karpenstein , Wolmsdorf and Konradswalde to the Glatzer regent and imperial councilor Sigmund Hoffmann († 1698), who had been raised to the nobility by the emperor with the title "von Leuchtenstern" . His grandson Leopold Reichsgraf von Hoffmann, Imperial Councilor of the Duchy of Brzeg , sold Heidelberg together with other villages in 1736 to the Treasury of the City of Landeck.
After the Silesian Wars , Heidelberg and the County of Glatz fell to Prussia in 1763 with the Peace of Hubertusburg . After the reorganization of Prussia, it belonged to the province of Silesia from 1815 and was initially incorporated into the district of Glatz . In 1818 it was reorganized into the newly formed district of Habelschwerdt , to which it belonged until 1945. In 1939 there were 89 inhabitants.
As a result of the Second World War , Heidelberg, like almost all of Silesia, fell to Poland in 1945 and was renamed Wrzosówka . The German population was expelled. Some of the new residents were displaced from eastern Poland . Because of its remote location, they left Wrzosówka again in the next decades, so that it is no longer inhabited and desolate. Since 1945 Wrzosówka belonged to the powiat Bystrzycki, which was dissolved in 1975, as well as the Wrocław Voivodeship, which was responsible until then. In 1975 it came to the newly formed Wałbrzych Voivodeship ( Waldenburg ), which existed until 1998.
Attractions
- Devotional chapel
literature
- Verlag Aktion Ost-West eV: The Glatzer Land . ISBN 3-928508-03-2 , p. 53.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Richard Hauck: Bad Landeck / Schlesien , Leimen 1973, p. 289