Bartnica

Bartnica ( German hunting ground; Czech Brtnice ) is a village in the rural community of Nowa Ruda in Poland. It is located ten kilometers north-west of Nowa Ruda ( neurodegeneration ) and east of the border with the Czech Republic and belongs to the powiat Kłodzki.

Geography

Bartnica belongs geographically to regions of Glatz, which connects north of Bartnica to the Waldburger Bergland. Neighboring towns are Kolce ( Dörnhau ) in the north, Sierpnice (Rudolf Waldau ) and Wyrębina ( Wurzelsdorf ) in the Northeast, Świerki and Dworki ( four yards ) in the southeast, Granicznik (Mark reason) in the south and Głuszyca in the northwest. Across the border to the Czech Republic are in the villages Steinetal Rožmitál ( Rosental ) and Benešov ( Straßenau ) in the southwest, Heřmánkovice in the west and the border crossing Janovičky ( Johannes Berg) in the northwest. Is also beyond the limit of 740 m high Bobri vrch ( Bieberstein ). Northwest of Bartnica springs the Schweidnitzer White Ritz.

History

Prey base belonged to Neuroder district in the county of Glatz, which belonged directly to Bohemia to 1763. It was situated on the border with the Principality Schweidnitz and was first mentioned in 1561 with a Heegerei in prey base. In 1598 it was the property of Henry the Elder. Stillfried on neurodegeneration, together with other goods prescribed it this year, his son Bernard. Ecclesiastical it was gepfarrt after Königswalde. Of economic importance in addition to agriculture were the crafts and home weaving. After Hubertusburg 1763 Peace came together with the county of Glatz to Prussia. After the reorganization of Prussia belonged since 1815 to the province of Silesia, which was divided into counties. 1816-1853 County of Glatz, 1854-1932, the district neurodegeneration was responsible. After its dissolution in 1933 hunting ground until 1945 belonged in turn to the district of Glatz. Since 1874 the rural community of prey base formed, along with the villages Königswalde, Mark and four courtyards reason the District Königswalde. An economic boom came in the early 1880s with the connection to the railway line Waldburg- Glatz, received a breakpoint on the prey base. Of 1939 prey base of 857 inhabitants.

As a result of the Second World War prey base in 1945 as large parts of Silesia placed under Polish administration and renamed Bartnica. The German population was, if they had not fled earlier, largely expelled in 1946. The new inhabitants were partly displaced persons from eastern Poland. 1975-1998 belonged to Bartnica Voivodeship Wałbrzych.

References

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