Falmirowice

Case Miro joke, Polish Falmirowice, is a town in Upper Silesia in the community Chrząstowice ( Chrząstowice ) in the powiat Opolski in the Opole Voivodeship.

Geography

Case Miro joke located 10 kilometers southeast of the city center of Opole in the historic Upper Silesia.

History

The village was mentioned in 1291 as Falmirow and 1532 as Chwalmirowitz documented. The Catholic population of the town was the parish after Dembio.

In the referendum on March 20, 1921 166 voters voted to remain in Germany and 54 for Poland. Case Miro joke remained with the German Reich. 1933 lived in case Miro joke 463 inhabitants. From 1933 the new Nazi rulers large-scale renaming of place names of Slavic origin conducted. On 19 May 1936, the town was renamed in Fallmersdorf. 1939 Fallmersdorf 523 inhabitants. By 1945, the place was in the district of Opole.

In 1945 the previously German place under Polish administration, was renamed Falmirowice and joined the Silesian Voivodeship. In 1950 case Miro joke for Opole Voivodeship and the 1999 re-established powiat Opolski. On 25 January 2006 the case was German Miro joke in the community Chrząstowice, plays, introduced as a second official language. In May 2008, the City also received the official German place names case Miro joke.

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