Jugowice

Jugowice ( German home village) is a village located in powiat Wałbrzyski in the Province of Lower Silesia in Poland. It is located four kilometers north-west of Walim ( Wüstewaltersdorf ) away to the rural community it belongs to.

Geography

Jugowice located in the north of the Owl Mountains. Neighboring towns are Zagórze Śląskie in the north, Mokrza ( Mühlbach ) and Michałkowa ( Michel village ) in the east, Toszowice ( Toschendorf ) and Sędzimierz ( Neugericht ) in the southeast, Dołki (low base ) and Jawornik ( Jauernig ) in the south, Olszyniec ( alder bush ) in the southwest, Jedlina -Zdrój and Podlesie ( grove ) in the west and Niedźwiedzica ( Bärsdorf ) in the northwest. Three kilometers to the north lies the territory of Silesia Dam ( Jezioro Bystrzyckie ).

History

Home village was first mentioned in records in 1305 Breslauer episcopal interest register. It was, together with Zagórze Śląskie, Dittmannsdorf, Reußendorf, Seifersdorf, Tannhausen, Jauernig and Schenkendorfstraße to the castle district of Kynsburg. The castle district was ducal fief and followed initially in the possession of Viscount Kilian Haugwitz, the Peczko Eycke and then the men Schoff. After Hausdorf had fallen together with the Duchy Schweidnitz 1368 to the crown of Bohemia, castle and castle district were a lien held by the royal governors. This included the Lords of Reibnitz from Mülheim and Hermann von Czettritz († 1454), which could prevent Hussite attacks. 1493 was Hausdorf still owned by the family of Czettritz, in 1535, it belonged to the Christoph von Hochberg ( Hoberg ) on Fürstenstein.

After the First Silesian War in 1742 Hausdorf coincided with almost all of Silesia to Prussia. After the reorganization of Prussia belonged since 1815 to the province of Silesia and was from 1816 the district of Waldenburg incorporated, with which it was connected until 1945. 1818 was home village of 462 inhabitants, in 1840 there were 666, including 51 House Weber. 1865 remote gas works was established. Since 1874 the rural community was Hausdorf seat of the homonymous administrative district, which included the rural communities Jauernig and Neugericht. In 1904 Hausdorf a station on the railway line from Schweidnitz - Charlottenbrunn. 1914, the electrified railway line Hausdorf - Wüstewaltersdorf was put into operation. 1936 made ​​the incorporations of Bärsdorf " small side " and Jauernig and Neugericht home village. 1939 counted 1,401 residents.

As a result of World War II village house fell in 1945 as almost all of Silesia to Poland and was renamed Jugowice. The German population was expelled. The new inhabitants were partly displaced persons from eastern Poland. 1975-1998 belonged to Jugowice Voivodeship Wałbrzych.

Attractions

  • Kynsburg
  • Silesians dam
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