Łosiów

Łosiów ( German Lossen ) is a village in the urban and rural community Lewin Brzeski in powiat Brzeski in the southern Polish Opole Voivodeship. It is located on the regional road 94 ( droga Krajowa 94).

History

In the 13th century monastery of St. John Lozy is mentioned on the present territory of Łosiów first time. This monastery is repeatedly rebuilt and expanded and is still with its church of St. John the Baptist ( kościół Sw. John the Baptist ) in Łosiów present. The place is Łosiów, in the notation Lozy (later Lossow ), first mentioned in 1558. A Coming Lossen, which existed until the secularization in 1810, is given in a recording from 1754/56.

The District Lossen is No. 2 from the rural communities Jägerndorf, Lossen and Rosenthal and the Gutsbezirk Lossen ( rule ) formed in various stages between 30 January 1874 to 3 December 1880, the administration is (initially) by the Chief Administrator in Lossen. From January 1874 to April 1892, the 1856 adopted county and municipal land - constitutions for the provinces of Prussia, Pomerania, Posen, Silesia, ... are implemented gradually mandatory in the six eastern provinces of the Prussian monarchy.

1894 Lossen was inherent to the District Court of Lions, with its own post office Lossen and the railway line Brieg - Cosel Kędzierzyn the Prussian State Railways. The community directory of 1900 Lossen in the Kingdom of Prussia is - Silesia province, district Breslau, County Brieg specified.

On January 1, 1908 eliminates the designation No. 2 for the District Lossen, 1922, the rural community of hunters from the village Lossen is dissolved and incorporated into the Gutsbezirk Stoberau in the district of Karl market. Between 1925 and 1933 the majority of the Gutsbezirks Lossen comes to the rural municipality in the district of Buchitz Fröbeln or in rural communities Lossen and the rest of the Gutsbezirks Lossen the rural community Rosenthal is slammed.

Thus, on February 1, 1933, the District Lossen from the three rural communities Jägerndorf, Jeschen and Lossen. - The introduction of the German church order of 30 January 1935, the rural communities are now renamed in communities. After the community Lossen was occupied in April 1945 by the Red Army, they came as Łosiów to Poland.

Today in the town there are a kindergarten, a primary school, a middle school ( gimnazjum ), a Rustic credit association, a zinc white factory and about 29 small and medium-sized enterprises especially in the service sector.

Population figures

1,996 inhabitants (1885), 1777 inhabitants ( 1 December 1910), 1,630 inhabitants ( 1933), 1,608 inhabitants ( 1939), 1600 (2005)

Attractions

On a historic postcard from 1916, the castle, the Catholic school, the Imperial Post Office and a stately building pharmacies are mapped as worth seeing. In the 21st century are displayed on the homepage:

  • House of the People ( House of Culture )
  • Castle ( Pałac ) from the end of the 19th century castle park
  • The Catholic parish church of St. John the Baptist, which was rebuilt after a fire in 1703 by the Hospitallers in the Baroque style.
  • The baroque Nepomuk statue of 1709.
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