Mysłakowice

Mysłakowice [ mɨswakɔv itsɛ ʲ ] ( German Zillerthal - Erdmannsdorf ) is a town in southwestern Poland and the seat of the municipality of the same country. It is located in the powiat Jeleniogórski the Lower Silesian Voivodeship between the Giant Mountains and Landeshuter comb, belongs to the Euro region Neisse and has numerous guest beds.

  • 6.1 Literature
  • 6.2 External links
  • 6.3 footnotes

Geography

Mysłakowice located in the eastern part of the Hirschberg Valley on Lomnitz ( Lomnica polish ) and Bober ( Bóbr ), about 8 km southeast of Hirschberg and 7 km north of Karpacz. The municipal area extends mostly along the two rivers and in the area of ​​east subsequent Landeshuter ridge, which also includes the Sokole Gory ( Falk mountains ) belong. At the foot of the mountains, and the Falk Landeshuter comb the part places Karpniki ( Fischbach ) and Bukowiec ( Buchenwald). From there, offer some of the most beautiful views of the nearby Giant Mountains.

The Giant Mountains begins immediately south of Erdmannsdorf ( Mysłakowice ) in the neighboring community Podgórzyn. After Hirschberg ( Jelenia Góra ), Karpacz ( Karpacz ) and exist in the surrounding places, a regular bus service.

History

The place Mysłakowice was first documented in 1305 under its German name Erdmannsdorf. During the early modern period, the place was owned by the family of Reibnitz.

From 1838 here Protestant exiles from Tyrol ( Zillertal Inklinanten ) settled, where King Friedrich Wilhelm III. granted through the intercession of the Countess Friederike of speeches towards refuge in this part of the then Prussia. Since it was mountain dwellers, they settled in the Giant Mountains, the highest mountain of Prussia, at. Many of them came from the valley, which led to a change of the place name in Zillerthal - Erdmannsdorf during the 19th century.

The Castle of Erdmannsdorf is also from 1832 to 1909 the summer residence of the ruling in Prussia Hohenzollern.

After the loss of Lower Silesia in Poland after the Second World War, the German inhabitants of the village were Erdmann 1945/46, driven out. The town was renamed in 1945 in Turońsk and in December 1946 in Mysłakowice.

1975-1998 was Mysłakowice at the Jelenia Gora province, which merged in the new Province of Lower Silesia in 1999.

Attractions

Worth seeing are the churches, mansions and palaces in all districts and the potential through many hiking landscape, these include:

Church

The Catholic Parish of the Sacred Heart ( Kościół pw Najświętszego Serca Pana Jezusa, also Kościół Królów Pruskich = "Church of the Prussian kings " called ) on the edge of the castle garden, designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, built from 1836 to 1838 as a Protestant church. During the renovation in 1858 the entrance is a portico with excavated ancient Roman columns of Pompeii has been added. The organ was manufactured in 1840 by Hirschberg organ builder Carl Friedrich Ferdinand Buckow.

Castle

The castle, which derived from the early 18th century predecessor was rebuilt in 1751 by Maximilian Leopold of Reibnitz to a two-story baroque residence of a tri-lobe floor plan. After several changes of ownership acquired Field Marshal August Neidhardt von Gneisenau, the property in 1816 in exchange for another of his goods. After the death of Gneisenau in 1831 bought Prussia's King Friedrich Wilhelm III. the castle for 136,000 dollars. In subsequent years, it was rebuilt by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, while the royal court gardener Peter Joseph designed planting plans for the park. Its present appearance owes it mainly to conversions in the style of English Gothic style under King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, whose ideas were realized in 1840 by Friedrich August Stiller. Today, the castle serves as a school.

Tiroler Hof

The house at ul Starowiejska 14, the so-called Tiroler Hof. It is one of several houses that were built by religious refugees in Tyrolean style in the 19th century and have survived to this day in Mysłakowice. The building was reopened after restoration measures in 1998 as a Tyrolean parlor and is owned by the Austrian state of Tyrol and the Tyrolean six communities of origin of the exiles.

Community

The rural community is Mysłakowice except the eponymous capital or from the following districts:

  • Bukowiec ( Buchenwald)
  • Dąbrowica ( Eichberg )
  • Gruszków ( Bärndorf )
  • Karpniki ( Fischbach )
  • Lomnica ( Lomnitz )
  • Kostrzyca ( whorl )
  • Strużnica ( Neudorf )

Partnerships

  • Leopoldshohe, Germany
  • Boxberg / Upper Lusatia, Germany

References

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