Nasale, Opole Voivodeship

Nasal ( German name wet needle) is a village in the urban and rural community Byczyna powiat Kluczborski, Opole Voivodeship in southwestern Poland.

History

The village was first mentioned in 1393 as Nassadil documented.

As wet nobility, the village belonged to the former county Kreuzburg OS, district Breslau in the Prussian province of Silesia, Lower Silesia later. Wet needle was since 1874 the seat of the administrative district wet needle with the villages Adolph Thal, Barkhausen, Carl Thal, Erdmannshain, Goslau, Gusenau, wet needle I, wet needle II, III, IV, low wet nobility and Pohl joke and the agricultural estates Goslau and wet needle II, III, IV

In 1910 the place 1195 inhabitants, in 1933 there were 1216 and 1939 there were 1128 residents, 144 residents were in 1910 had determined for the Gutsbezirk wet needle ..

The Catholic church is part of the Diocese of Opole, the Protestant diocese of Katowice.

Attractions

  • The shot wooden church from the 16th century in 1939 translocated from Seichwitz. After the Second World War, the church was handed over to the Protestant community. It burned in May 2010 completely.
  • The Catholic Church of St. Lorenz is a neo-Gothic brick building of 1870 with front tower and was built in 1508 in place of the wooden mentioned earlier building as a Protestant church. After 1945, the Catholics took over the church and endowed them with altars of the now Protestant shot wooden church.
  • In addition, an old manor house from the period can be found in the village nor to the turn of the century.

References

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