Niedamirów

Niedamirów ( German Kunz village ) is a village in the rural community Lubawka ( Liebau ) in the powiat Kamiennogórski in the Province of Lower Silesia in Poland.

Geography

Niedamirów located in Rehorngebirge, directly on the border with the Czech Republic. It is reached via a spur road from Jarkowice ( Jarkowice ) that ends in Niedamirów. Neighboring towns are Opawa and Miszkowice in the north and Paprotki ( Urban Hartau ) and Lubawka in the Northeast. Across the border to the Czech Republic, which is reached via the Lubawka - Královec, Královec are to the east, Lampertice the southeast, Bobr Křenov ( Krinsdorf ) and Žacléř in the south, Dolni Lysečiny ( downstroke village) and Albeřice ( Albendorf ) in the west and Mala Upa ( Kleinaupa ) in the northwest.

History

The area around Kunz village belonged first to Bohemia and arrived in the 13th century Duke Bolko I. Kunz village beginning of the 14th century was probably founded and belonged to the noble family Seidlitz. Together with the Duchy Schweidnitz it came again in 1368 to the Crown of Bohemia. Until 1378 it was with Oppau, Buchenwald and Tschöpsdorf Witwengut of Marita of Se ( i) dlitz, a governess of the Duchess Agnes. This year sold Marita's sons Hans Schone bird and Kuncze Hudner Kunz village and the other mentioned localities with all the possessions and rights to the Cistercian monastery Grüssau. To cover the Turks had control in 1558 Kunzendorf be pledged with Oppau, Tschöpsdorf and Buchenwald. During the pledge period Lutheranism developed in the villages. After returning to the monastery was recatholicisation the population.

After the First Silesian War Kunz village fell in 1742 together with Silesia to Prussia. 1810, the monastery was secularized. After the reorganization of Prussia in 1815 Kunz village belonged to the province of Silesia and was from 1816 the county Landeshut incorporated, with which it was connected until 1945. It formed its own rural community and belonged to the administrative district Oppau since 1874. 1939 lived 456 inhabitants in the village Kunz.

As a result of World War II Kunz village fell in 1945 as almost all of Silesia to Poland and was renamed Niedamirów. The German population was expelled. The new inhabitants were partly displaced persons from eastern Poland. 1975-1998 belonged to Niedamirów Voivodeship Jelenia Gora. Since 1995 takes place in Niedamirów annual " Festival of Three Cultures " instead, which should contribute to understanding between Germans, Czechs and Poles.

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