Nowe Siołkowice

Nowe Siołkowice ( German: New scarf Schukowitzgasse ) is a town in Upper Silesia. Nowe Siołkowice is located in the rural community Popielów (Alt Poppelau ) in Opolski powiat (district Opole ) in the Polish Opole Voivodeship.

  • 4.1 External links
  • 4.2 footnotes

Geography

Geographical Location

Nowe Siołkowice is located four kilometers east of the parish seat Popielów (Alt Poppelau ) and 22 kilometers east of the county town of Opole voivodship and ( Opole ). South of the city flows the Brinnitze, a tributary of the Budkowitzer creek.

Neighboring towns

Neighboring towns of Nowe Siołkowice in the West Popielów (Alt Poppelau ), in the north Lubienia ( sagging ), to the east Kaniów ( Hirschfelde ), in the southeast Chrosczütz ( Chróścice ) and in the southwest Stare Siołkowice (Alt scarf Schukowitzgasse ).

History

The town was founded in 1788 in the wake of Frederician colonization as a colony. 21 families of old scarf Schukowitzgasse moved to the new colony scarf Schukowitzgasse. In 1865 the town had 19 colonists, 14 Half colonists and seven Anger Häusler. The inhabitants were eingepfarrt to Alt scarf Schukowitzgasse and enrolled after Hirschfelde.

In the plebiscite in Upper Silesia on March 20, 1921 236 voters voted to remain in Germany and 57 for the membership of Poland. The colony scarf Schukowitzgasse remained with the German Reich. 1931, the town was renamed in New scarf Schukowitzgasse. 1933 lived 537 inhabitants in the village. On August 10, 1936, the town was renamed in New Schalkendorf. On April 1, 1939 Old Schalkendorf was merged with New Schalkendorf to Schalkendorf. By 1945, the place was in the district of Opole.

1945, with the end of World War II, the previously German city came under Polish administration before 1991 with the Two Plus Four Treaty a peace treaty between the two German states and the victorious powers of World War II, it was concluded that the site an integral part Poland made ​​.. The place was the Silesian Voivodeship connected and renamed in Nowe Siołkowice. The merger of the places was lifted. In 1950 the place came to Opole Voivodeship and since 1999 he is part of the re-established powiat Opolski.

Sights and Monuments

  • Consecrated wayside chapel with bell tower, the Saint Jadwiga of Silesia

References

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