Pietraszyn

Kleinpeter joke, Polish Pietraszyn, is a village in the town and rural community Kranowitz in powiat Raciborski in Silesia, Poland.

  • 4.1 External links
  • 4.2 footnotes

Geography

Small Peterwitz located 3 kilometers north- west of Kranowitz and 10 kilometers southwest of Racibórz ( Ratibor ) at the Bilawoda in the region of Upper Silesia. In the west and in the south of the village is surrounded by the territory of the Czech Republic, at the western end of the village the ( Schengen ) border runs directly behind the local development. The neighboring Woinowitz 'is the lies 1 km from Czech Sudice ( Zauditz ).

History

Kleinpeter joke was eingepfarrt 1652 Zauditz and was part of the diocese of Olomouc. 1742 was the village of Prussia, and in 1818 the county Ratibor allocated - before that it had the Leobschützer circle belongs. In the 19th century, Johann Trulley donated the chapel of St. Barbara local.

After the First World War, the southern part of the circle Ratibor was annexed to Czechoslovakia ( Hultschiner Ländchen ), whereby small Peterwitz border town and was cut off from its neighbor Zauditz, which was now in Czechoslovakia.

In the plebiscite in Upper Silesia on March 20, 1921 voted in small Peterwitz 433 persons ( 97.1 %) to remain with Germany and 13 for the annexation to Poland. Small Peterwitz remained with the German Reich.

By 1925, Kleinpeter joke was still the parish after Zauditz, then it was the more distant parish Kranowitz connected. Therefore, the decision was made to build a branch church and realized from 1930 to 1932 on the northern outskirts of the village.

After the Second World War, the village in 1945 came as Pietraszyn under Polish administration.

Today Kleinpeter joke belongs to the municipality Kranowitz, which is the municipality with the proportionally largest German minority in Silesia. In 2008, additional official place names were introduced in German language.

Population Development

The population figures Kleinpeter joke ':

Attractions

  • In 1930 the foundation stone of the Catholic branch church of St. Barbara was laid. The supervision led Franz Sichma. The construction and furnishing of the church were made possible by numerous donations and foundations of the inhabitants. So rendered all the inhabitants from their land to contribute to the 1932 acquired three church bells. On October 18, 1932, the church was consecrated by the Olomouc Bishop Josef Schinzel. The small church is the only cubist building in Ratiborer country.

References

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