Tuły

Thule, Polish tuly, is a town in the municipality Great lasso joke in Kluczborski powiat ( county Cross Castle ) in the Polish Opole Voivodeship.

  • 2.1 Population development
  • 5.1 External links
  • 5.2 footnotes

Geography

Geographical location

Thule is 14 kilometers south of the county town Kluczbork ( Kreuzburg OS) and 27 kilometers northeast of the Opole voivodship in the historical region of Upper Silesia.

History

The village in the Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis was first mentioned in documents dating from around 1300. 1742 Thule fell with most of Silesia to Prussia.

Originally, the village was the parish to Great lasso joke, but in 1854 was donated by Edward Blacha a Catholic church, which was collected on 5 June 1858 the parish seat.

From 1816 to 1945 Thule was part of the district Rosenberg OS and formed a consular district, which also includes the colony Marienfeld and the local independent Gutsbezirk Thule belonged. 1928 Gutsbezirk was incorporated in the rural community of Thule.

In the plebiscite in Upper Silesia on March 20, 1921 voted in Thule 132 voters to remain in Germany and 25 for Poland, in Gutsbezirk there were 174 for Germany and three in Poland. Thule remained with the German Reich. 1925 lived in the village of 567 inhabitants in 1933 and 489 inhabitants. On April 1, 1939 Thule was incorporated into pine forest. By 1945, the place was in the district of Rosenberg OS.

1939 the village was incorporated into Laskowitz. In 1945 the previously German place under Polish administration and renamed tuly and joined the Silesian Voivodeship. From 1945 to 1975, the place was in the powiat Oleski. In 1950, the city came to Opole Voivodeship. In 1999 the place to powiat Kluczborski. Since 16 August 2010, this place has the German name Thule as an additional official Ortsbeizeichnung.

Population Development

The numbers of inhabitants of Thule:

Clubs

  • German Friendship Circle

Attractions

  • The elaborate system of neo-Gothic parish church of Our Lady of Sorrows was carried out from 1854 to 1857 after plans by the architect Alexis Langer.
  • The baroque castle was built by the landowner family of Blacha in the 18th century and remodeled by their successors, the family von Furstenberg, 1856-57.

References

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