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Obertyn (Obertin) is a town located along the Czerniawa River in the district of Horodenka. It is 24 km west of Horodenka. It is bordered on the east by Czortowiec, the south by Balahorowka and Jakubowka, from the west by Zukow and from the north Chocimierz, Zabokruki and Hawtylak. In 1810 the area of the estate, including lands occupied by peasants, amounted to 3,011 morg (1.2 acres or 5,600 sq. meters). The Roman Catholic population including parashioners living in the suburb of Nietrzebowka was around 1,200. The Greek Catholic population was 1,980. Both parishes were in town. The Roman Catholic Church was established in Obertyn in 1757 by Rafaela Skarbek, standard-bearer from nearby Kolomyja. The church, which originally was a wooden structure, was consecrated at an unknown date. In 1796 a papal decree withdrew the parish from the archdiocese of Lwow but its' parishioners continued to follow in the Roman Catholic Rite. Eventually, the parish was to include eight (8) towns. They were Balahorowka, 3 km from Obertyn, with 55 parishioners; Czortowiec 7 km, 300 parishioners; Hanczarow 4 km, 7 parishioners; Harasimow 10 km, 96 parishioners; Hawrylak 4 km, 85 parishioners; Jakubowka 4 km, 23 parishioners; Niezwiska 15 km, 53 parishioners; and Woronow 15 km, 25 parishioners. The deanery of Horodenka, within the diocese of Lwow, had a population which included 1,844 Catholics and 2,860 Jews. The Greek Catholic parish belonged to the Zukow deanery, this included Hanczarow population 548, Balahorowka 138, totaling 2,675 Greek Catholics. The district highroad that goes thru Obertyn extended from Jezierzan to Zablotowa. There are many significant markets that can be seen in the surrounding area. The area is very fertile with deep humus and productive fields of corn and tobacco can be seen growing in the surrounding fields. However, the area lacks forests. There is a court that belongs to the district of Kolomyi, a post office, a permanent school for male students with four teachers, a loan office in the township with capital of 22,560 zloty managed by owner Jozefowa Kellermanowa. Between Obertyn, Kamionka and the village Zukow can be found many cemetaries. The first settlers of Obertyn were the Obertynski family. In the year 1438 a deposition was issued in Haliczu by Derslaw from Bybla, that he received a settlement of 60 bills (grzyna-former bank notes) from Konrada of Kunaszawy for 1/4 of Obertyn and Trzchemchow (Document of Castles and Lands, v.1 pp. 25 & 26). Obertyn became famous because of the battle that was fought in the area. It was in 1531 that Jan Tarnowski, commander of the troops, defeated Wolochow. Bielowski has so written: "After the rescue of Gwozdza, Tarnowski withdrew deeper into the country and encamped below Obertyn, when the message came that Peter, Governor of the Wolochy with his entire was coming directly toward him. There were some who believed that the enemy was very strong. The enemy, Wolochow's army, was 200,000 strong and ours was 5 to 6 thousand with almost all in the cavalry. The infantry had no more then 300 men. The commmander deliberated, so the operation stalled. He hurried to Halicza. "We will die or win here," replied the commander and he ordered the camp strenghtened. These words raised the army's spirit. They hastened to dig trenches and fastened chains to wagons. The commander ordered the infantry to follow the wagons. The loaded cannons were placed behind the oxen. The journey was hard and light camps were prepared along the way. They had barely finished the task and the enemy was before them. As the Polish camp awaited nightfall, cautiously but not without fear, a comet which had already been seen intermittently in the night sky for the past three weeks suddenly lit up the sky. On the morning of the 22nd of August Wolochy's camp was revealed on Obertyn's fields. Peter placed them on the hill, hoping that the Polish troops would see the greatness of the troops and military reserves and would be discouraged. His main concern was that the commander leading the forces might disappear with the army. That is why he surrounded them from all sides. Soon they became alarmed. He invaded the camp with numerious skirmishes provoking the battle by shouts, mockery and scolding. Silently with rifles, the Polish infantry moved ahead sweeping from one side to the other, they pushed with their rifles. Soon they approached the battlefield and the battle started. Fifty great divisions turned their fire on the Polish camp. The attack turned out not to be very damaging, since the gunpowder was of poor quality and the riflemen were not very skilled. Polish gunsmiths answered them under the direction of Superior Staszkowski. Although, scarce in numbers, they directed their fire united. They could see that the enemy was operating with blanks and the enemy forces began faltering. The commander made the command that his men not rush to attack. They waited patiently for five hours. Without a planned strategy Wolochy would not strike. Catching sight of the Polish camp in the opposite direction of where they were expected to be found, he ordered the attack. Balicki and Trojanowski, the old warrior and the young soldier stood before the other captains of the cavalry. The aged Balicki, who was full of courage before his soldiers, fought bravely. Woloszyn's attack was very powerful. The company under Balicki was separated from the other regiments and began to falter. Mikolaj Sieniawski and Wlodek joined in the battle with their troops and held their position. As they struggled in battle, Wolochy brought his forces together. At this same moment Commander Prokopaw and Aleksandrow Sieniawski gave orders. They stood up so that their own company came out on the battlefield where the enemy was. They fought them according to orders and the battle became more bloody. The commander from the camp was sending his forces in for reinforcement. After battling for an hour and half, the last enforcement crept up on the enemy and fired on the division. The enemy's soldiers broken in battle, began to leave the fields and soon scattered. Peter stood on the hill nearby watching the end of the battle. He saw his army retreating and not stopping. He joined them in the retreat. Our soldiers were chasing them for half a mile. The lord of the manor himself was injured twice. The entire camp fell into the hands of the victors. Fifty mighty brass cannons except minors, partly Wolochian, partly ours in the time of Jan Olbracht lost on Bukowina, all iron harquebus, which were held by the enemy, fifty banners, horses, wagons and over 1000 captives, occurred to be the prize of the memorable victory. "Whatever battle was won in Poland which with heart, intellect and luck, the old-fashioned battle could be compared, then Obertyn's such will be." writes Orzechowski. Rewarding monarch Tarnowski, with the consent of deliberated States, gave him 2 groszs for each feud: "As to no one before or after the commander happened," so says Bielski." B.R. Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego-Warsaw 1886. Submitted by : Elizabeth Berry, 1024 E. Bissonette, Oscoda, MI 48750 (Nov 1998). Translated by: Jane Pawlowski, Dearborn Heights, MI. Obertyn was the site of the Roman Catholic Church
of Sts. Peter and Paul, founded in 1757 by Rafal Skarbek. The church
built
in 1891, was destroyed shortly after World War II. A theater was
built on the site of the church. Religious services for the
Catholic population were being held in private homes three times a
week by a visiting priest from Kolomyja. The theater was then converted
to a church, and in 1991, the new parish of Matka Boska
Czestochowa, was dedicated. Obielewo (also known as Obielawy or Obylewo) is a village located on the south bank of the Noltec, in the Powiat/County of Szubin, in the Archiepiscopal of the Catholic Church at Znin – Gora. Obielewo lies about 7 ½ klm to the south of Labiszyna near the road to the Railway Station to Mogilno some 28 klm distant. Obielewo is an area of about 483 hectares said to produce clean revenues of 3803 German Marks. There are 6 homes / farmsteads, 98 inhabitants, 63 Catholic, 35 protestant. It was first mentioned in a Papal Bulla of July 7, 1136 confirming the dominion of the Archbishop of Gniezno over, a number of settlements including Obielewo. Early tax lists confirm the existence of 27 priviately owned homesteads in the vicinity the shore of the Noltec, in the present day along the shores are also wetlands and bogs (Kod. Wielkop., 7). In the 16th century there came into existence here a “Folwark” or large manorial farmstead. The Parish Priest ? Rector of the Church at Znin Gora levied a thithe on the peasants and estate fields. (Laski Lib Ben I 151) According to old lists in the year 1577 Obielewo comprised about 2 ½ Slad ( about 400 Morgs) and in 1579 1 ½ Slad (bout 200 Morgs), 5 zagrod or small farmsteads with buildings, gardens and courtyards. (Pawinski, Wiekop I 184). In the year 1846 the Manor Obielewa was the property of Sylwester Slawski, currently of Niemiec. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886 Translated by Jim Piechorowski, PGSA Member #6005/6151, July 2005; families: Piechorowski / Piechurowski A noble village. Its size is 951.14 mórgs. There are 52 buildings, 17 dwelling houses, and 131 inhabitants, of whom 97 are Lutheran, and 34 Catholic. In the 15th century the village belonged to the Komierowski's, later to the owner of Sosno. Parish of Wakiowo. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886 Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gschmidt50909282@aol.com (May 2003) Oborniki , in German Obornik, is a county seat in the
Grand Duchy of Poznan. It is located about 30 km. north of Poznan, at
latitude 52 degrees 39 minutes north, longitude 34 degrees 28 minutes
east [measured from Ferro], on the elevated right bank of the Warta river,
near the mouth of the Welna river. It has a station of the Poznan-Pila
railway, a telegraph station, and a post office with posts arriving daily.
The town is the administrative center of a deanery, and has an Evangelical
superintendent, a landed proprietors’ counselor, and a district
commissioner. Also in Oborniki are a royal county treasury, a savings
bank, a master-builder’s office, a customs office, a Polish loan
society, and Polish and German agronomical societies. The inhabitants
are employed in farming, milling, distilling alcohol, the lumber trade,
and manufacturing starch, bricks, and drainage pipes. About 60,000 quintals
of flour, 9,000 hectoliters of aqua vitae [a kind of liquor], and 50,000
quintals of starch are produced here each year. The lumber trade produces
annual sales of about a million marks. The town maintains a wooden bridge
on the Warta; a second bridge was built by the directors of the railway. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego, Vol. 7 pp. 336-242, Warsaw 1886. Translated by Izabela M. Szuman, edited by William F. Hoffman Contributed by Mike Konczak, 219 Market, Baird TX 79504 A Folwark (Large Manorial Farmstead) near Sobiejuchy , a village in Powiat Szubinskim, about 7 ½ klm distant from Znin. It contained 3 homes and 43 inhabitants; an area of aproximately 255 hectares, generated annual revenues of 3818 German marks. It belongs to the family of Jaroslawa Jaraczewski, the hier to Sobiejuchy. Post Office at Retkowo and a Railroad station at Nakle about 30 klm distant. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego, Vol. 7 p. 349, Warsaw 1886. Translated by Jim Piechorowski (June 2005), PGSA #6005; family: Piechurowski / Piechorowski 1779 Ocieka, with Wola Ocieska and Zadzikierz, a village on the stream Ocieka or Ociecki, in Ropczyce powiat, lies in a sandy lowland (206 meters). To the north it is surrounded by a large pine forest, the northern part of which is called Spalony las ["burned forest"], the southern Sokolny las ["falcon forest"]; to the east is the forest of the village of Kamionka, and to the south part of the forests of the village of Ostrow, Duzy [large] las, Saszczynski and Sarni [deer's] las. In the middle of the village, near the church, runs the Kolbuszowa-Ropczyce highway, from which a branch runs west, and in Dabie (8 km. away) on the Wislok [sic] it joins the highway from RzochÑw to Debica. The outlying settlement of Zadzikierz lies to the northeast (3 km.), near the forest on the northeast flank of a hill (245 meters) [on modern maps this appears to be the place now called Sadykierz]. Wola Ocieska [today called Wola Ociecka], which has a beautiful manor, is northwest of Ocieka, on the road to Dabie, on the northwest flank of the wooded Lysa gÑrka (211 meters). Between Ocieka and Zadzikierz there are four small ponds, and on the stream a mill and a windmill. With these outlying settlements the village has 1,465 Roman Catholic inhabitants, of whom 127 live on the grounds of the major estate, owned by Count Wladyslaw Romer. The major estate has 756 mÑrgs of farmland, 52 of meadows and gardens, 89 of pastures, and 1,678 of forests; the minor estate has 1,948 mÑrgs of farmland, 388 of meadows, 479 of pastures, and 343 of forests. The pastures are mostly sandy waste-land. The parish church is old and made of wood, of unknown endowment, and it has sacrament registers only from 1785. The parish includes Blizna, with 233 inhabitants; there are 37 Jews in the parish. There is a people's school here, and a fund for the poor, which has 500 zl. in Austrian currency. Siarczynski (in a manuscript in the Ossolineum library, n. 1826), says that this village belonged to Rzemien and that Anna n³e Ocieska Mielecka named it, but adds that it is probably the ancestral seat of the Ocieskis, who also owned Rzemien. The villages nearest Ocieka are, to the east, Zdzary and Kamionka, to the south OstrÑw, to the west Krownice and Dabie, to the north Blizna. - Mac. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1886, vol. 7, pg. 370] Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Winter 1999 Bulletin
Village also called Oczwioka, in Mogilno County, 4Km south of Gasawa, with 27 houses and 263 inhabitants: 246 Catholics, 10 Protestants and 7 Jews. The parish church and post office are in Gasawa. The railroad station is in Mogilno 17 Km away. In 1833, there were 15 houses and 126 inhabitants, all Roman Catholic. The Ocwieka administration and hamlet consisted of 116 hectares of land in 1877. Th v. Wilkens was proprietor of Marcinkowo Dolne and Stanislaw Jasinski owned two farms of 91 hectares. In 1145, Ocwieka was granted to the Trzemeszno Abbey and belonged to that convent until our times. The chronicle Dyplomat Wielkopolski includes these names of the heads of the village: Jan in 1357 and Mieczyslaw in 1373. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1890 Submitted by: Alice Nelsen, 2404 Belair Drive, Bowie, MD 20715 (Feb 1997) A village in the parish and rural district of Kopciowo, Sejny county. It is 23 versts from the town of Sejny. In 1827, there were 3 houses and 13 people. Now there are 6 houses and 51 people. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1892, vol. 7, p 456]. Translated by Dorothy Leivers, Hadlow, Kent, England, Dorfleiv@aol.com (May 2004) 1). Nowa [new], village, and Stara [old], village, Warszawa powiat, Gora gmina, ChotomÑw parish. It lies on the Nadwislanski railway line, 6 wiorsts beyond Jablonna toward Nowy DwÑr Mazowiecki. It has a public elementary school. O. Nowa has 158 inhabitants, 440 morgas; O. Stara 390 inhabitants, 1,110 morgas of peasant land. In 1827 there were 44 households, 270 inhabitants there. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw Submitted by: This translation, by William F. Hoffman, first appeared in the Winter 1995-1996 issue of "Bulletin of the Polish Genealogical Society of America" (Nov 1997). Is a village in Hungary, in the Trzcianka administrative district (powiat), on the Orawa Czarna River, located by the highway from the Galician border at Spytkowice and Jablonka to Rrzcianka and Twardoszyna. The Orawa Czarna flows from north to south and divides the territory west and east. The east part is called Kuligowa, 690 meters away, is mostly fields and a few scattered huts called Studanki. The west part has more forest and hills. To west is Gora Gron 798 meters away. On the west it borders with Zubrzyca Dolna, on the north with Podwilk, on the east with Podszkle and from the south with Jablonka. The village has 1894 square miles, 150 houses, 680 people (in 1880). The Latin Church under the name of St. John the Baptist was founded in the year 1658 It is 677 meters above sea level. An old registrar was consumed by fire in 1825. Only death records exist from the year 1777. There were 650 Roman Catholics, 57 other Chistians, 12 Jews for a total of 721 people. The court house is at Trzciana, and the post office is at Jablonka. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886 Submitted and Translated by: Rose Szczech (Apr 1998) In German, Arnsneste. A knightly estate in Chojnice, post office, school
and parish in Lesno, 2.5 km (about 1 1/2 American miles) away. Telegraph
station is in Brusy 8.5 km (5 1/4 American miles ) away. Railway station
is at Rytel 24 km (about 15 American miles) away. Lutheran parish in
Sumin in Bytow
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886 Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gschmidt50909282@aol.com (Feb 2003) A village at a lake, in Pruska commune, parish in Barglow. In 1827 it had 8 houses and 47 inhabitants. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886 Submitted by Jay M. Orbik and translated by Iwona Dakiniewicz - June 2002 As recorded in 1886, the village is in Lipno district, the township Osiek, and is 21 wierst [sic] from Lipno (township main office). It has 28 houses and 322 inhabitants. In 1564 it was owned by the John Osiecki-Miesek family; Thomas Osiecki and Lawrence Rokicki. The manorial farm has 171 morg of land under cultivation, 16 morg of meadows and 24 morg of barren land. The township has its court of justice in Skepe. In Osiek there is one Roman Catholic church, one Lutheran community house for prayers, three schools (Catholic, Lutheran and Jewish). To the township belong the villages: Adamowo, Boguchwala, Bozeszyn, Chocen, Cztery Wloki, Florencja, Grabowiec, Gozdy, Kozi Rog Rzeczny, Ligowo, Ligowko, Leg, Machowko, Myslakowo, Myslakowko,Osiek, Rokicie, Zrodla. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1881-1886 Submitted by: Henryk Skrzypinski Or Osielsko, a church village and farm district, Bydgoszcz county, 8 kilometers north-east of Bydgoszcz, 7 km from Fordonia and Vistula, parish on site, post office and train station in Bydgoszcz. Osielsk area includes settlements one of which is called Osielsko Parowe. This area includes 84 houses, 626 inhabitants, 392 Catholics and 234 Protestants. Osielsk is one of the oldest settlements in the Great Poland region. In 1065 it was given to Mogielnice convent; it shared its later fate with non-existing today Wyszogrod; the surrounding trenches have not been explored. In about 1583 the Osielsk parish included: Czarnowka, Niemcz and Smukala. Osielsk belonged to Bydgoszcz jurisdiction. Boleslaw Kedzierzawy's (Mazowian prince's) document from 1155 mentions Osielsk as one of the castles. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1892, vol. 7, p 634]. Translated by Jim Piechorowski, Jamespiech@aol.com (Dec 2004) In documents: Oszownicza, with Lazy , Leki, Olszyna, Skala, Wysranka and Wisniowki, village in Jasiel county. It lstreaches on a flat area with low elevation, in the region between two rivers,the Ropa and the Wislok, 254 meters above sea level (altitude), long ways the Laskowy stream till its mouth to the Ropa river on the right side. It is on the Lazy-Debowiec road. Osobnica has 2442 inhabitants (1880), and 33 of them live in the bigger property of August Delavaux. But the records of the diocese in Przemysl and deanery in Zmigrod give a higher number of inhabitants: 3428 of Catholics and 21 Jews (which can only be a printer`s error). There was a prospering weaver industry among local people. It has a wooden , parish church, a country school and commune loan cash with 762 zlotys of capital. Formerly, Osobnica belonged to Krakow diocese. By the recruits registry in 1581 - Osobnica was a church village in Biecz district, it belonged to Jan Mniszek, and was rented by Piotr Broniowski. There were 27 and half lans, 5 landlords,
12 households with farmland, 18 tenants (a peasant who had no own house
- he had to rent a room to live in) with cattle, 8 tenants without cattle,
5 craftsmen. The major estate has 455 farmland, 44 of meadows, 45 of
pastureland, and 147 morgas of forest. It is bordered on the west by
Harklowa, on the south by Pagorek, on the east by Lazy, also by Debowiec
and Brzesc, on the north by Ropa. Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1886. Submitted by Jay M. Orbik and translated by Iwona Dakiniewicz - June 2002. Properly Osowy Gra~d, village in the district
of Augustów, community of Kolnica, parish of Augustów,
distance from Augustów 9 versts, it has 32 houses and 287 residents.
In 1827 there were here 21 houses and 123 residents. Ostrów, by Tuszewie, with Zagroda,
Pataraka, Stara Wies, Buda Tuszowska, Foca and Katniki, the village
is also called Ostrowy Tuszowskie, district of Kolbuszowa. The village
has a Roman Catholic parish church, (Diocese of Tarnów, Deanery
of Mielec), and a public school. The wooden church was built in 1562.
To the parish belong Kumorów, Przylek, Toporów and Szydlowiec.
In 1880, there were 1,204 inhabitants (82 on the territory of the larger
domain). However, the church schematic lists 1,120 Roman Catholics and
83 Jews. Budy Tuszowskie is a German settilement, established on a small
area of the village of Tuszw. Ostrów has a community loan association
with assets of 2,959 zloty, while the settlement has assets of 547 zloty
(Austrian Currency). The fund for the poor, established by Fathers Anzelm
Urbanski and Feliks Kamienski, has 275 zloty (Austrian Currency). The
large estate of M. Hirsch, a Jew, has 24 mórgs of farmland, 1
mórg of meadows, 11 mórgs of pastureland, and 1,813 mórgs
of pine forests. The lesser domain has 1,507 mórgs of farmland,
348 mórgs of meadows, 363 mórgs of pastureland, and 365
mórgs of forests. This village, fragmented into many hamlets,
lies near the mouth of the Jamnica Stream which disappears into the
Babulski marshes in the sandy, pineforested Kolbuszowa plain (218 meters).
The hamlets of Pataraki, Katniki and the Brazylia Inn are situated to
the north of the village, in the midst of the forest, on the right bank
of the Jamnica. Budy Tuszowskie is on the west of the Komorwska Foundry.
On the west Ostrów borders Toporów, on the south Kossów,
on the east Jagodniki and on the north Ostrów Baranoski. For Website Problems: Webmaster at webmaster@pgsa.org Copyright © 2005 Polish Genealogical Society of America All Rights Reserved Last Updated on March 1, 2005 |
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