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Zabieniec
A free settlement by Przyleka, village in the district
of Kolbuszowa numbering 11 houses and 63 inhabitants, situated amidst
coniferous pines, south-east of Przyleka, at the headspring of the
brook which, under the name Swierczowski stream, Olszaniec or Przyrwa,
flows into the Leg River. Near the settlement is a forester's cottage,
elevation, 214 meters above sea level.
Zabieniec, hamlet in Hucina, district of Kolbuszowa.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Vol. XIV, p. 713, Warsaw 1895.
Submitted by: Anthony Paddock (Dec 2003)

Zaborska Ziemia
Also known as Zabornia, Zabory. In German "Sabirs Gebiet", "Gebiet
zu Saborn", in document from 1400; in a document of 1299 "Terra Zaborensis".
Zaborska land earlier comprised the northern part of the Tuchola Komtur.
Its borders were, on the south, the Brda river, on the east the Struga
(the left tributary stream of the Brda), on the north Czarna Woda,
on the west Sumin lake, the little river Spryca and lake Charzykowo.
The name "the Zabory" for this area arose among the
inhabitants of the old castellany of Raciaz, for along the Brda extend
even today wide forests, in which are found only tiny setlements, originating
only in recent times. Beyond these forests, beginning at Rytel and
Czersk, right up to Lesno, Wiele and Lag, among the currant in the
Brda and Czarna Woda, lies the thickly- and long-settled area, Zaborska
land (za=beyond; Bory=forests). This name existed already in the 13th
century before the Knights of the Cross. In a document of Wladyslaw
from 1299, giving back the judgments and the tribute from honey in
the castellany of Raciaz' to Michal Jankowicz, a "palaciam in terra
Zaborensi ("palace in the land of Zabory") was handed over to him at
the same time. (Kodeks Wielki, II, p. 174). In a privelege of Mestwin
from 1292 it is also mentioned: "Ciborius, castellanus noster in Sabor" ("Cibor,
our castellan in Zabor"). (See P.U.B. von Perlbach, p. 440). Also in
rent books of the Knights of the Cross the name often turns up. In
one of them the following are mentioned as Zabor villages: Brusy, Karsin,
Kosabuda, Czersk, Dabrowa, Lesno, Czyczkowy, Lubnia, Przytarnia, Zalesie,
Schonhain (i.e., Lag), Swornygacie and Wiele - together 446 hides.
The book names 4 mills (see "Preussen vor 500 Jahren" by Weber, Gdansk,
1878, p. 373). In 1666 and 1696 we find in court records in Chojnice
a Zaborian nobility, which manifests itself in that the armies of the
Commonwealth (of Poland) caused significant damage to its garrisons.
In the visitation of (bp) Rozdrazewski (around his diocese) in 1598
appears even a Zaborian deanery (Zaborzensis), or Starogardian deanery
to which belonged today's Starogard deanery with Garczynska parish
and the true Zabor parishes: Lag, Czersk, Wiele, Brusy and Lesno. There
is also in Zabor-land the village Wysoka Zaborska, so called to distinguish
it from Wysoka near Raciaz, which was called "polna zaborska" - field
zaborska. (See Roczniki Tow. Nauk. w Toruniu II; p. 133-136, and "Hist.
Comp. Geogr." v. Toeppen, p. 233).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1895
Submitted & translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh,
PA, gschmidt50909282@aol.com (Feb
2001)

Zakopane
Zakopane is a village and climatic station. From 1899
Zakopane has been connected with the railroad in Chabowka Knownas (Krakow
- Sucha - Sacz). Visitors come from all over and number 10,000. New
hotels, pension houses, private villas and resorts are being built.
One of the largest important tuberculosis sanitariums was opened on
top of Gubalowka, not far off the road between Zakopane and Koscielisko,
at the end of 1901.
In 1902 Zakopane had 5290 permanent citizens and 10,400
visitors (8700 during the summer and 1688 during the winter) besides
government servants and craftsmen numbering 1000. It has 589 houses
for visitors with 3320 rooms, 637 kitchens, 73 stores, 3 churches and
4 chapels. There are a few craftsman's schools.
The Holy Family church was erected in 1847 and consecrated
in 1899. It's pastor Fr. Stolarczyk (Slovak - Goral). Fr. Jan Tobolak
from Krzczonow was one of the earlier pastors. The oldest cemetary
is known as Peksow Brzyzek and only the elite are buried there. The
rest of the residents are buried in a newer cemetery.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Warsaw 1903.
Submitted by: Translated by Rose Szczech (Jan 1998)

Zal~e~z~e
With Markuszka, a village, in the district of Jaslo,
on the left bank of the Wisloka river, 29 kilometers north of the town
of Osiek, elevation 273 meters above the sea level. The area is hilly,
the soil is heavy, loamy. It borders to the west with Wola Debowiecka,
to the south with Zawadka, to the north with Debowiec. Markuszka is
situated south of Zalese and consists of 13 houses. The whole village
has 96 houses and 550 inhabitants (290 man and 260 women), all Roman
Catholics (with the exception of 8 Jews). The landed property (of Seweryn
Stawiarski) has 116 morg [tr. note: 1 morg = 1.4 acre] of ploughland;
the entire property has 609 morg. Nothing is known about the foundation
of the village and the parish, but they existed as early as 1326. Dlugosz
[tr. note: a famous historian, 1415-80] refers to the village as Zalanze,
Zalanszye and Zalanzie propo Osiek; it was a royal village. The present
wooden church was built in 1760 and modified in 1883. Markuszka and
Wola Debowiecka are part of the parish (diocese of Przemysl, decanate
of Jaslo). In 1581 (A. Pawinski, Malopolska), the entire parish was
owned by Jerzy Mniszek; Zalese included 13 serf half-fiefs, 1 copyholder,
1 tenant with livestock, 1 tenant without livestock and 2 perches of
cleared ploughland.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1895
Submitted by: John Cagney, Frankfort, IL (Mar 2002),
Translated by Tomas Kopacz, Milwaukee, WI

Zaloz~ce or
Zalos~e, Zalos~e Stare ( Old) and Nowe ( New)
A city in the Brody Administrative District, forty kilometers
from Brody toward the south east, at coordinates 49 degrees 48' North
and 43 degrees 2' East of Ferro [this is the same as 25 degrees 24' East
of Greenwich]. Located there are a district court, a post office, a notary,
a military station, a physician and a pharmacy. West of Zalozce lies:
Troscianiec Wielki, Czystopady and Ratyszcze; south: Podbrzeice, Seretec
and Zagorze; south-east: Milno and Blich; and south: Reniow and Bialoglowy
(the last in the Zloczow Administrative District). Almost in middle of
the territory flows the Seret River which at Zaloice becomes a vast pond.
The pond is at elevation 315 meters above sea level. The city was built
on the south side of the pond and on the right bank of the Seret River.
The city includes a Castle which lies on left bank of the river among
the wetlands. Together they comprise Zalozce Stare. Beyond the levy and
at the south-east edge of the pond lies a portion of a town named Zalozce
Nowe.
At a distance of two to three kilometers to the north-west from Zalozce
Nowe are hills (359 and 379 meters above sea level) which form part of
Zalozce and are called Zalozce Grove or Roztoki and Grove beyond Ruda.
The western territory goes up to 374 meters above sea level at Wojtowa
Gora and comes down toward the east to the Seret bog valley at 314 meters
above sea level. Beyond that and stretching further to the cast are higher
hills covered with beautiful oak trees (Ostra Gora). The larger territory
consists of 1043 acres of ploughed land, 728 acres of fields and gardens,
98 acres of pastures, and 33 acres of forest; the smaller territory consists
of 3499 acres of ploughed land, 1474 acres of fields and gardens, 236
acres of pastures, and 431 acres of forest.
In 1890 there were 988 houses and 6928 inhabitants; in the local district
there were 39 houses and 367 inhabitants at the manor house territory.
By religion there were 3157 Greek Catholics, 1636 Roman Catholics and
2502 Jews, By nationality there were 3065 Russians, 2846 Poles and 1379
Germans. The city has a Roman Catholic parish, with the diocese located
at Brody, and the archdiocese at Lwow. The parish was founded and salaried
by Jan Kamieniecki, the heir to Olesk and Zalozce. To this parish belong:
Bialoglowy and Blich, Czystopady, Ditkowce, Gontowa, Hnidawa, Horodyszcze,
Milo, Mszaniec, Neterpince, Niszkowce, Nosowce, Nowosiolki with Beniow,
Obarzance, Panasowka, Plisowce, Podbereice, Ratyszcze, Seretec, Troscianiec
Wielki, Wertelka, Zagorze and Zarudzie. The brick church was consecrated
in 1738. The church houses the tombs of Fr. Janusz Wismiowiecki, who
was master of the horse to the crown ( 21 May 1636), and his father Constantine,
Governor of the Russian District ( 25 May 1641). There is a cloister
of the Sisters of Charity at Zalozce Nowe, Originally founded and salaried
in Brody in 1760 by Helen Potocka, widow of Stanley Potocki, Governor
of the Poznad District, and heir to the possessions in Brody, When the
Brody cloister burned down in 1801, the sisters came to Zalozce, where
they take care of the elderly and teach the children in school. There
are two Greek-Catholic parishes in Zalozce Nowe and Stare. Reniow belongs
to Zalozce Stare and both belong to the Zalozce diocese. These are the
villages that belong to Zalozce Stare: Batkow, Czepiele, Harbuzow, Holubica,
Kolt—w, Kutyszcze, Lutowisko, Manajow, Markopol, Milmo, Nestorowce, Panasowka,
Pieniaki, Podkamien, Popowce, Ratyszcze, Seretec, Szyszkowce, Troscianiec,
Wertelka, Wierzbowczyk, Zagorze and Zwyzen. In Zalozce Nowe there is
an Orthodox church named the Holy Virgin Mary and in Zalozce Stare one
named Saint V [Vladimer ?]. Zalozce Nowe has three grade schools
which already existed in 1791 and Zalozce Stare has one grade school
dating from 1871. Both schools are taught in the Polish language. The
Sisters of Charity run an institution for the sick, with 20 beds, and
an orphanage from a yearly fund of 4,120 Zloty. There is also a workshop
for invalids, from a fund of 1,095 Zloty. Industry, craftsmanship
and trade have developed. There are these factories: distillery, water
mill and brick kiln. There is a local loan bank with a capital of 12,246
Zloty.
In the XV century, Zalozce, together with the local village, belonged
to the heirs of Oleski. After the death of Jan of Sienna in 1477, his
lands were dispersed and divided. His nephew Peter received Zalozce,
together with the local village. Peter left two daughters: Ann who married
Herburt, Castellian of Biecko, and Hedwig who married Martin Kamieniec,
Governor of the Podole District. After the father died they divided the
possessions at Lwow in 1511. In documents written at that time (passed
down by Fr. Baracz in "Cronicle Oleska", page 137) Zalozce
and the nearby village are named. From this we can infer that they already
existed in 1511 as Zalozce town and that Zalozce had a Castle. Further,
there is proof that in the XVI century they collected custom taxes from
merchandise, which was the bigest source of income for the Podole Region.
At the time of the division Zalozce more than likely was put up as a
security deposit and later years bought by Martin Kamiemiec who was at
the time Governor of the Podole District. In 1578, his sons, Jan, Adelbert
and Stanley, made another division of the possessions. At that time Zalozce,
with the Castle and the village came to Stanley. After Stanley
Kamieniec the land went to Wisniowiecki, and after Wisniowiecki to Potocki.
Peter, grandson of Jozef Potocki, Hetman and Governor of the Krakow Castle,
sold the possessions to Michael Ronikier who was the Lithuania King's
Cup-Bearer. After that Ignac, Lord of Miaczyn bought it. Today it belongs
to Vladimir, Lord of Dzieduszyc. The Castle that was once a fort is in
ruins. Some parts are still livable and and have been made into a brewery
and stables. There once was a vast four winged structure, built in the
shape of a cross, made with rocks and bricks and two stories high. At
the sides were towers which opened on all sides, were three stories high
with shooting galleries. At the south wing is an entrance gate with traces
of a drawbridge which is still in good condition. Outside the entrance
is the Crest of Pilawa. At the side of the gate are four comer towers.
The fortress was damaged. Under the Castle, there are vast cellars,
some still used for beer brewing, some completely damaged. At one
time, wetlands surrounded the Castle; today only dry lands are found.
The Castle was built at later part of XVI century. Wisniowiecki Lords
created it and they constantly lived in it. Besides their homeland Wisniowiec,
this Castle was the main full time living quarters. The heir was
Jerzy Wisniowiecki, Castellian of Kijow (1617). He was followed by Dymiter
Jerzy, Hetman to the Crown (1682). He was excellently prepared for his
role as Hetman and blood was boiling. During the Cossack War he was toppled
down. Many times he fought against armed Tartar forces. In 1675, Ibrahim
Szymszan Lord sent from the Zbaraz fortress a few lords to take ever
the Castle in which Lord Dymiter Wisniowiecki had gathered his forces,
The Turkish Lords usually went to fortunetellers before they started
to fight. Before the actual fighting they first let out a black chicken
toward the castle, to see which way the chicken would turn. With a cackle,
the chicken turned towards the moslem line of soldiers. The Turks took
this as a bad omen. They burned the town, but they didn't touch the Castle
and returned to Zbaraz. Joseph Potocki, Hetman to the Crown, renovated
and redecorated the Castle, lived in it often and,died there in 175 1.
When Ignac, Lord of Miaczynski, possessed the Castle he had almost ruins,
so he turned it into a wool factory. He later closed it down and started
to change it into a rug factory, but that didn't last too long. (Sokalski
in "Russian Geographer Statistician Zloczow", page 321, and
Czolowski "Old Castles and Fortresses at Halicka Rus", a preserved
file, 1892, page 122).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego, Vol. XIV, pp. 354-5, Warsaw 1895.
Submitted and Translated by: Rose Szczech, Polish Genealogy
Society of America (Mar 1998)

Zamosc
In German Zamoss. An estate in Chojnice county. Post
office in Karsin, parish of Wiele. 355 hectares (about 877 aacres),
102 (252 acres) in plowed fields, 41 (about 103 acres) in meadow, 96
(about 37 acres) in forest. In 1885 there were 8 dwelling houses, 53
inhabitants, 51 Catholics, 1 Lutheran, 1 Jew. The owner (dziedzic)
is Jan Sarnowski.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1880
Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gschmidt50909282@aol.com(Feb
2003)

Zareby
Zareby Koscielne, a village on the river Omulew in Przasnysz
county, Zareby gmina and parish, 38 km. from Przasnysz, about 1 km.
from the Prussian border, on the other side of which lies the town
of Wielbark. It has a wooden parish church, the gmina administrative
office with a savings and loan fund, a border guard post, and an inn.
It has 123 houses, 790 inhabitants, and 2,695 morgs of land (682 unused).
In 1827 there were 50 houses and 313 inhabitants. In 1868 the manorial
farmstead of Zareby Koscielne had an area of 2,665 morgs. The village
of Zareby Koscielne has 121 settlements, with 2,331 morgs of land;
the village of Krukowo has 78 settlements, with 2,816 morgs; the village
of Rzodkiewnica has 29 settlements, with 1,519 morgs; the village of
Binduga has 20 settlements, 754 morgs; and the village of Nowa Wies
has 21 settlements, 713 morgs. In 1852 the total area of the village
and manorial farmstead was given as 359 new Polish wlokas. According
to measurements by the Prussian government there were 787 Magdeburg
wlokas, which included 211 of meadows and 262 of forests. In a tax
register from the 16th century there as nothing about this village
or any of the settlements which comprise the gmina today. At that time
the area was surely a forest on the border. Small forest settlements
(Laz, Budki, and the like) undoubtedly belonged to the parish of Chorzele.
It may not have been till the first half of the 17th century that the
expanse of forest here, with its very poor soil, was cleared and these
villages were founded, which mainly took the names of the former forest
sections,
The parish church here undoubtedly came into existence at the end of
the 17th century. The current church was built in 1775 by Antoni Zielinski,
the owner of the village. Zareby parish, in Przasnysz dean-ery, has 1,725
souls. Zareby gmina belongs to gmina district court IV and has 13,646
morgs (5,084 unused). Among those listed in the Permanent Population
Register are 10 Protestants and 5 Jews. In the gmina there are two churches,
a paper mill, a sawmill, a water mill, a windmill, and two inns. The
gmina includes: Binduga, Borek, Brodowe Làki, Budki, Krukowo,
Laz, Mazuk, Nowawies, Ostrowek, Poscieƒ, Pruskoleka, Rzodkiewnica,
Rowki, Rachujka, Skuzy, Srebrnik, Wierzchowizna, and Zareby Koscielne.
[Br{onislaw} Ch{lebowski}, Volume 14, page 419].
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1895 [Vol. 14, page 419]
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Winter 2003
Rodziny.

Zarzecze
Jeleniewski
A village on the river Hancza Czarna, Suwalki district,
township Pawlow, Jeleniewo parish. About 15 km from Sulwaki, it has
11 houses and 103 residents. In 1827 it had 11 houses and 65 residents.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14]
Translated by Peter Wessner, PSG Texas Polish Footprints,
Spring 2001 Periodical

Zarzecze
Pawlowskie
A village in Suwalki district, Pawlowka township, Przerosl
parish, about 30 km from Suwalki, it has 17 houses, 177 residents.
In 1827 there were 14 homes, 89 residents.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14]
Translated by Peter Wessner, PSG Texas Polish Footprints,
Spring 2001 Periodical

Zazdros
Zazdrosc, in German Sadrosch, a colony in Swiecie
county, served by the railroad station and parish church in Sliwice.
It covers 69 hectares. In 1885 there were 18 houses, 20 hearths, and
113 Roman Catholic inhabitants. In 1789 it was a wasteland with three
hearths (see Goldbeck's Topogr., p. 196). [Rev. Fr.]
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14, pp. 504].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Fall 1999 Bulletin.

Zelazkowizna
A village and manor property, Suwalki district, parish
and township of Wizajny, distance from Suwalki about 30 km, it has
4 houses, 15 residents. In 1827 there were 4 houses and 49 residents.
The Zelazkowizna manor and Klejpedka manor together formed one of the
properties belonging to the Hancza holdings.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14]
Translated by Peter Wessner, PSG Texas Polish Footprints,
Spring 2001 Periodical

Zdroje
Zdroje, in German Sdroyen, a village on the Matawa
river in Swiecie county, served by the post office in Louisenthal and
the Catholic parish church in Sliwice; there is a Catholic school in
the village. It has 371 hectares (270 of farmland, 42 of meadows, 2
of forests). In 1885 there were enumerated here, along with GajdÑwko
(3 houses, 25 inhabitants) 41 houses, 55 hearths, and 274 inhabitants,
246 of them Catholic, 21 Protestant, and 7 Jewish. In 1773 there were
5 hearths here and 36 Catholic inhabitants. [Rev. Fr.].
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14, pp. 544]
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Fall 1999 Bulletin.

Zdziarzec
Zdziarzec or Zdzarzec, with Janowicami, a village,
in the Pilzno county, in a sandy plain (225 meters above sea level),
along the highway from Czarna to Radomysl Wlk (near Debica), 3.7 kilometers
south of Radomysl Wlk., has a Roman Catholic parish, 184 houses and
868 residents (434 men, 434 women), 842 Roman Catholics and 26 Jews.
(Translator's note: The description continues but was not translated.)
The parish belongs to the Diocese of Tarnow, the deanery of Radomysl
Wlk., and consists of Dulcza Wielka and Zarowka. Zdziarzec borders
on the north with Wolka Dulecka, on the east with Dabrowka, on the
south with Zarowka, Przeryty Bor and Dabie. Mac.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1895
Summitted and translated by James Czuchra, Chicago,
IL. Jan. 2001

Zgliczyn
Glinki
A village and manorial farmstead on the Mawka river,
in Sierpc county, Stawiszyn gmina, Radzanow parish, 33 km. from Sierpc;
it has 19 houses, 216 inhabitants, and 963 morgs of land. In 1827 there
were 12 houses, 103 inhabitants. See Glinki 7.) In 1578, according
to Pawinski’s Mazow., p. 54, in the village of Zgliczyno Glinki,
in Zgliczyno parish, there were 4 1/2 lans owned by peasants, as well
as 8 crofts with land, 1 without land, a mill, and production of beer.
[Br{onislaw} Ch{lebowski}.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1895 [ Vol. 14, page
580].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Spring 2003 Rodziny.

Zgliczyn
Koscielny
A settlement on the Mlawka river in Sierpc county,
Stawiszyn gmina, Radzanów parish, 30 km. from Sierpc; it has
2 houses, 21 inhabitants, and 1 morg of land. In 1827 there were 2
houses, 65 inhabitants there. There is a parish church there, but in
this century it was closed and the parish was incorporated into Radzanow
parish. Village lists from 1827 still give the parish of Zgliczyn.
It existed as early as 1578. [Br{onislaw} Ch{lebowski}.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1895 [ Vol. 14, page
580].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Spring 2003 Rodziny.

Zgliczyn
Pobodze
A village
and manorial farmstead on the river Dzialdowka, in Mlawa, with 18
houses and 197 inhabitants. In 1827 there were 10 houses with 120
inhabitants. In 1577 from the village of Zgliczyn Pobodze three land-owners
paid taxes on 2 lans and 6 crofts with land (Pawinski, Mazow., p.
54). In 1868 the manorial farmstead of Zgliczyn had 492 morgs of
land: 270 of farmland and gardens, 32 of meadows, 80 of pastureland,
20 overgrown with brush, and 90 unused. The village of Zgliczyn Pobodze
had 15 settlements, 40 morgs; the village of Chrapów had 4
settlements with 139 morgs of land. [Br{onislaw} Ch{lebowski}.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1895 [ Vol. 14, page
580].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Spring 2003 Rodziny.

Zgliczyn
Witowy
A village and manorial farmstead on the river Dzialdowka,
in Mlawa county, Ratowo gmina, Radzanow parish, 28 km. from Mlawa;
it has 25 houses and 225 inhabitants. In 1827 there were 11 houses,
77 inhabitants; it is in Zgliczyn parish. In 1871 the manorial farmstead
of Zgliczyn Witowe had 779 morgs of land, of which 240 were farmland
and gardens, 45 were meadows, 94 were pastureland, 200 were forests,
150 were overgrown with brush, and 50 were unused. There were 14 wooden
buildings; the forest is not administered. The village of Zgliczyn
Witowe had 20 settlements, 60 morgs. [Br{onislaw} Ch{lebowski}.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1895 [ Vol. 14,
page 580].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Spring 2003 Rodziny.

Ziemie~cin
Ziemiecin, a village and manor in Nieszawski
County (powiat), district of Boguszyce,
parish of Sadlno, a distance of 52 Km from Nieszawy, having 177 inhabitants.
In 1828 there were 15 houses and 91 inhabitants. In 1886, Ziemiecin
manor had 665 morgs of land; 529 morgs of cultivated land and gardens,
71 morgs of meadows, 38 morgs of pasture land, 27 morgs of unused/undeveloped
land; 15 brick buildings, 4 wooden buildings; 6 crops under rotation
in 11 fields.
The village of Ziemiecin had 23 settlers,
on 35 morgs of land. Ziemiecin is first listed in records around the
year 1433 and Mateusz and Jakub inherited Ziemiecin about the year
1470 (Dyplomatic Kodex, vol.II, page 539 and 853). According to the
district laws of Radziejow from 1557, the village of Ziemiecin belonged
to the parish of Sadlno, which had 5 lans of area and 10 farm houses.
(pawinski, Wielkopolski, vol. II, page 30).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Vol.14, p.609, Warsaw 1895
Submitted by Delphine Kasuk, Lockport,
IL. Dec. 2000. Translated by Martin Kurtin.
Families of members doing research
in Ziemiecin. Click on researcher name to send E-mail.

Zrecin
Link to PGST
translation - text and photos.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw. Translated by Martin
Kurtin.

Zubsuche
- in the county of Nowy Targ
This village along with Nowe Bystre, is located in
the Podhale region. It lies on the left bank of the Bialy Dunajec river
and is south of Zakopane. It is composed of a few subdivisions having
the names of the original settlers like: Zub, Suche, Furmanowka, Pistorowka,
Geska, Bystra, Bystryk, Slosz, etc. There are 518 homes with 2451 people
(1210 men and 1241 women). There are 2438 Roman Catholics and 13 Jewish
individuals. Most of the homes are well built wooden houses. The people
of the community work in Zakopane. The village belongs to the parish
in Poronin. This settlement started slowly in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The name of the village came from the names of two of the settlers
Zub-Suche. It was first mentioned in the recruiting documents from
1674 in the parish of Ludzmierz.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Warsaw 1895.
Submitted and Translated by: Rose Szczech, Polish Genealogy
Society of America (Apr 1998)

Z~ukowice
Stare [Old] and Nowe [New], along with Laski, a village
in Tarnów county, 19 km. northeast of Tarnów, in a valley
at an elevation of 235 meters above sea level, on the road from Tarnów
to Radomysl. The stream Jabloniec, which flows into the Czarna, a left
tributary of the Wisloka, divides this community into two parts, with
Zukowice Stare to the west, Zukowice Nowe to the east, and Laski north
of Zukowice Nowe. It is served by the Roman Catholic parish in Lisia
Góra. Zukowice Stare has 271 houses and 1,399 inhabitants (705
men, 694 women), 1,375 Roman Catholic and 24 Jewish. The wólka
Polany (26 houses) and the settlement Jodlówka (1 house) belong
to the village. There is a school in the village. Zukowice Nowe with
Laski and Mokre had a total of 157 houses, 857 inhabitants (426 men,
431 women), 831 Roman Catholic and 26 Jewish. The tabular estate (owned
by Prince Sanguszko) is part of the Tarnów estate and covers 539
mórgs, of which 13 are unused; the minor estate [land owned by
peasants] has a total of 3,868 mórgs. Zukowice borders on the
west with Lisia Góra, on the east with Jawornik, on the north
with Jastrzabka Nowa, and on the south with Zaczarnia and Jodlówka.
In 1337 King Kazimierz confirmed deeds submitted by the owner of Zukowice,
who was “nobilis vir Sczw” [“a nobleman Sczw” ?],
giving title to this village to Leszek and Wladyslaw, dukes of Kraków.
In 1354 King Kazimierz granted 40 lany of the ducal forest on the river
Czarna, in Tarnów district, to Mikolaj, Pawel, and Klemens, sons
of Witek, to found on this land a village with a charter of Magdeburg
law, to be called Zukowice. They received in that village a soltys property
with three lany, with the right to dig ponds, establish shops for a butcher
and shoemaker, sell bread, salt, and fish, and to occupy meadows on the
river Bren; they were to collect every sixth denarius from rents, and
every third from fines levied by the court. One lan was set aside for
the church, and another as a common pasture. The peasants were to have
20 years of freedom. After that they were to pay a rent per lan of 8
skoty [an ancient coin, 1/24th of a grzywna], a ferton apiece as a tithe,
and as a meszne [Mass tax] they were to give the parish priest each one
measure of rye and one of oats. Once a year grand courts were to be held
with a king’s delegate participating. The soltysi were obligated
to perform military service in armor with a spear.
Evidently the establishment of this community was not a complete success,
because in 1368 King Kazimierz bestowed the property and office of soltys
in that same village on “the kmien Bratumi?” (Bratumyli kmetonis)
for his services, and transferred the village from Polish law to German
law. This act produced completely different circumstances. Instead of
a rent, the peasants were to provide two measures (urnas) of mead apiece
yearly, and a ferton apiece as a tithe (Kod. malopol., III, 24, 101,
217).
According to the 1536 tax register for Pilzno county 16 peasants were
settled in the village of Zukowice in the parish of Lisia Góra.
The lany were not surveyed (so did they use the land jointly?). They
paid a tribute in mead and skins. In 1581 the village of Zukowice, along
with Luszowice, the property of Prince Ostrogski, had 15 settlements,
31⁄2 lany, 7 zagrody with land, 2 tenant farmers, 3 paupers, and
1 crafts-man (Pawinski, Malopolska, 261, 554). [Br{onillaw} Ch{lebowski} – Mac.
{Maurycy Maciszewski}].
[According to the Tarnów diocese Website, the address
of the parish church in Stare Zukowice is: Parafia p. w. Najsw. Maryi
Panny
Czestochowskiej, Stare Zukowice 93, 33-151 Nowa Jastrza³bka, POLAND,
and its e-mail address is stare_zukowice@diecezja.tarnow.pl.]
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1895 [ Vol. 14, page
846].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Fall 2004 Rodziny. 
Z~urowa
Zurowa is a village located in the province of Jaslo
(now Tarnow). It is located on the left hand shore of a stream above
a tributary flowing towards Olszynki. It also flows toward the Siepietnica
do Ropy. It is 4.1 kilometers northwest of Olpiny, at an elevation
of 300 meters above sea level.
It has a Roman Catholic chaplain and a school. The buildings
are squeezed in a valley across from a small wooded hill. The homes
face an east-west direction. There are 169 homes and 1062 inhabitants,
of which 526 were men and 536 were women, all Roman Catholic.
The chamberlain, Alexander Radecki, owned 865 morgs
of land of which 645 morgs were forest. Zygmunt Zurowski leased 1381
wiorstas (wiorsta=1066.78m) from the county office in Biecz and paid
with 3 kilometers of meadow, two farms without fields, 2 tenants with
cattle, 4 tenants without cattle and three craftsmen.
Zurowa belonged to the parish at Olpiny. In 1772, the
town was incorporated into the estate of the chamberlain. In 1794,
the government built a church (St. Margaret) and a chaplain was obtained.
Later, the village was sold to todayÍs present owners. Zurowa is bounded
on the south by Olpiny, on the west by Jodlow, on the east by Swoszona
and on the north by Ryglice.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Warsaw 1895.
Submitted by Carol Wywialowski (Nov. 2000)
Families of members being researched in Zurowa. Click
on researcher name to send E-mail.
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