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Golczowice, Prudnik County

Golczowice, Prudnik County

FieldValue
nameGolczowice
other_nameGolschowitz
settlement_typeVillage
image_skyline2011-09 Golczowice 01.jpg
image_captionSaint Anne church
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Voivodeship
subdivision_name1Opole
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Prudnik
subdivision_type3Gmina
subdivision_name3Głogówek
coordinates
pushpin_mapPoland
pushpin_label_positionright
population_total93
population_as_of2022
established_titleFirst mentioned
established_date1419
timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
utc_offset_DST+2
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code48-250
area_code+4877
registration_plateOPR

Golczowice , additional name in German: Golschowitz, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Głogówek, within Prudnik County, Opole Voivodeship, south-western Poland. It is situated in the historical region of Prudnik Land.

As of 31 December 2022, the village's population numbered 93 inhabitants. A significant portion of them belongs to the German minority in Poland.

Geography

The village is located in the southern part of Opole Voivodeship, close to the Czech Republic–Poland border. It is situated in the historical Prudnik Land region, as well as in Upper Silesia. It lies in the Silesian Lowlands. The National Register of Geographical Names for 2025 classified Golczowice as a hamlet (przysiółek) of Zawada.

Etymology

In Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien, published in 1865, Felix Triest noted the village's German name as Golschowitz, and its Polish name as Golczowice. In 1936, Nazi administration of the German Reich changed the village's name to Goldenau.

Following the Second World War, the Polish name Golczowice was introduced by the Commission for the Determination of Place Names on 1 October 1948. As Gmina Głogówek gained the bilingual status on 1 December 2009, the government introduced an additional German name for the village: Golschowitz.

History

Traces of human presence in the area of the present-day village of Golczowice, confirmed by archaeological research, date back to the Stone Age and the Bronze Age.

The village's name was first recorded in a document published in 1419. There was a folwark in the village. The village was completely abandoned in the 16th century due to the wars and riots that occurred in the previous century. According to a document signed on 10 December 1595 in Wrocław, there was an inn and a pond in Golczowice, which belonged to the Głogówek estate.

19th-century sigil

In 1724, a wooden Saint Anne church was built in Golczowice. Until 1742, the village was a part of (circulus superioris Glogoviae) in the Habsburg Empire. After the First Silesian War, it was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia was incorporated into Prudnik County (Großkreis Neustadt). The wooden church burnt down in 1764. noted in 1784 that Golczowice belonged to the Schaffgotsch family.

A new Saint Anne church was constructed in the years 1843–1848 in a place where victims of the 1831 cholera epidemic were buried. The villages of Golczowice and Zawada had their own sigil. In the 19th century, there was a watermill in Golczowice.

War monument

After the First World War, a monument dedicated to people from Golczowice, Zawada, Czartowice, But, Mucków, and Sysłów, who died in the war, was erected in the village. Only a portion of Prudnik County participated in the 1921 Upper Silesia plebiscite, which was supposed to determine ownership of the Province of Upper Silesia between Germany and Poland. Golczowice found itself in the eastern part of the county, within the plebiscite area. In the end, the area of Prudnik, along with Golczowice, remained in Germany.

During the Second World War, on 18 March 1945, the Soviet Red Army encircled several German divisions in the area of Golczowice. On 19 March, a command post of the Wehrmacht was set up in the village. Following the Second World War, from March to May 1945, Prudnik County was controlled by the Soviet military commandant's office. On 11 May 1945, it was passed on to the Polish administration. Autochthonous inhabitants of Golczowice, who either spoke Silesian or knew Polish, were allowed to remain in the village.

Demographics

Golczowice is inhabited by autochthonous Germans and Silesians. They belong to the registered German minority in Poland. The residents speak the Prudnik dialect of the Silesian language. The villaged gained the bilingual Polish-German status in 2009.

Transport

County road number 1281O (Żabnik—Nowa Wieś Prudnicka—Czartowice—Golczowice—Zawada) runs through the village. The local public transport buses were operated by PKS Prudnik. Since 2021, public transit is organized by the PGZT "Pogranicze" corporation in Prudnik.

Religion

The Roman Catholic Saint Anne church is located in the village. The church is a seat of the local parish, which belongs to the Diocese of Opole.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (January 2024). "Oficjalny Spis Pocztowych Numerów Adresowych".
  2. {{PRNG Miejscowości. 34406. (2025-08-21)
  3. "Regulamin Odznaki Krajoznawczej Ziemi Prudnickiej".
  4. (February 2023). "Gmina się nieco zmniejszyła". MGOK na zlecenie Urzędu Miejskiego.
  5. (1995-12-24). "Ludność Ziemi Prudnickiej". Tygodnik Prudnicki.
  6. Szyniec, Grzegorz. (2021). "Spis miejscowości Śląska".
  7. Triest, Felix. (1864–1865). "Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien". Wilh. Gottl. Korn.
  8. Hanich, Andrzej. (2021). "Słownik nazw miejscowości diecezji opolskiej w XX i XXI wieku". Instytut Śląski.
  9. Rozporządzenie Ministrów Administracji Publicznej i Ziem Odzyskanych z dnia 1 października 1948 r. o przywróceniu i ustaleniu urzędowych nazw miejscowości ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/DocDetails.xsp?id=WMP19480780692 M.P. z 1948 r. nr 78, poz. 692]).
  10. Stadnicki, Stanisław. (2008-10-01). "Głogówek – Oberglogau".
  11. Wieland, Johann Wolfgang. (1736). "Principatus Silesiae Oppoliensis exactissima Tabula geographica, sistens Circulus Oppoliensem Ober-Glogau Gros Strehliz, Cosel, Tost, Rosenberg, Falckenberg & Lubleniz". ab Homannianis Heredibus. Cum Spec. S. Caes. Rque Mtis Privilegio.
  12. Dereń, Andrzej. (1999-04-06). "XVIII-wieczna rewolucja". Spółka Wydawnicza "Aneks".
  13. "Powiat prudnicki z perspektywy roku 1784".
  14. (2021-08-20). "1079 Zowade-Golschowitz (Zawada, Golczowice, kolonia Zawady) II".
  15. Mosakowski, Zachariasz. (2020-03-10). "Golczowice, młyn wodny". Centralna Baza Danych o Młynach w Polsce.
  16. [https://sbc.org.pl/dlibra/publication/31758/edition/28606 Abstimmungsgebiet Oberschlesien. Akte polnischer Wahlbeeinflussung]
  17. "Neustadt (Prudnik)".
  18. Dereń, Andrzej. (2005-05-11). "Polska Ziemia Prudnicka". Spółka Wydawnicza "Aneks".
  19. Hellfeier, Robert. (June 2018). "Chrzelicka mowa? cz. I". Panorama Bialska.
  20. "Wykaz dróg powiatu prudnickiego".
  21. "PKS Connex Prudnik / Przewozy pasażerskie / Rozkład jazdy".
  22. Dobrzański, Maciej. (2021-08-18). "Powołują związek, który ma ułatwić komunikację".
  23. "Wg dekanatów".
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