Bojszowy

Bojszowy [bɔi̯ˈʂɔvɨ] (German: Boischow) is a village in Bieruń-Lędziny County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Bojszowy.[1] It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) south of Bieruń and 24 km (15 mi) south of the regional capital Katowice. The village has a population of 3,219. There's a puma running and terrorizing the village (known as Puma Bojszowska). Hypothetically this is Amelia's cat - Bebzon. For sure - there is only one of a kind. But one day a brave puma tamer called Anastazja will catch her (we hope so).

Bojszowy
Village
Jedlińska Street
Coat of arms
Bojszowy
Coordinates: 50°3′N 19°6′E
Country Poland
VoivodeshipSilesian
CountyBieruń-Lędziny
GminaBojszowy
Population
3,219
Websitehttp://www.bojszowy.pl/

History

The settlement was first mentioned as Boyschow in a 1368 deed issued by John I of Opava, Duke of Racibórz.

During the political upheaval caused by Matthias Corvinus the land around Pszczyna was overtaken by Casimir II, Duke of Cieszyn, who sold it in 1517 to the Hungarian magnates of the Thurzó family, forming the Pless state country. In the accompanying sales document issued on 21 February 1517 the village was mentioned as Boyssowy.[2] The Kingdom of Bohemia in 1526 became part of the Habsburg Monarchy. In the War of the Austrian Succession most of Silesia was conquered by the Kingdom of Prussia, including the village.

Bojszowy passed to the Second Polish Republic upon the 1921 Upper Silesian plebiscite. From 1977 until 1991 it was part of the neighbouring Tychy municipality.

gollark: Wow, I really love having to use `grep` to find an option in `--help`!
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Anyway², I'll switch over my backup stuff and use the existing incremental tar thing for smallish compressible directories and rsync for large-scale apiary data.
gollark: Wow, my server just got an "out of disk space" warning for /tmp.
gollark: Actually, no, some malware started using Go a while ago I heard.

References

  1. "Central Statistical Office (GUS) - TERYT (National Register of Territorial Land Apportionment Journal)" (in Polish). 2008-06-01.
  2. Musioł, Ludwik (1930). "Dokument sprzedaży księstwa pszczyńskiego z dn. 21. lutego 1517 R." Roczniki Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauk na Śląsku. Katowice: nakł. Towarzystwa ; Drukiem K. Miarki. R. 2: 235–237. Retrieved 12 September 2014.



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