Hołdunów

Hołdunów (German: Anhalt) is a district of Lędziny, Silesian Voivodeship, southern Poland. It was established in 1770 and merged with Lędziny in 1991. At the end of 2014 it had 5,399 inhabitants.[1]

General view

History

The settlement was established in 1770 by about 300 Calvinists, fleeing religious persecution from the village of Kozy in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth across the border to Upper Silesia in the Kingdom of Prussia.[2] The refugees established a village on the fields of Lędziny's folwark Kiełpowy, called Anhalt, named after the rulers of a nearby Pless (Polish: Pszczyna).[3] In 1778 they built a rectory, which housed a small chapel, school and lodging for a priest and a teacher.

The village was affected by the discovery of underground coal deposits in 1842, which led to the opening of a coal mine in the following year. In 1902 the Protestant Saint Trinity church was built in the municipality (razed in 1967). It was then inhabited by a majority of German-speakers. In Upper Silesia plebiscite (1921) Germany got 294 votes against 76 for Poland.[4] Nonetheless Hołdunów became a part of Poland. In the interwar period it was one of only four municipalities in the Upper Silesian (thus excluding Cieszyn Silesia) part of autonomous Silesian Voivodeship which had Protestant majority (70.6% in 1933).[5] It was later annexed by Nazi Germany at the beginning of World War II, and returned to Poland afterwards.

In 1975 Hołdunów together with Lędziny were amalgamated with Tychy. Lędziny regained town rights in 1991 and absorbed Hołdunów.

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References

  1. "Lędziny w liczbach" [Lędziny in numbers] (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2015-05-27.
  2. A. Malina, Ewangelickie tradycje Hołdunowa, Didache, Katowice 2004.
  3. Bartosz Wieliński (2011-08-20). "Niemcy mordowali, Polacy podpalali" (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Retrieved 2011-08-21.
  4. Results in Pszczyna County Archived 2015-05-02 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Czembor, Henryk (1993). Ewangelicki Kościół Unijny na polskim Górnym Śląsku (in Polish). Katowice: Dom Wydawniczy i Księgarski "Didache". p. 45.


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