Stara Kuźnia, Opole Voivodeship

Stara Kuźnia [ˈstara ˈkuʑɲa] (German: Klein Althammer) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bierawa, within Kędzierzyn-Koźle County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.[1] It lies approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) east of Bierawa, 12 km (7 mi) south-east of Kędzierzyn-Koźle, and 50 km (31 mi) south-east of the regional capital Opole.

Stara Kuźnia
Village
School
Stara Kuźnia
Coordinates: 50°18′0″N 18°20′30″E
Country Poland
VoivodeshipOpole
CountyKędzierzyn-Koźle
GminaBierawa
Population
691

Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).

The village has a population of 691.

During the Second World War the village, then known as Klein Althammer, was the base for a working party (E537[2]) of British and Commonwealth prisoners of war, under the administration of Stalag VIIIB/344 at Łambinowice (then known as Lamsdorf) in Poland. In January 1945, as the Soviet armies resumed their offensive and advanced into Germany, the prisoners were marched westward in the so-called Long March or Death March. Many of them died from the bitter cold and exhaustion. The lucky ones got far enough to the west to be liberated by the allied armies after some four months of travelling on foot in appalling conditions.

gollark: Arguably you would be better off with random microcontroller hardware.
gollark: If you're emulating a CPU on your FPGA, then an actual hardware CPU is going to easily beat it.
gollark: I think a more sensible model is multicore CPUs for general tasks and FPGAs doing dedicated acceleration things which they're actually good at.
gollark: I guess you could have one FPGA per running task or something but… why?
gollark: You probably want to be able to run background tasks for networking and such.

References



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