Szczepanowice

Szczepanowice (German: Sczepanowitz, Stefansfeld; since 1936, Stefanshöh) is a district of Opole, Poland.

Saint Joseph's Church in Szczepanowice

History

Szczepanowice (the name derives from a variant of the Polish given name, Stefan) was first mentioned as a settlement in the first half of the 13th century — in 1254 as Sczepanowicz, and in 1278 as Sczepanowice.

At the opening of the Third Silesian Uprising (1921), the town's railroad bridge was one of seven that were blown up by the Wawelberg Group, a destruction unit run by Polish military intelligence (Section II).

Formerly a village, Szczepanowice was annexed to the city of Opole in 1936. It has some 3,200 residents and comprises mainly single-family dwellings. In addition there is a cluster of apartment houses on ulica Gospodarcza and of row houses on ulica Stawowa.

In 1997 Szczepanowice suffered a millennium flood of the Odra River.

gollark: GEORGE (86% confidence), yes.
gollark: Evil plan #92827261: tunnel HTTP over UDTP.
gollark: Perhaps I should somehow make a way to run my multicast chat program over the netz™.
gollark: As a backup plan, GEORGE will be periodically etched into the moon.
gollark: Yes, we're working on using firmware hacks on display controllers and certain extremely rapidly changing arrangements of pixels to create optically pumped lasers.

See also

Notes

  • Most of the information in this article is drawn from the corresponding "Szczepanowice" article on the Polish Wikipedia.

References


    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.