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Ciężkowice
・ Ciężkowice (disambiguation)
・ Ciężkowice, Opole Voivodeship
・ Ciężkowice, Łódź Voivodeship
・ Ciężkowice-Rożnów Landscape Park
・ Ciężkowiczki
・ Ciężkowo
・ Ciężków
・ Ciğatay
・ Ciğir, Kazan
・ Ciğirler, Kızılcahamam
・ Ciświca
・ Cișmea
・ Cișmichioi
・ Cișmigiu Gardens


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Ciężkowice : ウィキペディア英語版
Ciężkowice


Ciężkowice ((ドイツ語:Hardenberg)) is a town in Tarnów County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, with 4,322 inhabitants (2010). It lies in the ''Ciężkowice Foothills'', on the Biała river. The town is located on regional road nr. 977, it also has a rail station (Bogoniowice - Ciężkowice), on a line which goes from Tarnów to the Slovakian border crossing at Leluchów. Ciężkowice is home to a sports club ''Ciężkowianka'', founded in 1948.
The history of Ciężkowice dates back to the year 1125, when in a document of Papal legate Gilles de Paris, the village is mentioned as a property of the Tyniec Benedictine Abbey. On February 29, 1348, King Kazimierz Wielki granted it Magdeburg rights town charter. At that time, Ciężkowice was inhabited by the German settlers (see Walddeutsche), and German language name of the town, ''Hardenberg'' was also used in documents. In the late Middle Ages, Ciężkowice was located on a merchant route from the Kingdom of Hungary to Kraków. Weekly fairs took place here every Wednesday, where local dairy products, clothes, salt, horses and Hungarian wines were sold. In 1358, St. Andrew parish church was built.
After the Swedish invasion of Poland, Ciężkowice lost its importance. Until 1772 (see Partitions of Poland), the town belonged to Sandomierz Voivodeship. From 1772 to late 1918, it was part of Austrian Galicia. The decline of Ciężkowice was so severe that in 1934, the government of the Second Polish Republic stripped it of the town charter, and Ciężkowice remained a village until 1998.
== Points of interest ==

* Nature Museum of Krystyna and Wlodzimierz Tomek, with a collection of birds and insects,
* neo-Gothic St. Andrew church, with an Ecce Homo painting, presented to the town by Pope Innocent XI,
* Classicist town hall in the market square,
* wooden houses in the market square, typical of the Carpathian Foothills,
* St. Florian monument (patron saint of the town), in the market square,
* several roadside chapels,
* World War I military cemeteries nr. 137, 138,139 and 140,
* Ignacy Jan Paderewski manor house with a spacious park, located on the other side of the Biala river, in the village of Kąśna Dolna. The manor house was built in the early 19th century, and in 1897, it was remodelled by its new owner, Ignacy Jan Paderewski, who in 1903 sold it to Helena and Wlodzimierz Kodrębski. Currently, it houses the Paderewski Center.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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