Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q345316> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 triples per page.
- Q345316 subject Q17566407.
- Q345316 subject Q3531575.
- Q345316 subject Q3532267.
- Q345316 abstract "Łazy [ˈwazɨ] is a town in Zawiercie County, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland. Until 1947 the town was the seat of the Rokitno Szlacheckie municipality. In the years 1975-1998 the town administratively belonged to the Katowice province. According to data from December 31, 2004 the town has 7,242 inhabitants. During World War II, German occupiers changed the name to Lazy then to Lasern without a legislative decree. Łazy belongs to the province of Lesser Poland, and since its foundation until the Partitions of Poland, it was part of Krakow Voivodeship.In the Middle Ages, in the area of today’s Łazy were five settlements: Grabowa, Niegowonice, Wiesiolka, Wysoka and Ciagowice. Another village, which today is located within boundaries of Łazy, Chruszczobrod, belonged to the Duchy of Siewierz, which was incorporated into the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1790. In the year 1386, King Wladyslaw Jagiello granted the villages of Niegowonice, Wiesiolka, Wysoka, Grabowa and Rokitno Szlacheckie ro Wlodek of Charbinowice, the starosta of Lublin and czesnik of Kraków. Until 1795, Grabowa, Hutki Kanki and Niegowoniczki belonged to Lelow County, while Niegowonice, Wiesió∏ka,Wysoka, Ciagowice, Rokitno Szlacheckie and Turza were part of Kraków County. During the Swedish invasion of Poland, the area of today’s Łazy witnessed heavy fighting and destruction. Stanislaw Warszycki, owner of the so-called Ogrodzieniec Properties, fought Swedish invaders. As a result, the Ogrodzieniec Castle was destroyed, together with numerous villages, such as Grabowa, with its fortified stronghold on the Lesser Poland - Silesian border. After the Third Partition of Poland (1795), the boundary between the Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg Empire was established on the upper Pilica river. The area of Łazy was seized by Prussia, as part of the province of New Silesia. In 1807, after the Treaties of Tilsit, it was annexed by the Duchy of Warsaw, which in 1815 became Russian-controlled Congress Poland, and remained part of Russian Empire until World War I. The village of Łazy for the first time appeared on maps in ca. 1790. It remained a small settlement, located next to the much larger village of Rokitno Szlacheckie. Łazy owes its development to the construction of the Warsaw–Vienna railway (completed in 1848). During the January Uprising, a skirmish between Polish rebels and Russian troops took place near Lazy on March 22, 1863. Until 1927, Łazy belonged to the gmina of Rokitno Szlacheckie, Bedzin County. In the Second Polish Republic, it was originally part of Kielce Voivodeship, and on January 1, 1927, the gmina of Rokitno Szlacheckie was transferred to Zawiercie County. The village of Lazy was captured by the Wehrmacht in early September 1939, and remained in German hands until January 20, 1945. After the war, the government of People's Republic of Poland transferred Łazy to Katowice Voivodeship, creating the gmina of Łazy in late 1945.In Communist Poland, Łazy was a local center of industry, with Cement Works Wysoka, Pottery Plant, and large cargo depot of Polish State Railways. In the late 1940s, houses of culture, cinemas and libraries were opened in the gmina of Łazy. The village went through the period of quick development in the 1960s, when waterworks and electrification program were completed. Finally, on January 1, 1967, Łazy received town charter.".
- Q345316 areaTotal "8750000.0".
- Q345316 country Q36.
- Q345316 isPartOf Q1135372.
- Q345316 isPartOf Q54181.
- Q345316 isPartOf Q553402.
- Q345316 populationTotal "7139".
- Q345316 postalCode "42-450".
- Q345316 thumbnail POL_Łazy_COA.svg?width=300.
- Q345316 wikiPageExternalLink x.node?id=49.
- Q345316 wikiPageExternalLink lazy.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q1006772.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q1135372.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q11390.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q12554.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q128781.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q1395320.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q150093.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q152006.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q152115.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q153136.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q15334.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q153850.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q154596.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q1548361.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q1626030.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q172107.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q17566407.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q207272.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q211274.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q2136259.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q221457.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q239174.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q247073.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q27306.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q2994873.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q31487.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q34266.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q3531575.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q3532267.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q36.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q361.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q37333.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q473670.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q54049.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q54181.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q553402.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q617213.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q631163.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q708159.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q7231714.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q750418.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q9311984.
- Q345316 wikiPageWikiLink Q972886.
- Q345316 areaTotalKm "8.75".
- Q345316 name "Łazy".
- Q345316 populationTotal "7139".
- Q345316 postalCode "42".
- Q345316 subdivisionName Q1135372.
- Q345316 subdivisionName Q54181.
- Q345316 subdivisionName Q553402.
- Q345316 point "50.43333333333333 19.4".
- Q345316 type Place.
- Q345316 type Location.
- Q345316 type Place.
- Q345316 type PopulatedPlace.
- Q345316 type Settlement.
- Q345316 type Thing.
- Q345316 type SpatialThing.
- Q345316 type Q486972.
- Q345316 comment "Łazy [ˈwazɨ] is a town in Zawiercie County, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland. Until 1947 the town was the seat of the Rokitno Szlacheckie municipality. In the years 1975-1998 the town administratively belonged to the Katowice province. According to data from December 31, 2004 the town has 7,242 inhabitants. During World War II, German occupiers changed the name to Lazy then to Lasern without a legislative decree.".
- Q345316 label "Łazy".
- Q345316 lat "50.43333333333333".
- Q345316 long "19.4".
- Q345316 depiction POL_Łazy_COA.svg.
- Q345316 name "Łazy".