Baligród

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Baligród
Baligród
Official seal of Baligród
Seal
Country Poland
Subcarpathian Voivodship
District Leskopowiat
Founded 1615
Area
 - Total 68.8 km² (26.6 sq mi)
Elevation 340 m (1,115 ft)
Population
 - Total 1,468
Baligrod
Baligrod

Baligród is a village in Lesko County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship (from January 1, 1999 until January 1, 2002 in Bieszczady County), Poland. It is also the seat of the municipality (gmina) called Gmina Baligród. Location: 49°21' N 22°17' E

[edit] History

Baligród used to be a small town, today, however, it is a village situated in the valley of Hoczewka river, near Bieszczady mountains.

The settlement mentioned for the first time in 1615 as a small town, was supposedly established in the beginning of the 17th century near a castle built in the same time by Bal. In 1634 the town previously called Balówgród [1]received Magdeburg rights and privileges for markets, fairs and wine storage. Baligród remained in the Bal family until 1770. The town was situated beside an often attended trade route to Hungary what guaranteed good opportunities for development. Later the town started to decline, and yet before 1915 it lost its municipal rights.

In wartimes in Karpaty in 1914 - 1915 Baligród was partly destroyed. During World War II the village was once again partly ruined and many of its inhabitants were killed, including a great many Jewish inhabitants, of which none are left. Those Jews that did not manage to escape were rounded up outside of town and executed. On August 6, 1944 the village was attacked by a strong unit of Ukrainian Insurgent Army, 42 Poles were killed, and some buildings were burnt. The soldiers of Polish Army that were stationed here called the village Diabligród (Devil’s town), because during the occupation Germans stoned the main square with stones taken from the Jewish cemetery, which remains in a state of disrepair. Nearby, on March 28, 1947 on a road to Cisna near Jabłonki Poland’s General Karol Świerczewski was killed.

It is a village with a few stores and homes built around a large square. In the middle of the square is a model T-34 tank on the square. The tank is not connected with the struggles in Bieszczady but replaced a tank model T-70 that was placed there earlier, and was being used in fights against Ukrainian Insurgent Army. The T-70 tank of Baligród was the last one of this type model existing in Poland and was transferred to the museum of Szkoła Oficerska Wojsk Pancernych in Poznań.

In Baligrod were born ancestors of Michael Schudrich.

[edit] Sightseeing

  • Catholic church built in 18771879
  • Greek-Catholic church from 1829
  • Military cemetery established in 19461947, and redesigned in 1984
  • Remainings of foundations of Bal’s castle
  • Ruins of Jewish cemetery

[edit] References

  1. ^ thus the name, Bal (=polish (noble)family) and gord

Coordinates: 49°20′N, 22°17′E

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