Ropczyce-Sędziszów poviat - Powiat ropczycko-sędziszowski

Ropczyce-Sędziszów poviat - poviat in Poland, in Podkarpackie Province, created in 1999 as part of an administrative reform. Its seat is Ropczyce.

Coat of arms of the Ropczycko-Sędziszów poviat

An administrative division

The poviat consists of: Urban and rural communes

   Ropczyce Sędziszów Małopolski

Rural communes

   Iwierzyce Ostrów Wielopole Skrzyńskie

Cities

   Ropczyce Sędziszów Małopolski

Neighboring counties

   Kolbuszów poviat Rzeszów poviat Strzyżów poviat Dębicki poviat Mielec poviat

Worth seeing

in Ropczyce

Monuments Transfiguration of the Lord

   The parish church of Of the Transfiguration, built around 1368, rebuilt after a fire in 1873; the sanctuary of Our Lady, Queen of Families, erected around 1730, renovated twice in 1883 and 1951, together with an entrance gate and a fence from the 19th century; St. John of Nepomuk, built in the 19th century; a wooden house from the 19th century (ul. Najświętszej Marii Panny) - the birthplace of Józef Mehoffer; Jewish cemetery.

in Sędziszów Młp.

Monuments Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary from 1823 (currently unused) Church. st. Anthony Square in front of the church. st. Anthony's cemetery chapel from 1844

   Town Hall - was built in the 17th century and was rebuilt in the 19th century. The building is a multi-storey building with a basement and an elongated rectangular plan. The front, northern facade is dominated by a tower, separated from the walls of the building by two pilaster strips. In the lower part of the tower, above the entrance, there is the city's coat of arms, and above there are two neo-Gothic windows in an arcade [20]. The tower in the upper part takes the shape of a quadrilateral with cut corners. It is covered with a high, gable roof with a dormer from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. The parish church of Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary - built in the years 1694–1699, in the late Baroque style (similar to the style of St. Anne's Church in Krakow), in place of the wooden church, which was destroyed in the 17th century as a result of the invasion of the city by Transylvanian or Swedish troops. The architect Tylman van Gameren is assumed to be the author of the construction plans. The original design envisaged the construction of two rows of chapels along the nave, connected by passages, but was never completed. In 1762 the church fell into disrepair. In 1788, the condition of the church was such that the vault was in danger of collapsing. In the years 1788–1792, renovation was carried out and the construction was completed, the plan was changed - the combined row of chapels was abandoned in favor of the side aisles. In 1792, the temple was consecrated. In 1817, the interior of the church was completely destroyed by a fire - it was rebuilt only in 1870 with the financial support of the local gentry. During World War II, as a result of artillery fire, the eastern wall of the building and the sacristy were damaged. The church was built in the late Baroque style - it has a three-nave, basilica style. The main entrance to the temple is on the west facade and is decorated with a black marble portal. The coat of arms of Pilawa is placed above the portal. The church square is surrounded by a wall from the second half of the 18th and 19th centuries, which is connected on the south side with the bell tower from 1823 (currently unused). The walls inside the church are decorated with polychrome made by Stanisław Szmuc in 1974. The main altar was made by the Ligęza brothers and Aleksander Krywut in 1888. Sculptures of St. Stanislaus and St. Adalbert and Our Lady. In the western part of the northern aisle, a fragment of the stucco decoration has been preserved, showing a shield with the coats of arms of Pilawa and Szreniawa, as well as the initials of Michał Potocki. The church and monastery of Capuchins - the monastery was built in the years 1739–1741, and the temple of st. Anthony was erected in the years 1741–1756 and consecrated on September 28, 1766. The church and monastery were built according to the design of the architect Jan de Oppitz from Lviv. The buildings were erected in the late baroque style, the so-called Tuscan. In the main altar of the church there is a painting, transferred from the Capuchin church in Olesko, depicting St. Antoni Padewski, painted by Szymon Czechowicz in the years 1762–1765. Below there is a painting of Our Lady of Częstochowa from the 17th century, painted on wood, dressed in dresses from the 18th century and enriched with a metal frame from the second half of the 19th century. 19th century - according to tradition, it was a camp painting by the Volyn voivode, Michał Potocki. In front of the church there is a two-level, terraced courtyard, which is partly surrounded by a balustrade with balusters and partly by a wall on which the Passion stations are located. On the lower terrace, on a high pedestal, there is a sculpture of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception made in 1912 by Wojciech Samek. The monastery was originally a single-story structure with three wings - in 1929 a second floor was added to two wings. The monastery complex was surrounded by a high wall, which was pulled down in 1783 and replaced with a fence by order of the Rzeszów starost. The currently standing wall was built after 1808 (it was repaired in the 1930s). The monastery houses valuable relics, including paintings from 1754, transferred from the monastery in Olecko: "Adoration of the Shepherds", "St. Franciszek at the Cross "," The Last Supper ", paintings dated to the second half of Eighteenth century: "Christ blessing children", "Escape to Egypt", copies of the originals from the nineteenth century portraits of the founders: Marcjanna née Ogińscy and Michał Potocki, chasubles and antepedias made in tapestry technique, goldsmiths: chalices, monstrances, reliquaries, candlesticks, engravings from representations of Franciscan and Capuchin saints and blesseds, a collection of old prints (about 4,000) from the 16th, 17th and 16th centuries. The ruins of the barracks - were erected at the beginning of the 18th century for the private troops of Michał Potocki, as part of the palace complex (the palace was pulled down after it fell into ruin in the 19th century). After the first partition of Poland, the barracks were taken over by the Austrian army, and after 1900 they were rebuilt by the Tarnowskis into a farm. Cemetery chapel - built in 1844. The building is erected on a rectangular closed semicircular plan. At the front, two columns support the extended eaves of the roof. Jewish cemetery [21] - established in the 17th century. The last burial in the cemetery took place in 1943. During World War II, the necropolis was completely destroyed by the German occupier - the matzevot from the cemetery were used to harden local roads and squares (one tombstone has survived to this day). In 1945, a monument was erected on the mass grave of people of Jewish nationality who were murdered on July 24, 1942. In 1996, the Nissenbaum Family Foundation carried out cleaning work on the cemetery.

outside the cities

there are not