Karlików

Karlików
Карликів
village
Coordinates: PL 49°26′04″N 22°04′01″E / 49.4344779°N 22.0668983°E / 49.4344779; 22.0668983Coordinates: PL 49°26′04″N 22°04′01″E / 49.4344779°N 22.0668983°E / 49.4344779; 22.0668983
Country Poland
Beskids Subcarpathian Voivodship
Founded 1483
Area
  Total 8.8 km2 (3.4 sq mi)
Elevation 290 m (950 ft)
Population
  Total 120
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 38507

Karlików (Ukrainian: Карликів, Karlykiv; Rusyn: Карликів, Karlykiv) is a village situated in the Subcarpathian Voivodship (province) of south-eastern Poland; previously in Krosno Voivodship (1975-1998) and Sanok district, (10 mi or 16 km east of Sanok). Karlików is about 10 mi (16 km) from Sanok. It is situated below the main watershed at the foot of the Słonne Mountain, and has an elevation of 340 m (1,115 ft).

Karlików– Karlykow 1483, Karlowa 1488, Karlikow 1557, Karlikow 1589, Karłykiw 1867, village in eastern Lesser Poland, in the Lesser Beskid mountains, Bukowsko rural commune.

History

Gerichts-Bezirk ( Bukowsko Rural Commune) Bukowsko bis 1918. An 1898 map shows the location of Karlików (click in it to enlarge).
The Pogórze Bukowskie is a hilly region (thus the name, Bukowsko hilly region) in Poland.

Karlików was founded in 1483 by the Bals de Lobetanz family. From 966-1018, 1340-1772 (Ruthenian Voivodeship, Sanoker County) and from 1918-1939 Zboiska was part of Poland. From 1772 to 1918 it belonged to the Austrian empire. This part of Poland was controlled by Austria for almost 120 years. At that time the area (including west and east of Subcarpathian Voivodship) was known as Galicia. In 1785 the village lands comprised 61 łan.

The village was part of the Ukrainian Catholic Apostolate in 1936, and the parish priest at the time was Oleksiy Malarchyk. Filial churches to Karlykiv were located in neighboring Prybyshiv (Przybyszow) and Volia Petrova (Wola Piotrowa.) The majority of the village's residents were Lemko in ethnicity (Lemkos are an eastern Slavic regional ethnic group/Carpathian "highlanders." In this village, most Lemkos considered themselves to be Ukrainian.) Following World War II, the village was burned down in the spring 1946 by the Polish Communist Army, which deported many of the Lemkos they could locate to Soviet Ukraine per an agreement with the Soviet Union. In 1947, Father Malarchyk and his family (including his four-year-old granddaughter) were murdered by Polish agents in the midst of ethnic warfare and instability that had spread throughout Southeast Poland, as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army clashed with Polish forces. During the final ethnic cleansing campaign, known as "Akcja Wisla" (or Operation Vistula) on 29 April 1947, most or all of the remaining Lemkos were forcibly deported to the Silesia area of Western Poland.

Karlikow Today: Today, Karlikow is still a rural village inhabited mostly by ethnic Poles. It contains a ski slope which attracts seasonal tourism. The cemetery in Karlikow still contains headstones of the Lemko families who once lived there.

Twin cities

See also

References and literature

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