Sienno, Masovian Voivodeship
Sienno | ||
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Village | ||
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Sienno | ||
Coordinates: 51°5′22″N 21°28′36″E / 51.08944°N 21.47667°E | ||
Country | Poland | |
Voivodeship | Masovian | |
County | Lipsko | |
Gmina | Sienno | |
Population | 1,000 | |
Website | http://www.sienno.pl/ |
Sienno [ˈɕennɔ] is a village in Lipsko County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Sienno.[1] It lies approximately 15 kilometres (9 mi) south-west of Lipsko and 130 km (81 mi) south of Warsaw.
The village has a population of 1,000.
History
The History of Sienna dates back to at least the 14th century, in 1375AD was built the first wooden church, at that time it belonged to the parish in Chotczy. Between 1431-1442 Dobisław z Oleśnicy the lord of Sienno was built of a church of brick in the Gothic style and it was consecrated by Zbigniew Oleśnicki.
In the 16th century the Church was replaced by Sebastian Sienieńskiego as a Calvinist Church. Catholics reconsecrated the building at the beginning of the 18th century. It was partially destroyed by fire in 1879 and again during World War I. Rebuilt in the interwar period, it is today an example of Gothic architecture. Five Gothic paintings on Panel with from 1460AD are located in Medieval Art Gallery in the National Museum in Warsaw.
Sienno received city rights in ok. 1430, and has lost them after the January uprising in 1869. Sienna residents participated in the January uprising and in the resistance during World War II. There was a battler 7 km to the North of the village.This was the place of death of Colonel Dionysius Czachowskiego.
Sienno represented a significant concentration of the Jewish population. The first small group mentioned in 1576. Municipality of ok. 100 people was founded in the 18th century, in 1921 in Sienno about lived 735 Jews. There was here a wooden synagogue from the 18th century and the Jewish cemetery. Both objects were destroyed by the Germans. In Sienno by was the ghetto, in which Germany came together ok. 2,000 people before deportation to the Treblinka extermination camp in October 1942. In the old village and Sienna is a place after kirkucie tagged monument-link with siedmioramiennym-style świecznikiem. Rabbi in Sienno was for some time, Abraham Joshua Heschel, the famous Jewish philosopher, theologian, and writer.
People of Sienna
The Sienna was the home town of prominent members of Dębno coat of arms including among others, Bishop of Krakow Cardinal Zbigniew Oleśnicki (later Archbishop of Gniezno), Jakub z Sienna. Coat of Arms for Sienna is the coat of arms of the Dębno family, which, inter alia, includes the Oleśnickich and Sienieńskich families.
- John z Sienna, founder of Zloczow 1442
- Thomas z Sienna, Bishop
- James z Sienna, Bishop
- Jan Sienieński, voivode of podolski,
- Jan Sienieński, Castellan of małogoszcz,
- Dobiesław Sienieński, Canon of Gniezno, Dean of Kielce and Radom
- Jakub Sienieński-Belarusian language lecturer at the Racovian Academy.
- Zbigniew Sienieński, Castellan
- Zbigniew Oleśnicki Cardinal
- Baltazar Opec, writer
- Włodzimierz Sedlak, priest, Professor
- Abraham Joshua Heschel, the Jewish philosopher and theologian, Rabbi in Sienno
- Lucjan Fornalski, landowner, owner of a nearby farm Coins
- Pastor in Sienno in 1531 was Baltazar Opec, translator and writer.
- In Sienno several years spent Prof. Włodzimierz Sedlak
Gallery
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Sienno
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Sienno
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Church in Sienno
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Saint Sigismund church in Sienno
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Catholic cemetery
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Jewish Cemetery
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Sienno
References
External links
- Jewish Community in Sienno on Virtual Shtetl
Coordinates: 51°5′22″N 21°28′36″E / 51.08944°N 21.47667°E