Długołęka ( Polish. Długołęka ) is a village in the Monca District of Podlaskie Voivodeship of Poland . Included in the Krypno gmina . According to the 2011 census, 720 people lived in the village [1] .
Village | |
Drugolenka | |
---|---|
polish Długołęka | |
A country | Poland |
Province | Podlaskie |
Powiat | Monkey |
Rural commune | Krypno |
History and geography | |
Center height | 125 m |
Timezone | UTC + 1 , in the summer UTC + 2 |
Population | |
Population | 720 people ( 2011 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +48 85 |
Postcode | |
Car code | BMN |
SIMC | |
Geography
The village is located in northeastern Poland, north of the Narew River, at a distance of approximately 14 kilometers south of the town of Mońki , the administrative center of the county. The absolute height is 125 meters above sea level [2] . To the east of the settlement passes the regional road 671 .
History
In the second half of the XVI century, the village was the property of the church (possession of the Knyshinsky parish) [3] . As of 1795, Dlugolekenka was part of the Bielský county of the Podlaskie Voivodeship of the Kingdom of Poland [4] .
According to the “Index to the populated areas of the Grodno province, with the necessary information relating to them,” in 1905, 1,120 people lived in the village of Dlugolenka. Administratively, the village was part of the Kripiansky parish of the Belostok district (3rd camp) [5] .
From 1975 to 1998, Długolenka was part of the Belostok voivodship .
Notes
- ↑ Długołęka // polskawliczbach.pl
- ↑ Długołęka (English) . GeoNames. The date of appeal is December 18, 2017.
- ↑ Aleksander Jabłonowski, Polska XVI wieku pod względem geograficzno-statystycznym. T. 6. cz. 2, Warszawa 1909, s. 124.
- ↑ Karol de Perthées, Mappa Szczegulna Woiewodztwa Podlaskiego, 1795
- ↑ A pointer to the populated areas of the Grodno province, with relevant information related to them. - Grodna: Lip. type., 1905