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Żebracz (formerly Żebracza, Żebracze) - a former village lying at the mouth of the Biała River to the Vistula, near Czechowice-Dziedzice and Kaniowa. History

In the document of Prince Cieszyn Przemysław Noszak of 31 December 1388 a knight named Steffke, owner of the village of Bettelsdorff, was listed on the list of witnesses, which could be translated into Polish as Żebracz. The German name did not persist and was completely replaced by the Polish form. Another well-known owner of the village, Otton, in 1443 in the document of Prince Wenceslas I Cieszyn wrote as de Zebrachie. In the sales document of the duchy of Auschwitz Crown of Poland by Jan IV Oświęcim issued on 21 February 1457 the place was mentioned Zebracza.

The village was located at the mouth of the Biała river to the Vistula River, which changed its trough many times, dividing the town into two parts. From 1457 this river became a state border separating the Kingdom of Poland from the Kingdom of Bohemia (which since 1526 was part of the Habsburg state). A part of the village lying on the left (Czech) side of Biała was absorbed by Czechowice, where the name Żebracze survived to the present day as a common term, while the right-bank part was absorbed by Kani by its name, also supplanted Żebracz.

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