Nowa Wieś (Warsaw)
Nowa Wieś, also Nowa Wieś Ujazdowska - a non-existent agricultural settlement established in Warsaw in 1784 within the Stanisławowska Axis. History
Osada Nowa Wieś was founded in 1784 on the initiative of Stanisław August Poniatowski for the inhabitants of the medieval village of Ujazdów, liquidated in connection with the creation of a new spatial composition near the Ujazdowski Castle.
Designed by Dominika Merlini, the model village consisted of twelve farms symmetrically located on both sides of the Royal Road (also known as the Wolska Avenue, as it connected the Elevated Field in Wola with the Ujazdowski Castle) between the present Savior's and Polytechnic's. The wooden, one-storied buildings erected at the alley were alternated to the summit and the ridge, while their second row comprised only ridge-shaped buildings.
The area of Nowa Wieś included about 9 hectares of gardens in the area of Marszałkowska, Mokotowska and Polna streets, as well as about 106 hectares of arable land. These lands were already located outside Lubomirski Okopami, which marks the 1770 border of the city. The proximity of Warsaw made the village very prosperous.
In 1820, the land of Nowa Wiei was dedicated to the square of drills and exercises for cavalry, becoming part of the so-called. Mokotowski War Field. After 1847, the remaining areas of Nowa Wiei were designated for residential development, the inhabitants were resettled, and some houses were rebuilt.
The last relics of the settlement were demolished in the 1930s.
The name of the settlement was named Nowowiejska Street. Bibliography
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