Kulaszne [kuˈlaʂnɛ] (Ukrainian: Куляшне, Kuliashne) is a - TopicsExpress



          

Kulaszne [kuˈlaʂnɛ] (Ukrainian: Куляшне, Kuliashne) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Komańcza, within Sanok County, in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship (province) of south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia.[1] It lies approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) north-east of Komańcza, 14 km (9 mi) south of Sanok, and 68 km (42 mi) south of the regional capital Rzeszów.The Kulaszne church was built in 1912 as a Greek Catholic - church. It burned down in 1974 and a Roman Catholic church was built over the foundation. In 2004, the building reverted to Greek Catholic, so it is now, once again - a church.The first church erected in the village probably in the sixteenth century. Another mentioned came from 1761 years. Last, wooden Greek Catholic church of Archangel Michael was built in 1901, 1906 or 1912 (according to various sources).This was built in the early twentieth century, the church was tricuspid (seemingly bisected), each of the three parts was covered by a separate roof ridge, crowned with a bulbous dome. Represented the type of North-East Orthodox Lemko variant bezwieżowym (commonly: wschodniołemkowski, like the nearby churches in Rzepedź and Turzańsk). The nave and chancel combined, about the same height from the west vestibule.After 1947 years the temple Utilities Catholics of both rites. Since 1949, she served the function of filial Roman Catholic Church and the Greek Catholic chapel affiliate branch. Was surrounded by a wreath of old trees, as seen in the above image. In 1974, the temple was destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt as a Roman Catholic church with a modern silhouette. In the thirty years after the fire began construction of a new church. In 2004, this task has taken the Catholic parish of the Protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Komancza, whose pastor is Fr. Andrew Zuraw. A new church was erected near the place where the original temple was a Catholic. It was designed by Eng. Bogdan Jezierski. It was situated next to the cemetery, about half serpentine. Consecration of the Orthodox Church of Archangel Michael took place on 15 July 2006. The ceremony was attended by several priests of the Greek-Catholic Polish and Slovak.In the immediate vicinity of the church is a cemetery. The cemetery is a small, fenced with a wire mesh. Full on the green. As part of the new, evergreen species dominate utilized.At first glance you can see which part of the cemetery is utilized and which is old. That symbolic border defines green cemetery.The grass on the new part of the cemetery is mowed and , the old part is lost in the grass: Filial church from 1912, source: S. Kryciński churches in the Bieszczady Mountains, p. 185.//old part of cemetery there are monuments falling apart and hidden in the grass.// The new church////
Posted on: Sun, 07 Sep 2014 21:36:41 +0000

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