@article{91623111-4d17-4310-88c2-a8b611a1bc99, author = {Bartosz Jakubowski}, title = {Interesy Pawlikowskich w Starzawie w latach 20. i 30. XX w. Majątek Nowostawy}, journal = {Rocznik Przemyski. Historia}, volume = {2021}, number = {1 (26) 2021}, year = {2021}, issn = {2449-7347}, pages = {213-234},keywords = {Michał Pawlikowski; Jan Gwalbert Pawlikowski; Wincenty Rozwadowski; Bartłomiej Rozwadowski; Pawlikowscy; Rozwadowscy; Medyka; Starzawa; Nowostawy; stawy rybne}, abstract = {The Pawlikowski family’s businesses in Starzawa in the 1920s and 1930s. The Nowostawy estate This paper shows the circumstances of the Rozwadowski family’s arrival in the Przemyśl Region and establishing the famous fish farm in Starzawa. The article also contributes to the history of the Pawlikowskis from Medyka. In the late 1920s Michał Pawlikowski got Wincenty Rozwadowski (owner of Babin near Kalush /Kałusz/) interested in setting up fish ponds in Starzawa near Mostyska (Mościska), property of his father Jan Gwalbert Pawlikowski, of which he was administrator. Following long negotiations, in 1931 J.G. Pawlikowski sold to Wincenty Rozwadowski and his children 414 hectares of land in Starzawa, including marshy meadowland and wasteland. The Rozwadowskis established there a new structure called Starzawa Stawy (Starzawa Ponds), soon renamed Nowostawy, and W. Rozwadowski established a large fish farm there. In the 1930s the estate was administered by Wincenty’s son, Bartłomiej Rozwadowski, who got arrested by NKVD in October 1939 and all trace of him was lost. After the war the ponds were nationalized and the former owners were hardly ever mentioned again. Keywords: Michal Pawlikowski, Jan Gwalbert Pawlikowski, Wincenty Rozwadowski, Bartłomiej Rozwadowski, the Pawlikowski family, the Rozwadowski family, Medyka, Starzawa, Nowostawy, fish ponds}, doi = {10.4467/24497347RPH.21.008.14731}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/rocznik-przemyski-historia/artykul/interesy-pawlikowskich-w-starzawie-w-latach-20-i-30-xx-w-majatek-nowostawy} }