Jadowniki Mokre is a village in Poland in Gmina Wietrzychowice, Tarnów County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship.
The unwritten history of settlement in this area dates back to the Neolithic archaeological discoveries confirming the presence of settlements from two thousand years ago testify to this.
In the 19th century, the village was described as: Jadowniki Mokre (with Zaurban), a village between the Dunajec River and the mouth of the Uszwica River into the Vistula, in Brzesko County, Wietrzychowice parish, in the Równa area, has 976 Roman Catholic inhabitants.
In 1449, the owner of Jadowniki was Albert Czapka of the Nowina. In 1476, the village passed into the hands of the PieniÃ à ¼ek family from Witkowice of the Jelita. In the 15th century, the village was owned by Stanisà Âaw PieniÃ à ¼ek of the Jelita coat of arms. Then it became the property of Feliks and Paulina Konopka. In 1880, Jadowniki Mokre belonged only to Jan Konopka. The larger estate owned by Konopka was distinguished by exemplary cultivation and has 330 morgas of land, 157 morgas of meadows and gardens, 23 morgas of pastures and 771 morgas of beautiful pine forest. The smaller estate (Zaurbanie) has 404 morgas of land, 362 morgas of meadows and gardens, 150 morgas of pastures. In 1944, the Operation Bridge (Wildhorn) action was carried out here. On May 4, 1944, the Gestapo and German gendarmerie detained 65 people in the village, and shot 12 of them. They also burned down 12 buildings.
Monuments entered into the Poland register of monuments of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship
Other
In Jadowniki Mokre there is a church called the Parish of the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary and a care and rehabilitation center for children and youth run by Caritas.