Lubrza is a village in à Âwiebodzin County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Lubrza. It is located between the Goszcza and Lubrza lakes.
The oldest mention of the village comes from 1246, when it was granted to a Cistercian monastery from nearby Goà Âcikowo by Bodzenta, son of Janusz, in thanks for ransoming him from German captivity, however, a portion of the village remained a noble possession, as in 1276, it was partially owned by castellan of Zbàszyà  Wojciech of Dryja, thanks to whose efforts Lubrza obtained town rights. By 1302, it was the seat of a wójt within the Duchy of Gà Âogów. In the 14th century, the Dryja family built a tower castle. In 1322, the remaining part of Lubrza was sold to the Goà Âcikowo-Paradyà ¼ abbey. In 1383 the town obtained the right to hold a market. In 1546, the abbot of the Goà Âcikowo-Paradyà ¼ monastery was kidnapped by the Brandenburgers during a return journey from Lubrza to Goà Âcikowo, and then imprisoned near Cottbus (Chóà Âebuz) for several weeks. In 1613, annual fairs were established. In 1810, the settlement was secularized and ceased to be a church property.
Five Polish citizens were murdered by Nazi Germany in the village during World War II. The town was partly destroyed during the war in 1945. There is a preserved military bunker and military weir from World War II in Lubrza.