Pià Âawa Górna is a town in Dzierà ¼oniów County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland, in the western part of the Wzgórza Strzelià Âskie hills.
According to official figures for 2019, the town has a population of 6,412.
The oldest historic mention of Pià Âawa Górna comes from the 12th century under the Latin name Pilava Superius. Pià Âawa Górna was part of Piast-ruled Poland. In 1189, Bishop of Wrocà Âaw à »yrosà Âaw II granted Pià Âawa to the Knights Hospitaller from Strzegom. After Polish rule, Pià Âawa Górna passed under the suzerainty of the Kingdom of Bohemia, Hungary, again Bohemia and the Habsburg monarchy. It was an agricultural village in Lower Silesia.
After its annexation by the Kingdom of Prussia from Austria in the First Silesian War, German settlers developed a clothing industry in the village in 1743. A settlement congregation of the Moravian Brethren was built in Pià Âawa Górna, then officially known under the Germanized name Ober-Peilau, on the estate of the Austrian noble Ernst Julius, Count von Seydlitz. Imprisoned for his Protestant faith by the Habsburg rulers of Silesia, when he was freed following the Prussian seizure of Silesia, he named the new settlement Gnadenfrei ("freed by [God's] Grace") to commemorate the event. Later on Gnadenfrei would be merged with Pià Âawa Górna. In 1842, Pià Âawa Górna had a population of 713. From 1871 to 1945 Peilau/Pià Âawa was part of Germany. It was for many years "the longest village in Germany", stretching for several miles along the Pià Âawa/Peila stream.
By the beginning of the 20th century the village was almost completely German in ethnicity and Protestant in confession. During World War I, the German administration operated a POW camp for Allied officers and a forced labour camp for regular POWs in the town. In 1928, it was renamed Gnadenfrei in attempt to erase traces of Polish origin. During World War II, the Germans operated a forced labour camp for Jewish men. Following the defeat of Germany in the war, the settlement became again part of Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the 1980s. The remaining German population was expelled in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement and replaced with Roman Catholic Poles, themselves having been expelled from the Lwów (Lviv) region (now in Ukraine).
In 1962 Pià Âawa Górna was granted town privileges. From 1975 to 1998 Pià Âawa Górna was administratively located in Waà Âbrzych Voivodeship.
Architectural sights include: the Saint Martin church (built in the 16thâÂÂ19th centuries), an 18th-century palace complex and the Educational Centre building from the 19th century.
Weaving mills and quarries were located in the vicinity of Pià Âawa Górna by the 14th century; the former state textile firm and quarry still exists in the town. In 2002 Pià Âawa Górna had 120 stone-working businesses, 27 textile businesses of various kinds, 172 trade companies, and 157 service industries. The agricultural industry is based on local farming and consists of 115 small businesses which mostly grow sugar beets, rapeseed, and grains.
In order to promote tourism in the region, Pià Âawa Górna engages in agritourism.
Pià Âawa Górna is twinned with: