Fuleda, Rural village in Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, Poland
Fuleda is a village in the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship in northern Poland, situated on a peninsula extending into Lake Dobskie. The settlement spreads along the shoreline, surrounded by forests and fields that slope gently toward the water.
Fuleda was established in the 15th century and had become a settled community by the 17th century with a primarily Polish population. The village developed as an agricultural settlement in this lake-filled region.
The village contains a substantial estate constructed in the style of a Cossack settlement, owned by the influential Starak family of Poland.
The village is accessible from the town of Giżycko and offers holiday cottage accommodations for visitors. Water-based activities like boat outings and outdoor recreation are available in the area.
The area around the peninsula contains thousands of granite boulders transported here by glaciers during the ice age. Many of these stones originally came from the island of Gotland and now define the landscape's character.
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