Brzóza Królewska, Village administrative division in Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland
Brzóza Królewska is a village in Subcarpathian Voivodeship in southeastern Poland, located west of Leżajsk in Gmina Leżajsk. It consists of farmland, residential houses, a parish church, and small outbuildings spread along rural roads.
The village appears in records as far back as 1565, though stable settlement only took hold in the mid-17th century when people from Giedlarowa moved here to escape raids. That migration established the agricultural foundation the village still rests on today.
The parish church in the village serves as a meeting point for religious services, local celebrations, and seasonal festivals that mark the year. Visitors can see how faith shapes the daily pace of life in a rural Polish community.
The village sits close to Leżajsk and is reachable by local roads from the town. Those who walk will find rural paths and open land around the settlement worth exploring on foot.
A water reservoir sits at the point where Tartaczny stream meets the Tarlaka river, and beavers have made this stretch their home. Visitors who walk quietly along the bank have a good chance of spotting them near their dams.
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