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Szebnie

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Gmina Jasło is a rural gmina (administrative district) in Jasło County , Subcarpathian Voivodeship , in south-eastern Poland . Its seat is the town of Jasło , although the town is not part of the territory of the gmina.

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4-521: Szebnie [ˈʂɛbɲɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jasło , within Jasło County , Subcarpathian Voivodeship , in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) east of Jasło and 42 km (26 mi) south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów . From 1789 to 1939, it was the seat of the Gorayski noble family , and there is a preserved historic manor house of

8-686: The camp were entered by the Soviets on 8 September 1944. There was a SS training facility SS-Truppenübungsplatz Heidelager nearby at Pustków , for the Ukrainian 14th Waffen SS Division , as well as other collaborationists military formations. Their field training included killing operations at Szebnie . From February 1944, Szebnie was also the location of the Stalag 325 prisoner-of-war camp relocated from Stryj , and it held mostly wounded POWs and invalids. The Polish resistance helped some 200 POWs escape from

12-731: The camp. In July 1944, the Germans evacuated the camp, with 300 POWs left behind, and in September 1944 the camp was closed. [REDACTED] Media related to Szebnie at Wikimedia Commons Gmina Jas%C5%82o The gmina covers an area of 93.1 square kilometres (35.9 sq mi), and as of 2006 its total population is 15,774. Gmina Jasło contains the villages and settlements of Bierówka , Brzyście , Chrząstówka , Gorajowice , Jareniówka , Kowalowy , Łaski , Niegłowice , Niepla , Opacie , Osobnica , Sobniów , Szebnie , Trzcinica , Warzyce , Wolica , Zimna Woda and Żółków . Gmina Jasło

16-680: The family in Szebnie. The village was the location of the Szebnie concentration camp during German occupation of Poland in World War II. The facility was constructed in 1940 originally as horse stables for the Wehrmacht next to a manorial estate. Thousands of prisoners perished there over the course of the camp's operation, including Russian prisoners of war , Polish Jews and non-Jewish Poles as well as Ukrainians and Romani people . The charred remains of

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