Nehrybka

Since ancient times, the nearby river has provided residents with water, and also energy to run a mill.

In addition, the Wiar River has served as a natural moat, which helped the inhabitants of Nehrybka defend against attacks from the east.

The next date, which confirms the existence of the village, is the year 1389, in which King Władysław II Jagiełło granted the rights of Magdeburg law and one hundred Frankish fiefs to Przemyśl, starting from the borders of "Nehrzebka."

The Rus origins of the village were confirmed by a stone pole inscribed in old Ruthenian, with an image of the Crucifixion, which stood before World War I, just seven minutes from the main road.

During the times when the Przemyśl area was part of Kyivan Rus, Nehrybka and other nearby villages were known for their horse husbandry.

[2] Under the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Nehrybka was part of the Przemyśl County in the Rus Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province.

The bishops of Przemyśl, while under the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and, later, under the Austrian Empire, resided not in the city but 20 km away in Walawa on the San River.

The Austrian Emperor Joseph II banned this institution, and also forbade them and the village gentry from carrying swords.

[4] In 1909 the village was owned by Prince Hieronim Lubomirski, and in 1914 Nehrybka belonged to Princess Karolina Lubomirska.

With the defeat of the Central Powers, namely Germany and Austria-Hungary, Nehrybka was to join the re-emerging Polish state.

The Ukrainian Greek Catholic majority living in and around Nehrybka was aware that they were a separate nation and wanted to have their own state.

The Germans operated a subcamp of the Stalag 327 prisoner-of-war camp in the village, with mass graves of Italian POWs unearthed in 1961.

In one of the present factory buildings Polna S.A., prisoners of war were shot and then thrown into a mass grave at the Battery 2 "Nehrybka.

In the liberated territories, in a few years, began to rule the Soviet-installed puppet "people's government," which under Stalin was particularly onerous for residents.

After World War II, Poland reappeared on the map of Europe, but its borders were shifted significantly to the west and north.

This changed the ethnic composition of the village, and by 1947 years the last group of Ukrainians was deported.

Early-19th-century epitaph at a local church