The earliest mention of the village was included in the Liber fundationis episcopatus Vratislaviensis from around 1305, when it was part of fragmented Piast-ruled Silesia.
[3] In the nineteenth century, the village had a population of 606, and the people were mostly engaged in weaving cotton, trade to a small extent, sheep and cattle.
[citation needed] During World War II, the Germans operated the E381 forced labour subcamp of the Stalag VIII-B/344 prisoner-of-war camp in the village.
[4] After Germany's defeat in the war, in 1945, the village became part of Poland as Albertów, and since September 1, 1947 under its current name.
The remains of its walls were in the palace, built in the late eighteenth century, when the village belonged to the family von Seherr-Thoss.
Today's form - Neo-Baroque mansion - gave the palace reconstruction in 1910, at the request of the then owners of the property, the family von Seidlitz-Sandreczki.
Z oo from Wrocław acquired from the District Dzierżoniów palace and park in Roztoczniku to create a care center for the elderly.
Above the main entrance there is a balcony decorated with a balustrade, and above cartouche with labrami and trzymaczami in the form of two soldiers.
On the axis of the facade is the main entrance to the palace, leading to a large lobby, decorated with two arcades supported on a pillar.