Pyzówka has historically been one of the outlying villages that form the royal demesne of Nowy Targ, comprising 37 villages and the town of Nowy Targ. Pyzówka was first settled in the late 16th century when the Pieniążek family administered the Nowy Targ demesne. The family claimed payment for settling the village in 1616. Minakowski's Wielka Genealogia states that Jan Pieniążek z Kruzlowej was the dziedzic of Pyzowka and Wróblówka. His mother, Anna Pukarzowska, carried the Śreniawa coat of arms which may have given rise to the village's alternative name. According to Krzeptowski and Krzeptowska the village was established by Mateusz Pyza, who was the brother of Piotr Czerwinski, Soltys in the neighbouring, and much older, village of Klikuszowa. The first written document that mentions the Pyzowka is a court record of 1604 noting a dispute involving a village resident called Tomasz Gomolka. The next recorded document, dated 1606, notes that Mikołaj Matiowicz was re-affirmed in his role as Soltys of Pyzowka/Sreniawa that year. Kreptowski and Krzeptowska note that Matiowicz was the eldest son of Mateusz Pyza. The different surnames recorded for father and son would not have been unusual in 16th-century Poland when surnames were neither fixed nor inherited as a rule. The Sołtystwo did not then pass to Matiowicz's offspring, but was passed on to his brother Jakub Pyza Sreniawa, to use the name recorded in a document dated 1611. In this document Jakub Pyza Sreniawa's daughter Dorota, is described as Soltys of Sreniawa and leaves money and goods to her second husband Filip Fornalik.
Village Name
Pyzowka is considered an example of the phenomenon of a village name given by an administrator being usurped by a popular name. As noted in the history section, the village originally was given the name Sreniawa, as recorded in several early documents. Adamczyk suggests that this was in tribute to the powerful Sreniawit family. The village's first Soltys, who would have been the settlement's major landholder with the task of growing it, was, however, known by the surname/nickname Pyza and it appears the Polish possessive form of that name, Pyzowka, became commonly used for the entire settlement. An early document from 1611 refers to Dorota,‘soltyska sreniawska ’ and identifies her as ‘dziewka Jakuba Pyza Sreniawy. But, as noted in the History section, in 1606 an official document already referred to both Pyzowka and Sreniawa and subsequent Soltyship holders are referred to as Dorota and Filip Pyzowscy. It is clear from parish records that a branch of this Soltys family retained the surname Pyzowski while another branch reverted to the surname Czerwinski that was used by the same clan when still resident in the older village of Klikuszowa . Given that there are no other villages of the name Pyzowka in Poland, it is possible that all living persons of the surname Pyzowski may be related to Jakub Pyza. The legal/social estate status of the Pyzowski family remains unclear. One document refers to the Pyzowskis as szlachetni but other documents make no mention of this status. The Gajl Polish heraldic text http://gajl.wielcy.pl/herby_nazwisko_herby.php records the name Pyzowski but shows no coat of arms recorded for the family.
Academic Studies
Pyzowka is unusual in Poland in being the focus of several academic studies and surveys. The earliest was carried out in 1947 – 1949 by the Instytut Ekonomiki Rolnej under the direction of :pl:Bogusław Gałęski|Professor Boguslaw Galeski. The surveys covered every farm in the village and described the extreme poverty of the inhabitants. The surveys are retained by the IER in Warsaw. An historical study of archives relating to the village was carried out in 1972 by Professor Mieczyslaw Admaczyk. The unpublished manuscript contains transcripts of archival material dating from 1767. A copy is held in the village. In the 1970s Dr F. Pine and T. Bogdanowicz carried out socio-anthropological fieldwork in the village that included observer participation for two years as well as an analysis of parish records, historical archives and door to door surveys of village households. Dr Pine's doctoral thesis is held at the University of London and the London School of Economics. Wieslaw Parzygant, the current village Soltys, is recording personal histories of village residents notably biographies of the much decorated Polish war hero Franciszek Rola, and his brother, the village Soltys and social activist Jan Rola, recipient of Poland's highest civil honour, the Gold Cross of Merit. The biographies are published on the village . Jozef Krzeptowski and Maria Jasinek Krzeptowska have devoted a section of their comprehensive Genealogies of the Soltys Families of the Podhale to Pyzowka. They provide a detailed genalogy of the Pyza, Sreniawa, Pyzowski, Czerwinski clan. The full text can be ordered from http://krzeptowski.pl/wydawnictwo/