ciekawostki

The "Na Flakach" Inn
The inn on the border with Bujaków was built on the site of the former wooden buildings in 1828. Next to it stood a large brick barn for horses and carriages. There are two explanations for the characteristic name Flaki (tripe or intestines): either the inn served tasty tripe or a fight in the inn ended with the stomach of one of the brawler cut open. Another nearby building housed a smithy and flats for manor workers. The first mention of the inn dates back to 1777, when it was probably still a wooden building.  The innkeepers were: the Szlachcic family, Józef Byrski and his wife Maria, Maciej Westwalowicz, Wojciech Piwowarczy, Antoni Kozierowski, Salamon Popper, Jan Myrta, Jakób Radek, Paweł Bałaż (Hungarian) and Ignacy Matyja. In 1911, the manor sold the inn to Franciszek Gabryś from Bielany, who had been the manor treasurer in Kozy for 20 years. The  inn was open until 1942.   After the Second World War, it housed a shop of the communal cooperative “Samopomoc Chłopska”. The inn has a characteristic entrance with seats on both sides of the door and the date of construction placed above the main door. The “Na Flakach” inn was one of three large manor inns that operated on the side of the Imperial Road in Kozy.
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