Koniakow's history begins in the second half of XVI century. Around this time, settlers from Cieszynski’s Silesia located in this area, created the following villages: Istebna and Jaworzynka, together with Koniakow, known as the Beskid's Tri-Village. However, it was not only settlers of Polish origin that inhabited this area. Also Vlachs (Wallachians) were passing through with their flocks of sheep. Some of them decided to stay, and mixed in with the original habitants. Such mixtures fructified between men and women, and their ethnic differences were exposed in their types of clothing and also their cultural beliefs.
The unspoilt beauty of Koniakow was an attraction to many of its inhabitants. The village sits in a valley surrounded by mountains and rolling and luscious hills. Two rivers Olza and Sola intertwine, making the land fertile and able to feed man and beast.
The best known hills are: Tyniok (894 meters), Sliwkula (790 meters) and Ochodzita (897 meters) which gives Koniakow the infamous status of being the highest settlement in all of the Silesian Beskids.
Many rivers got their springs here: Vistula - the Queen of Polish rivers, Olza, and some smaller one - Czadeczka, its waters are joining Wag and Dunaj that end in the Black Sea.
The habitants’ main profession was shepherding, which boomed in XVIII century but later declined, because the logging practices given by Habsburg Monarchs. The inhabitants got poorer, and many of them emigrated mainly to France and the United States of America.
In 1816 Koniakow received the status of an independent village and the heraldic sign of a horse with the following inscription: "Gmina Katastralna – Koniakow".
When after WWI this land returned to its rightful owner – Poland's shepherding business increased, but never reached the level it had decades earlier.
Presently, Koniakow together with Jaworzynka and Istebna belong to Gmina Istebna, all called Tri-Vilages of Beskid. They are one of the most attractive tourist attractions in Poland.
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