The village of Krywe was located under Wallachian law in the first half of Sixteenth century. In 1502, she was in the property of the Kmita family. The first mention dates from 1526. Until 1553 it was in the hands of Piotr Kmita, later his widow Barbara Kmita from Herburtów. After Barbara's death (1579), she belonged to the department after Anna of Kmita as her heirs, descendants of Stanisław Herburt and Jan Barz. The village was located west of the church hill above the Krywiec stream, the left tributary of the San River. In 1589, there were 7 fiefs of land inhabited by peasants, princes and poppies in the village. There was also a one-wheel water mill then. In 1630, peasants from Hulski and Zatwarnica attacked and plundered the local court belonging to the castellan of Sanok (1648) Andrzej Boguski. At the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, these properties belonged to the Łążyński family, then the period of splendor of the manor began. Later, a steam sawmill was built here, the ruins of which can be seen. In 1848 there was a parish school in Kryw. In 1852 there was a stone manor house and adjacent buildings, a park and a pond. After the January Uprising in 1864, Aleksander Cholewa Ubysz (1832–1890), captain from 1863/4, writer (nickname Symplicius Gawin) settled in Krivem, author of hunting conversations, officer of the Austrian and Polish armies, the January Uprising. In 1910, a brotherhood of sobriety was established in the village, operating until at least 1930. During the partitions economic emigration was widespread, before the outbreak of World War I, almost 20% of the population from the local parish (Krywe, Hulskie, Tworylne) lived abroad. Five villagers died in the fighting at the turn of February and March 1915. The 1921 census gives 472 inhabitants (74 households) in Krivem. A steam sawmill was opened in the vicinity of the manor in 1936. It has not survived to this day. In the interwar years, ethnographic research was conducted in the surrounding areas, their effect was the book "On the Lemko-Boyko Borderland" (Lviv 1935). In August 1938, the 950th anniversary of the baptism of Ruthenia was held in Krivem, attended by about 2,000 faithful from Lesko and Turczańskie counties. A commemorative cross was placed next to the church. After September 17, 1939 Krywe found itself on the border between Germany and the USSR. The areas north of San were under Soviet occupation, the Germans were occupying the south of San. In 1945, the German part returned to Poland, we regained the northern shore of San only in 1951 under an agreement between Poland and the USSR on the exchange of border areas. The court buildings and the sawmill were burned in September 1945 by a branch of the UPA. The inhabitants of Kriva waited in the USSR for displacement in the surrounding forests and, as a result of the raid, only 16 families were transported to the East. The whole village was displaced to the Western Lands only in spring - in May 1947 during the "Wisła" campaign. Within a few hours, all people were taken and after they left, all buildings, including the church, were set on fire. The action was conducted by a branch of the Polish People's Army. From the 1960s to the late 1980s, summer cattle grazing was conducted here. The only current residents of Kryvyi, the DIY, have lived here since 1971.
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