Karzec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krobia, within Gostyń County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.
Karzec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krobia, within Gostyń County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.
==History== The area formed part of Poland since the establishment of the state in the 10th century. Karzec was a private village of Polish nobility, administratively located in the Kościan County in the Poznań Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland. It was annexed by Prussia in the Second Partition of Poland in 1793. It was regained by Poles in 1807 and included within the short-lived Duchy of Warsaw, and after the duchy's dissolution in 1815, the village was reannexed by Prussia, and was also part of Germany from 1871. Following World War I, Poland regained independence and control of the village. In the late 1920s, Karzec was connected with the nearby village of Pudliszki by a narrow-gauge railroad, built by Stanisław Fenrych, founder and owner of the Pudliszki food company.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).