Równe is a village in the Głubczyce district, in the Głubczyce municipality. It lies in the area of the Prudnik Forestry. The first information about the town comes from the second half of the 14th century when it was mentioned as Rofne and Rosne. The name of the village derives from the Old Slavic word meaning equal/flat, which is a reference to the physiographic properties of the terrain on which it was established. In the 14th century, the village was the property of the Dukes of Opava. From 1570 it belonged to Głubczyce, from 1609 – to the Margrave Johann Georg of Hohenzollern, and then to the Princes of Liechtenstein. In the village, there is a historic church of St. Peter and St. Paul, mentioned in the 14th century. During the Reformation period – from 1540 to 1630 – the temple was in the hands of Protestants. The contemporary church was built in the years 1832-33, using elements of an earlier building that burned down in a fire in 1827. Above the portal of the church, the coat of arms of the Diocese of Olomouc is visible. The furnishings of the church date from the 19th century.
Next to the temple, there is a presbytery building from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries and an 18th-century chapel.
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