Lubiechowa is located in the southern part of the Kaczawskie Foothills, at the foot of the Northern Ridge of the Kaczawskie Mountains. It is an old settlement, founded no later than the 2nd half of the 13th century as an agricultural village. For a long time (16th–19th centuries), it was owned by the von Zedlitz family.
The Church of St. Peter and St. Paul is the most valuable sight in the village. It dates back to the late 13th century, with expansions in the 14th and 16th centuries. It features precious interior elements, including frescoes in the presbytery, some dating back to the late 14th century (such as the Adoration of the Magi, Saint George battling the dragon, Creation of the World, Original Sin, and the Last Judgment). Renaissance tombs of the von Zedlitz family can be found inside and on the exterior wall.
Next to the church stands a renovated palace, now in its current form as a result of a neoclassical reconstruction of an older 18th-century structure. Near the palace, remnants of a park with historic trees, including oaks and plane trees, can be found. In the former farmstead complex, there is a 16th-century manor, later converted into a granary.
To the west of the village lies the Łomy Hill, known for mineral findings in the former trachybasalt quarry. To the south of the village, at the eastern end of the Okole ridge, rises a group of greenstone rocks called Leśna Ambona. The rocks reach a height of up to 10 meters, and on the rugged walls, the original pillow lava structures are occasionally exposed.
Description: Piotr Migoń