Łagiewniki (Resko)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Łagiewniki ( German Elvershagen , formerly Elbershagen ) is a settlement ( osada ) in the municipality of Resko ( Regenwalde ) in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship .

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania on the left side of the Rega , over which there is a bridge, about seven kilometers east-southeast of the town of Regenwalde ( Resko ) and 15 kilometers north-northwest of the town of Labes (Łobez) .

history

Elvershagen (Elbershagen) east-southeast of the city of Regenwalde (Regenwolde) on the map of Eilhard Lubinus from 1618 (excerpt)
Elvershagen manor around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection
Dorfstrasse (photo 2014)

The place name Elvershagen, which was Elbershagen in the 17th century , is traced back to the extinct line of the Lords of the Elbe (de Albea) who owned around Schivelbein and other places in the area around the 14th century .

The former manor Elvershagen was an old fiefdom of the Borkonen of the Regenwalde- Stramehlschen line. It has been handed down from the Borkkonians that for generations they refused to receive their old hereditary and ancestral estates from the griffins as the Pomeranian overlords by taking the oath of feud. They only consented to the newer possessions that had been transferred to them by the sovereign himself. They maintained their exemption from feudal conception until 1567, when they gave up their resistance under the government of Dukes Johann Friedrich and Barnim X , but made it a condition that they should not suffer any disadvantage.

In 1745 the village and estate Elvershagen came to the Bonin family , who were still sitting here in the last quarter of the 18th century. As part of the regulation of landlord and peasant conditions based on the edict of September 14, 1811, six farms in the neighboring village of Obernhagen , southwest of Elvershagen , which had belonged to the Elvershagen lordship, were separated and publicly auctioned in January 1813. After the estate had had intermediate owners, it was passed on to Baron Hugo Friedrich Erdmann v. Willamowitz-Möllendorff sold it to Friedrich v. Bülow sold. He sold the manor in 1863 to Chamberlain v. Heyden.

Until 1945 Elvershagen belonged to the district of Regenwalde in the administrative district of Stettin , since 1939 in the administrative district of Köslin of the Pomerania province of the German Empire .

Towards the end of the Second World War , the Red Army occupied the region in the spring of 1945 . Soon after, Elvershagen was placed under Polish administration. In the following years the inhabitants were expelled and replaced by immigrating Poles . The German village of Elvershagen was renamed Łagiewniki .

Population numbers

  • 1925: 351, including two Catholics, no Jews
  • 1933: 317
  • 1939: 324

Sons and daughters of the place

literature

  • Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania . Part II, Volume 1: Description of the court district of the Royal. State colleges in Stettin belonging to the Eastern Pomeranian districts . Stettin 1784, p. 336, No. 14.
  • Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania - description of the conditions of this country in the second half of the 19th century . Part II: Land book of the Duchy of Stettin, of Kamin and Western Pomerania; or the administrative district of the Königl. Government to Szczecin . Volume 7: The rainforest district, and news of the spread of the Roman Catholic. Church in Pomerania. Berlin and Wriezen 1874, pp. 708–711.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rudolf Virchow: Schivelbeiner Antiquities . In: Baltic Studies , Volume 21, Berlin 1866, pp. 179–196 , especially p. 194.
  2. Berghaus (1874), p. 709.
  3. Udo Wilhelm Bogislav von Bonin: History of the rear Pomeranian family von Bonin up to the year 1863 . Berlin 1864, p. 179.
  4. Public Gazette No. 26, Supplement to No. 33 of the Official Gazette of the Royal Pomeranian Government , Second Volume, Stargard 1812, p. 1.
  5. http://gemeinde.elvershagen.kreis-regenwalde.de/
  6. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. regenwalde.html # ew39rgnwcelversh. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).

Coordinates: 53 ° 45 '  N , 15 ° 30'  E