Białęcino

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Białęcino
Białęcino does not have a coat of arms
Białęcino (Poland)
Białęcino
Białęcino
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Sławno
Gmina : Malechowo
Geographic location : 54 ° 15 '  N , 16 ° 39'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 15 '20 "  N , 16 ° 39' 9"  E
Residents :
Telephone code : (+48) 94
License plate : ZSL
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Danzig



Białęcino (German Balenthin ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural community Malechowo in the Powiat Sławieński ( Schlawe district ).

Geographical location

The former farming village of Białęcino is twelve kilometers south of the district town of Sławno ( Schlawe ) and two kilometers west of the voivodship road 205 ( Darłowo ( Rügenwalde ) - Sławno - Polanów ( Pollnow ) - Bobolice ( Bublitz )) between Ostrowiec ( Wusterwitz ) and Nowy Żytnik ( New Mill) ), embedded in the valley of the Grabowa ( Grabow ). In the northwest lies Podgórki ( German Puddiger ), in the north to east Ostrowiec ( Wusterwitz ), in the south Goalsica ( Söllnitz ) and in the west Lejkowo ( Leikow ). The place is on the edge of a threshold that is about 60 meters above sea level. to the south to the Grabowtal falls to about 15 meters. The highest point is the formerly so-called Fichtberg with 78 meters in the forest of Białęcino at the eastern end of the village.

history

In 1347 Balenthin is mentioned for the first time in a document. In this document, the Swenzonen Jasco von Slaw and his son Peter recognize the arbitration ruling of the Camminer Bishop Johann I von Sachsen-Lauenburg in a dispute with their lords .

In 1655 the widow and heirs of Nikolaus von Below from Wusterwitz (Ostrowiec) are the owners. A short time later Adam von Podewils auf Krangen (Krąg) bought the village and it remained in the possession of this family until 1858.

In 1784 Balenthin had a Vorwerk , nine farmers, three Kossäten , a schoolmaster, a lime kiln and animal husbandry, and fishing in the Grabow.

In 1858 Oskar Schimmelpfennig bought the estate . At the end of the 19th century, the princes of Pless in Upper Silesia took over the estate, but sold it again before the First World War . The Balenthin estate was relocated.

In 1818, 84 people lived here. Their number rose to 201 in 1871, but then dropped to 117 by 1939.

Before 1945 Balenthin belonged together with the district Balenthin (Pachthof) (Białęciniec) (the Vorwerk Balenthin (Białęcinko) belonged to Wusterwitz since 1928) to the district Wusterwitz (Ostrowiec) in the district of Schlawe i. Pom. in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania . Regarding the registry office , the place was oriented towards Segenthin (Żegocino), and the district court was in Schlawe .

At the end of February 1945 troops of the Red Army advanced as far as the Grabow and advanced to Wusterwitz. The people of Balenthin received an evacuation order on March 4th. After three days in the forest, the residents were finally evacuated to Nitzlin (Nosalin). On March 14th, they returned to their home village, which they found badly destroyed. In mid-1946, Polish farmers took over the farms. Balenthin came as Białęcino to Gmina Malechowo in the powiat Sławieński of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship (until 1998 Köslin Voivodeship ).

Balenthin (leasehold)

The district Balenthin (Pachthof) (now in Polish: Białęciniec) was also called the Heeg or Pike in dialect . It was the rest of the former estate. It was a kilometer northwest of the village of Balenthin. Two farms belonged to him.

church

Balenthin belonged before 1945 together with the village Wiesenthal (Święcianowo) to the evangelical church Wusterwitz in the same parish in the church district Schlawe the Prussian Union of churches . Since 1945 it has continued to be assigned to the parish Ostrowiec - albeit now a Roman Catholic - and is part of the Sławno ( Schlawe ) deanery in the Köslin-Kolberg diocese of the Catholic Church in Poland . The few Protestant residents are now cared for by the Koszalin ( Köslin ) parish in the Pomerania-Greater Poland diocese of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

school

Before 1945, Balenthin had a one-class elementary school for around 16 to 18 children. The last German school owner was Schmidt until 1939, after which the children went to the school of Deutsch Puddiger (Podgórki) until the end of the war .

literature

  • Manfred Vollack (Ed.): The Schlawe district. A Pomeranian homeland book. 2 volumes, Husum 1988/1989, ISBN 3-88042-239-7 .