Białogórzyno
Białogórzyno | ||
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | West Pomerania | |
Powiat : | Białogard | |
Gmina : | Białogard | |
Geographic location : | 54 ° 5 ' N , 16 ° 5' E | |
Residents : | 303 () | |
Postal code : | 78-211 | |
Telephone code : | (+48) 94 | |
License plate : | ZBI | |
Economy and Transport | ||
Street : | Nosowo ( DK 6 ) - Żeleźno - Białogard ( DW 163 ) | |
Rail route : | PKP line no. 202: Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk , station: Nosówko | |
Next international airport : | Szczecin-Goleniów |
Białogórzyno ( German Bulgrin ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It is located 13 kilometers northeast of Białogard ( Belgard ) and belongs to the rural community Białogard in the powiat Białogardzki .
Geographical location
Białogórzyno lies between the district town of Białogard and Koszalin ( Köslin ) directly on the border between the powiat Białogardzki and the powiat Koszaliński, which is formed here by the river Radew ( Radüe ). The place can be reached via a side road that leads from Nosowo ( Nassow ) on the European route 28 via Nosówko ( Nassow train station ) to Żeleźno ( Silesen ) and on to Białogard. The train station is Nosówko, four kilometers away on the Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk railway line .
history
Upstream of the Pomeranian village of Bulgrin on the eastern border of the former Belgard district were the Vorwerke Klempenkaten, Nassow train station (now in Polish: Nosówko) and Krähenberg (Wronie Gniazdo), Biniack and Krausenkaten. The place was first mentioned in a document from 1289. In 1456 it is mentioned as a fiefdom of a family called Klankespar or Kranksparn. In 1606 the estate was taken over by Duke Bogislaw XIII. left to the von Ramel family . In 1773 it came into the possession of Joachim von Kleist- Nemitz, then to the von Bonin family and other owners until Ehrenfried Rossow bought it in 1863.
In 1867 Bulgrin had 580 inhabitants and 56 residential buildings, in 1939 there were 614 inhabitants in 160 households.
Before 1945, Bulgrin formed its own administrative and civil registry district. Bulgrin was part of the Belgard District Court.
When the Red Army occupied the village in March 1945, there was no fighting. The village became part of Poland as a result of World War II , and the ancestral population was expelled from the village in 1947 . Today Białogórzyno is part of the rural community of Białogard.
church
Parish
Bulgrin has been a parish from ancient times. The parish still included the places Butzke (today Buczek ), Pustchow ( Pustkowo ) and Silesen ( Żeleźno ).
In 1940 the parish of Bulgrin had 1762 parishioners. At that time it belonged to the Belgard parish in the ecclesiastical province of Pomerania of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union .
Today Białogórzyno is part of the Parafia ( Parochie ) Koszalin ( Köslin ) of the Polish Kościół Ewangelicko-Augsburski (Luterański) ( Evangelical Church of Augsburg (Lutheran) Denomination ).
Parish church
The Bulgriner village church was a simple half-timbered building that was built in 1838 in place of the massive church that burned down in 1836. The church was renovated inside and out in 1935 and received a tower. There was also a New Apostolic Church until 1945.
literature
- Statistisches Reichsamt (Hrsg.): Official municipal register for the German Reich based on the census of 1939 . 2nd Edition. Berlin 1941.
- Heimatkreis Belgard-Schivelbein (Ed.): The district of Belgard. From the story of a Pomeranian home district . Celle 1989.
- Ernst Müller: The Protestant clergy of Pomerania from the Reformation to the present . Part 2: The administrative district of Köslin. Szczecin 1912.
- Hans Glaeser-Santow: The Evangelical Pomerania . Part 2: Authorities, churches, parish offices, clergy, institutions and associations. Szczecin 1940.
Individual evidence
- ^ Website of the Powiat Białogardzki, Dargikowo , accessed on February 16, 2013