Brzózki (Nowe Warpno)

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Brzózki
Brzózki does not have a coat of arms
Brzózki (Poland)
Brzózki
Brzózki
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Policy
Gmina : Nowe Warpno
Geographic location : 53 ° 41 '  N , 14 ° 23'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 40 '31 "  N , 14 ° 22' 54"  E
Height : 7 m npm
Residents : 223 (2013)
Postal code : 72-022
Telephone code : (+48) 91
License plate : ZPL
Economy and Transport
Street : DW114 Police - Nowe Warpno
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



panorama
Village street

Brzózki (German Althagen ) is a village in the municipality Nowe Warpno ( Neuwarp ) in Powiat Policki ( Pölitzer Kreis ) in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It is the seat of a Schulzenamt , to which the villages Myślibórz Wielki ( Groß Mützelburg ), Myślibórz Mały ( Klein Mützelburg ), Mszczuje ( Moorbrück ), Maszkowo ( Moritzhof ) and Popielewo ( Haffhorst ) belong.

Geographical location

Brzózki is located in the eastern historical West Pomerania , about nine kilometers southwest of the city of Nowe Warpno, 20 kilometers northwest of the city of Police ( Pölitz ) and 32 kilometers northwest of Stettin ( Szczecin ). The village is located on 114 Voivodship Road from Nowe Warpno to Police.

history

The village was founded in the 19th century as an estate and colonist village in two different phases. The first ten colonists were settled by the tax authorities in 1777. The second half of the colonist positions were created in the period 1782–1785 by the war council and rear Pomeranian tax auditor August Friedrich Matthias on previously acquired forest land; at the same time a sexton and school was founded in 1783. By 1783 the village had 22 colonist sites and four Büdner sites , which together covered an area of ​​over 253 acres . Around 1867 Althagen had a prayer house, a sexton and school house, 37 residential buildings, 61 farm buildings, a post mill and 371 residents who were distributed among 70 families.

At the beginning of the 1930s, the Althagen district had an area of ​​3.2 km², and there were a total of 62 houses in three different places of residence on the parish grounds:

  1. Althagen
  2. Forsthaus Horst
  3. Haffhorst (today in Polish Popielewo )

In 1925 there were 336 inhabitants in Althagen, who were spread over 90 households.

Until 1945 the village of Althagen belonged to the district of Ueckermünde in the administrative district of Stettin in the province of Pomerania . After the Second World War , it was annexed to Poland together with the so-called Stettiner Zipfel and Hinterpommern . Althagen was renamed Brzózki . Most of the residents were evicted and replaced by Poles.

Development of the population

  • 1867: 371
  • 1925: 336
  • 1933: 325
  • 1939: 324

church

The inhabitants who were present in Althagen before 1945 belonged almost exclusively to the Protestant creed. Around 1867 there was one Catholic resident in Althagen, and in 1925 there were three Catholics. The Protestants in Althagen belonged to the Protestant parish of Ziegenort, the Catholics to the Catholic parish of St. Mariae Himmelfahrt in Hoppenwalde .

Web links

Commons : Brzózki  - album with pictures, videos and audio files

See also

Footnotes

  1. Główny Urząd Statystyczny, online query as Excel file: Portret miejscowości statystycznych w gminie Nowe Warpno (powiat policki, województwo zachodniopomorskie) w 2013 r. Update of the 2011 census (Polish, accessed on 21.01.2016)
  2. Gmina Nowe Warpno website, Położenie i Schwierystyka , June 26, 2012
  3. a b c d e Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen . Part II, Volume 1: The districts of Demmin, Anklam, Usedom-Wollin and Ückermünde . Anklam 1868, pp. 1061-1063.
  4. a b c d Gunthard Stübs and Pomeranian Research Association: The community of Althagen in the former Ueckermünde district in Pomerania (2011)
  5. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Pomerania - Ueckermünde district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).