Byszyno

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Byszyno
Byszyno does not have a coat of arms
Byszyno (Poland)
Byszyno
Byszyno
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Białogard
Gmina : Białogard
Geographic location : 53 ° 57 '  N , 16 ° 3'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 57 '0 "  N , 16 ° 3' 0"  E
Residents : 186 ()
Postal code : 78-200 Białogard
Telephone code : (+48) 94
License plate : ZBI
Economy and Transport
Street : DW 163 : KołobrzegWałcz
Ext. 169 : Byszyno → Głodowa (- Bobolice )
Rail route : Railway station: Białogard ( Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk and Szczecinek – Kołobrzeg routes )
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Byszyno [ bɨ'ʃɨnɔ ] ( German  Boissin ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Białogard (municipality of Belgard) in the powiat Białogardzki (Belgarder district) .

Geographical location

Byszyno is located on the left bank of the Parsęta, ten kilometers southeast of Białogard and can be reached via the voivodeship roads DW 163 to Połczyn-Zdrój ( Bad Polzin ) and DW 169 from Bobolice ( Bublitz ). The train station is Białogard on the Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk railway line . Nearby is the Jezioro Byszyńskie ( Boissin Lake ).

history

Boissin, 1891

The farming village of Boissin, formerly also called "Boytz" , was mentioned in a document in 1524, but is probably older. Springkrug on the right bank of the Persante was one of them until 1945 .

In 1939 459 inhabitants lived in 99 households in the 1,534.5 hectare community. Most of them worked in agriculture, some also in industry (Belgard) and handicrafts. Crafts and trades were represented in Boissin by two blacksmiths, a carpentry shop and a cartwright shop, as well as a shoemaker's shop and a tailor's shop and the turbine-powered watermill. The inn in the center of the village was not only the focal point for the place, but also for the whole area on various occasions.

Until 1945 Boissin belonged to the Belgard (Persante) district . The village and the communities of Naffin , Ristow , Lenzen and Zarnefanz formed the Zarnefanz office, which as a whole was assigned to the Lenzen registry office area. The competent district court area was Belgard. The last mayor before 1945 was Hugo Franz.

Soviet troops occupied the village on March 3rd and 4th , and the evictions began the following autumn . Boissin came into Polish hands and is now a Byszyno district of the rural community ( gmina wiejska ) Białogard.

church

Parish

Boissin was its own parish until 1945, which together with the neighboring parishes of Zarnefanz and Lenzen formed the parish of Lenzen. It was in the parish of Belgard in the church province of Pomerania of the Protestant Church of the Old Prussian Union . In 1940, 3149 parishioners belonged to the parish of Lenzen, of which 549 lived in the parish of Boissin.

Today Byszyno belongs to the parish Koszalin ( Köslin ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Polish Evangelical-Augsburg Church .

Village church

The Byszyno church was built as a rectangular stone church in the second half of the 19th century. The gables were made of brick. The arched windows were originally set in decorative stones. There was no tower or roof turret. The bells rang inside over the entrance in the gable.

literature

  • Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee (ed.): The Belgard district. From the story of a Pomeranian home district. Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee, Celle 1989.

Web links

  • Boissin at the Belgard-Schivelbein home district

Footnotes

  1. ^ Website of the Powiat Białogardzki, Byszyno , accessed on February 16, 2013