Dąbrówka Kobułcka

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dąbrówka Kobułcka
Dąbrówka Kobułcka does not have a coat of arms
Dąbrówka Kobułcka (Poland)
Dąbrówka Kobułcka
Dąbrówka Kobułcka
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Warmia-Masuria
Powiat : Olsztyn
Gmina : Biskupiec
Geographic location : 53 ° 50 '  N , 21 ° 4'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 50 '28 "  N , 21 ° 3' 58"  E
Residents :
Economy and Transport
Street : Borki Wielkie / DK 16 → Dąbrówka Kobułcka



Dąbrówka Kobułcka ( German  Dombrowken ) is an unofficial local office in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship within the urban and rural municipality of Biskupiec in the Olsztyński powiat ( Allenstein district ).

Geographical location

Dąbrówka Kobułcka is located in the middle of the Warmia-Masurian Voivodeship , 31 kilometers north of the former district town of Ortelsburg ( Szczytno in Polish ) and 39 kilometers northeast of today's district metropolis Olsztyn ( Allenstein in German ).  

history

In the early 19th century, the Dombrowken estate belonged to a complex of goods that the later district administrator of the Ortelsburg district acquired. The owners changed more often afterwards. In the early 1930s, the Dombrowken estate was split up for settlement purposes and sold to four settlers.

In 1874 the manor district of Dombrowken was incorporated into the newly established Kobulten district ( Kobułty in Polish ) in the Ortelsburg district in East Prussia . 101 inhabitants were registered in Dombrowken in 1910.

On June 15, 1898, Dombrowken was a railway station on the newly opened railway line from Königsberg (Prussia) (now in Russian Kaliningrad ) via Zinten (Russian Kornewo ) to Rudczanny (1938 to 1945 Niedersee ).

Due to the provisions of the Versailles Treaty , the population voted in the referendums in East and West Prussia on July 11, 1920 on whether they would continue to belong to East Prussia (and thus Germany) or join Poland. In Dombrowken, 40 residents voted to remain with East Prussia, Poland did not cast any votes.

Dombrowken's independence ended on September 30, 1928, when the village was incorporated into Groß Borken (Polish: Borki Wielkie ).

As a result of the war, Dombrowken came to Poland in 1945 along with all of southern East Prussia and was given the Polish form of the name “Dąbrówka Kobułcka”. Today the place no longer exists and seems to have merged into Borki Wielkie (Groß Borken) over time . But not the train station. It was assigned under the Polish name "Dąbrówka Kobułcka" on the Czerwonka – Ełk ( German Rothfließ – Lyck ) line. However, this has not been used since 2010. The only thing that reminds of the train station is an overgrown platform edge.  

church

Until 1945 Dombrowken was parish in the Protestant Church Kobulten ( Polish Kobułty ) in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union and in the Catholic Church Kobulten in the then diocese of Warmia .

Individual evidence

  1. Dietrich Lange, Geographical Location Register East Prussia (2005): Dombrowken
  2. Groß Borken at the Ortelsburg district community
  3. ^ A b Rolf Jehke, Kobulten district
  4. ^ Uli Schubert, community directory, Ortelsburg district
  5. Herbert Marzian , Csaba Kenez : self-determination for East Germany. Documentation on the 50th anniversary of the East and West Prussian referendum on July 11, 1920. Editor: Göttinger Arbeitskreis , 1970, p. 94
  6. Dąbrówka Kobułcka in Baza Kolejowa
  7. Walther Hubatsch , History of the Protestant Church of East Prussia , Volume 3 Documents , Göttingen 1968, p. 497