Dąbrowskie (Prostki)

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Dąbrowskie
Dąbrowskie does not have a coat of arms
Dąbrowskie (Poland)
Dąbrowskie
Dąbrowskie
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Warmia-Masuria
Powiat : Ełk
Gmina : Prostki
Geographic location : 53 ° 44 '  N , 22 ° 29'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 44 '28 "  N , 22 ° 28' 36"  E
Residents :
Postal code : 19-335
Telephone code : (+48) 87
License plate : NEL
Economy and Transport
Street : Długosze → Dąbrowskie
Żelazki → Dąbrowskie
Rail route : Korsze – Białystok
train station: Prostki
Next international airport : Danzig



Dąbrowskie ( German  Dombrowsken , 1927–1945 Eichensee ) is a village in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship that belongs to the rural community Prostki ( German  Prostken ) in the powiat Ełcki ( Lyck district ).

Geographical location

Dąbrowskie located in the southeast of the Warmia and Mazury , five kilometers from the provincial border Masuria / Podlasie (former German-Polish border) away. The district town of Ełk (Lyck) is twelve kilometers to the north-west.

history

Dombrowsken was founded in 1482 and forms a village around a small lake. In 1874 it was in the newly built office district Wischniewen ( Polish Wiśniowo Ełcki incorporated), which - in 1938 District Kölmersdorf renamed - existed until 1945 and the county elk in Administrative district Gumbinnen (1905 Government district Allenstein ) in the Prussian province of East Prussia belonged.

In 1910 Dombrowsken had 339 inhabitants.

Due to the provisions of the Versailles Treaty , the population in the Allenstein voting area , to which Dombrowsken belonged, voted on July 11, 1920 on whether it would continue to belong to East Prussia (and thus to Germany) or join Poland. In Dombrowsken, 260 people voted to stay with East Prussia, Poland did not vote.

On July 25, 1927, the village was officially renamed Eichensee . The number of inhabitants rose to 377 by 1933 and amounted to 339 in 1939.

As a result of the war, the village came to Poland in 1945 along with all of southern East Prussia and received the Polish form of the name Dąbrowskie . Today it is the seat of a Schulzenamt ( Polish Sołectwo ) and thus a place in the network of the rural community Prostki (Prostken) in the powiat Ełcki ( Lyck district ), until 1998 the Suwałki Voivodeship , since then assigned to the Warmia-Masurian Voivodeship .

Religions

Dombrowsken was parish up to 1945 in the Evangelical Church Ostrokollen (1938-1945 Scharfenrade , Polish Ostrykół ) in the Ecclesiastical Province of East Prussia of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union and in the Catholic St. Adalbert Church in Lyck in the Diocese of Warmia .

Today Dąbrowskie belongs to the parish in Prostki with the branch church in Ostrykół in the diocese of Ełk of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland . The Protestant residents stick to the parish in Ełk, a subsidiary of the parish in Pisz ( German  Johannisburg ) in the Masurian diocese of the Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland .

traffic

Dąbrowskie is located east of the Polish national road 65 and can be reached from Prostki via Długosze (Dlugossen , 1938–1945 Langheide) . In Dąbrowskie there is also an overland road coming from Żelazki (Zielasken , 1938–1945 Schelasken) .

The nearest train station is Prostki on the Korsze – Białystok railway line .

Individual evidence

  1. Polish Postal Code Directory 2013, p. 216
  2. Dietrich Lange: Geographical Location Register East Prussia (2005): Eichensee
  3. ^ Rolf Jehke: District Wischniewen / Kölmersdorf
  4. ^ Uli Schubert: Community directory, district of Lyck
  5. Herbert Marzian , Csaba Kenez : Self-determination for East Germany - A documentation on the 50th anniversary of the East and West Prussian referendum on July 11, 1920. Editor: Göttinger Arbeitskreis , 1970, p. 83.
  6. Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District of Lyck (Lyk, Polish Elk). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  7. a b Dombrowsken (District of Lyck)
  8. Walther Hubatsch : History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 3 documents. Göttingen 1968, p. 494.