Dargoslaw

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Former Dargislaff manor (photo 2007)

Dargosław (German Dargislaff ) is a church village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It is assigned to the rural community Brojce ( Broitz ) in the Powiat Gryficki ( Greifenberger Kreis ).

Geographical location

The church village is located about five kilometers north of Brojce ( Broitz ) on the Molstow , which flows past the southwest side of the village at a short distance, seven kilometers southeast of Trzebiatów ( Treptow ad Rega ) and 16 kilometers northeast of Gryfice ( Greifenberg i. Pom. ).

history

Dargislaff southeast of Treptow an der Rega and northeast of Greifenberg i. Pom. on an 18th century map

The village is listed in 1269 under the name Dargoslaw together with numerous other neighboring villages in a confirmation letter that the Pomeranian Duke Barnim I issued to the Belbuck monastery ; It is not known since when the monastery, founded in 1180, was owned by the town.

Like Schwedt and some other old Wachholtz fiefdoms, Dargislaff belonged to the villages that were still owned by the Belbuck Monastery around the middle of the 15th century and the Jobst Wachholz in 1467 in exchange for the so-called Wachholzhagen goods from the abbot of the monastery, Nikolaus von Winterfeld. As can be seen from church registers and other documents, the family was well off in the region in the centuries that followed. After the death of the Pomeranian District President of Stettin George Christoph von Wachholtz (1700–1764), these goods were awarded to his next fiefdom successor, Captain George Ehrenreich Ludewig von Wachholtz, by virtue of a court judgment on June 13, 1766.

Towards the end of! 8. Century belonged to Dargislaff two estates , one located on the road from Treptow to Regenwalde Vorwerk , Altendorf called (about 1825 sheep ), a water mill , located between the village Molstow was Altendorf at the Molstow and the farm (it was after comparing the 28 December 1737, sold hereditary), 14 farms, including one with an attached inn, four cottages, a blacksmith's shop, a wood-keeper's cottage, which was not far from the village on the heath, and a total of 41 households (fireplaces). Since October 5, 1898, Dargislaff was connected to the district town of Greifenberg via a section of the Greifenberger Kleinbahn .

At the end of the Second World War , the region was conquered by the Red Army and then - like all of Western Pomerania - placed under Polish administration. Unless they had already fled, the German population of Dargislaff was expelled from 1946 by Polish militiamen who immigrated after the war . The German village Dargislaff was renamed Dargosław .

Demographics

Number of inhabitants
year population Remarks
1822 201
1867 399 on December 3, 203 of them in the village and 196 in the manor district
1871 372 on December 1st, 179 in the village and 193 in the manor district, all Protestants
1933 573
1939 560

Parish

The population of Dargislaff was Protestant until 1946 and attended their own village church, a mother church belonging to the Treptow Synod on the Rega, in which the villages of Darsow, Streckentin, the Vorwerke Groß- and Klein-Jarchow, Mönchgrund and Althof were parish.

literature

  • Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann ; Detailed description of the current state of the Königl. Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania , Volume 2, Part I: Description of the court district of the Königl. State colleges belonging to Stettin, Hinterpommerschen Kreise , Stettin 1784, pp. 420-421, No. (17) ( online ).
  • Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen . Part II, Volume 6, W. Dietze, Anklam 1870, pp. 942-946 ( online )

Web links

Commons : Dargosław, West Pomeranian Voivodeship  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Footnotes

  1. ^ Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen . Part II, Volume 6, W. Dietze, Anklam 1870, p. 945 ( online )
  2. ^ Leopold Nedopil : German aristocratic samples from the German Ordens-Central-Archive , Volume 2, Braunmüller, Vienna 1868, pp. 461–462, No. 7357–7363 ( online )
  3. ^ Robert Klempin and Gustav Kratz (eds.): Matriculations and directories of the Pomeranian knighthood from the XIV to the XIX centuries , Berlin 1863, p. 267 ( online ) and p. 378 ( online ).
  4. a b c Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania . Part II, Volume 1, Stettin 1784, pp. 420-421, No. (17) ( online ).
  5. a b Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical description of the province of Pomerania with a statistical overview . Berlin and Stettin 1827, p. 175 ( online ).
  6. a b Royal Statistical Bureau: The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population . Part III: Pommern Province , Berlin 1874, pp. 70-71, No. 15 ( online ), and pp. 72-73, No. 94 ( online ).
  7. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Province of Pomerania - district of Greifenberg. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  8. Christian Friedrich Wutstrack : Addendum to the short historical-geographical-statistical description of the royal-Prussian duchy of Western and Western Pomerania . Stettin 1795, p. 69 ( online )