Dziadowo (Pisz)

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Dziadowo ( Lost
Village)
Dziadowo (lost village) does not have a coat of arms
Dziadowo (Lost Village) (Poland)
Dziadowo (Lost Village)
Dziadowo ( Lost
Village)
Basic data
State : Poland
Powiat : Pisz
Gmina : Pisz
Geographic location : 53 ° 32 '  N , 21 ° 51'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 32 '2 "  N , 21 ° 51' 20"  E
Residents : 0
Economy and Transport
Rail route : Johannisburg – Kolno , discontinued in 1945



Dziadowo ( German  Dziadowen , 1905–1945 Königstal ) was a village in what is now the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship . The local office is in the Gmina Pisz ( city ​​and rural community Johannisburg ) in the Powiat Piski (district of Johannisburg ).

Geographical location

National road DK 63 in Dziadowo (Königstal) at the junction to Bogumiły (Bogumillen).

Dziadowo was on the main road from Pisz ( German  Johannisburg ) to the border village Dłutowo (Dlottowen , 1938-1945 Fischborn) to continue to Kolno . It was eleven kilometers north to the district town of Pisz. To the west of the local office there is a bridge over the Pisa (German Pissek ).

history

The small village, which later gained national importance through its sawmill , was founded in 1495 by the Teutonic Knight Order as a freehold estate with ten hooves under Magdeburg law .

Dziadowen belonged to the circle Johannesburg in Administrative district Gumbinnen (1905 Government district Allenstein ) in the Prussian province of East Prussia . From 1874 to 1945 the place was incorporated into the Gehsen district.

Included in the rural community of Dziadowen were the directly neighboring village of Wrobeln (before 1871 Wroblen , in Polish Wróble , no longer reported as an independent living space from 1938 at the latest) and Groß Pasken, which was incorporated between 1905 and 1910 (from 1938 mining Königstal , Polish Paski Wielkie ).

On April 21, 1905, Dziadowen was renamed Königstal . From 1908 to 1945 the village was a train station on the Johannisburg – Dlottowen / Fischborn (–Kolno) railway line , which has not been used since 1945. In 1945, the village came in consequence of the war with the entire East Prussia to Poland and received the Polish name form Dziadowo . In the following years the track of the village is lost, it is no longer mentioned; it is now considered abandoned.

Development of the population

The numbers of the inhabitants of Dziadowens and Königstals developed as follows:

year Number of inhabitants
1818 89
1838 158
1871 233
1885 207
1895 231
1905 322
1910 400
1925 515
1933 483
1939 495

The values ​​from 1910 also include the previously incorporated Groß Pasken .

Religions

Until 1945 Dziadowen was parish in the Evangelical Church Gehsen (Polish Jeże ) in the Ecclesiastical Province of East Prussia of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union and in the Roman Catholic Church in Johannisburg in the Diocese of Warmia .

school

Dziadowen became a school location in 1888.

Individual evidence

  1. Dietrich Lange: Geographical Register of Places East Prussia (2005): Königstal
  2. a b c d Dziadowo - Königstal in family research Sczuka (with map and list of residents 1944/1945)
  3. Rolf Jehke: District Gehsen
  4. Dietrich Lange: Geographical Location Register East Prussia (2005): Wrobeln
  5. a b Dziadowen / Königstal at genealogy.net
  6. Dietrich Lange: Geographical Register of Places East Prussia (2005): Groß Pasken
  7. a b Uli Schubert: Municipal directory, district of Johannisburg
  8. Ministerial order of November 12, 1946 (MP z 1946r. No. 142, poz. 262) .pdf
  9. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Johannisburg district (Polish Pisz). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  10. Walther Hubatsch : History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 3 documents. Göttingen 1968, p. 491.