Gębice (Czarnków)

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Gębice
Gębice does not have a coat of arms
Gębice (Poland)
Gębice
Gębice
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Greater Poland
Powiat : Czarnkowsko-Trzcianecki
Gmina : Czarnków
Geographic location : 52 ° 54 ′  N , 16 ° 41 ′  E Coordinates: 52 ° 54 ′ 20 "  N , 16 ° 41 ′ 20"  E
Residents : 986 (March 31, 2011)



Gębice ( German  Gembitz ) is a village in the rural municipality of Czarnków in the powiat Czarnkowsko-Trzcianecki ( Czarnikau-Schönlanke ) in the Greater Poland Voivodeship , Poland .

Geographical location

Gębice is located about 40 kilometers south of the city of Piła ( Schneidemühl ) and ten kilometers east of the city of Czarnikau . The Netze (Notec) flows past around ten kilometers to the west of the village . The distance to the village of Sarbia ( Sarben ) is 5.2 kilometers.

history

Gembitz north of the city of Poznan and south of the city of Schneidemühl on a map of the province of Poznan from 1905 (areas marked in yellow indicate areas with a predominantly Polish- speaking population at the time ).
Homestead in Gembitz

Gembitz was a village and manor in the 19th century. The village had an evangelical parish church and an evangelical school. Around the middle of the 19th century there was an important grinding mill in the village. In 1854 a Paliszewski sat on Gembitz.

The village and manor belonged to the district of Czarnikau in the Posen Province of the German Empire until 1920 , but then had to be ceded to the Second Polish Republic due to the provisions of the Versailles Treaty .

In 1939 Gembitz was occupied by the German Wehrmacht and then, in violation of international law, incorporated into the Reichsgau Wartheland , to which it belonged until 1945. Towards the end of the Second World War , the village was occupied by the Red Army ; After the war it was handed over to the administration of the People's Republic of Poland .

Parish

Around the middle of the 19th century, the Protestants in Gembitz belonged to the Protestant parish Gramsdorf ( Bukowiec ). In 1865, the assistant teacher Friedrich Kühn from Niepruszewo was employed by Buck as a cantor at the Protestant parish church in Gembitz. In 1881 Heinrich Berthold Wenig was elected pastor of the communities Gembitz, Gembitz Hauland and Fitzerie, who had previously administered the pastoral office on a provisional basis.

The Catholics in Gembitz belonged to the Catholic parish of Czarnikau.

Population numbers

  • 1861: 900
  • 1885: 922

Footnotes

  1. ^ CIS 2011: Ludność w miejscowościach statystycznych według ekonomicznych grup wieku (Polish), March 31, 2011, accessed on June 6, 2017
  2. a b Handbook of geography and statistics for the educated estates . Seventh edition, volume 4, part 2 (by Hugo Franz von Brachelli ): The Kingdom of Prussia and the German medium and small states . Leipzig 1864, p. 246, right column
  3. Leopold von Ledebur : Adelslexikon der Prussischen Monarchy . Volume 2, Berlin 1855, p. 178, right column.
  4. a b Eugen M. Th. Huhn: Topographical-statistical-historical lexicon of Germany . Volume 2, Bibliographisches Institut, 1845, p. 516 right column.
  5. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Prussian Government in Bromberg . No. 29, Bromberg, July 21, 1865, p. 276.
  6. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Prussian Government in Bromberg . No. 52, Bromberg, December 27, 1881, p. 355, No. 886.
  7. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. pos_czarnikau.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).