Golęcino

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Golęcino (German Frauendorf ) is a district of Stettin and is located in the Północ district northwest of the old town on the western bank of the Oder .

history

The place was called in the 13th century Golazin and belonged to a gentleman ( "Dominus") named Bartholomew, who is the Herzog I. Barnim founded Cistercian monastery Stettin gave. Two documents from Duke Barnim I from 1243 have survived that confirmed this donation. Because of the female owners, the monastery was subsequently named Frauendorf.

Frauendorf was already a popular excursion destination in the 18th century, especially among the citizens of Szczecin, who, among other things, used the 84 meter high Juloberg as a lookout point. In 1818 the place came into the newly formed district Randow in the administrative district of Stettin . In the second half of the 19th century, several factories settled around the place. The largest was the Kraft ironworks located downstream with around 2,500 employees. Around 1900 the place had 3962 inhabitants and was connected to the Stettin – Pölitz – Ziegenort railway . In the first half of the 20th century, Emil R. Retzlaff established the Ostseewerft AG near Frauendorf; the first ship was stacked there in 1921. In 1929, Retzlaff bought the Nüscke & Co. shipyard and merged it with the Ostseewerft Frauendorf under the name Merkurwerft. After the Randow district was dissolved in 1939, Frauendorf became part of the city district of Stettin. In 1944 the place and the shipyard were destroyed in bomb attacks.

After the Second World War , the place in the so-called Stettiner Zipfel came to Poland and was named Golęcino .

Sons and daughters of the place

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Klaus Conrad (arrangement): Pommersches Urkundenbuch . Volume 1. 2nd edition (= publications of the Historical Commission for Pomerania. Series 2, Vol. 1). Böhlau Verlag, Cologne / Vienna 1970, No. 415 and 416.
  2. ^ Wilhelm von Sommerfeld: History of the Germanization of the Duchy of Pomerania or Slavia up to the end of the 13th century . Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1896, p. 169. (Reprint: Adamant Media Corporation, 2004, ISBN 1-4212-3831-4 )
  3. ^ Brunk:  Contributions to the music history of Pomerania in the first half of the 19th century . In: Society for Pomeranian History and Archeology (Hrsg): Baltic studies . New series vol. 24/25, Léon Saunier, Stettin 1922, p. 38 f ( digitized version ).
  4. a b Frauendorf . In: Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon , Volume 7. Leipzig 1907, p. 37. at zeno.org

Coordinates: 53 ° 28 '  N , 14 ° 35'  E