Jadamowo

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Jadamowo
Jadamowo does not have a coat of arms
Jadamowo (Poland)
Jadamowo
Jadamowo
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Warmia-Masuria
Powiat : Olsztyn
Gmina : Olsztynek
Geographic location : 53 ° 28 ′  N , 20 ° 19 ′  E Coordinates: 53 ° 28 ′ 6 ″  N , 20 ° 19 ′ 0 ″  E
Residents : 73 (1997)
Telephone code : (+48) 89
License plate : NOL
Economy and Transport
Street : DK 7 (= E 77 ): GdanskWarsaw
Rail route : PKP - Route 216: Działdowo – Olsztyn
Railway Station: Waplewo
Next international airport : Danzig



Jadamowo (German Adamsheide ) is a small town in the southwest of the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship . It belongs to the urban and rural municipality Olsztynek ( Hohenstein ) in the powiat Olsztyński ( Allenstein district ).

geography

Jadamowo is located at the top of the Southeast Jezioro Mielno ( Mühlensee ), 13 km south west of Olsztynek near the busy 7 road (here: Europastraße 77 ), the Danzig with Warsaw and Krakow and Slovakia connects.

The nearest train station is Waplewo ( Waplitz ), four kilometers away, on the state railway line from Działdowo ( Soldau ) to Olsztyn ( Allenstein ).

history

The former "Adamsheide" appeared as Gutsdorf for the first time in 1586 as a Vorwerk von Wittmannsdorf (since 1945: Witramowo), which at the time belonged to the property of Count Finck von Finckenstein .

In 1878 the place was included in the district of Wittmannsdorf in the district of Osterode in East Prussia in the district of Allenstein in the Prussian province of East Prussia .

After the turn of the 20th century, the Adamsheide estate was state owned, and parts of the estate were purchased by the Hohenstein Forestry Office. The manor house was built around 1900.

On August 24, 1907, the independent Adamsheide manor district was formed from the Wittmannsdorf manor district, and in 1910 126 inhabitants were registered here.

On September 30, 1929, the Adamsheide manor district merged with the Wittmannsdorf rural community to form the new Wittmannsdorf rural community, and Adamsheide became just one district again.

As a result of the Second World War , Adamsheide came under Polish administration with all of southern East Prussia and was given the current name "Jadamowo". He is incorporated into the Waplewo Schulzenamt ( Waplitz ) of the city and rural community of Olsztynek and "changed" from the Prussian district of Osterode in East Prussia to the Polish Powiat Olsztyński . It has belonged to the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship since 1998 and was previously part of the Olsztyn Voivodeship . Like the entire estate, the former manor house is now privately owned.

Religions

Adamsheide, with its majority Protestant population, belonged to the Szelesen parish ( Żelazno ) in the parish of Hohenstein in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union before 1945 . Until the mid-19th century it was in the Sprengel Waplitz eingepfarrt (Waplewo) to which to 1721 and already on Neidenburgischem lying area Kirchdorf curtains (Gardyny) belonged, both gräflich Finckensteinsch were. Pastor Karl Heinz Ziegler was the last German clergyman to officiate in Seelesen .

A predominantly Catholic population has lived in Jadamowo since 1945 . The village is now in the parafia św. Stanisława (Parish of St. Stanislaus ) incorporated into Waplewo. It lies in the area of ​​the Olsztynek deanery in the Archdiocese of Warmia of the Catholic Church in Poland .

Evangelical church members living here are now assigned to the church in Olsztynek, which is a branch parish of Olsztyn. It belongs to the Masurian Diocese of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Jadamowo - Adamsheide
  2. ^ Rolf Jehke: Wittmannsdorf district
  3. ^ Uli Schubert: Community directory
  4. Friedwald Moeller: Old Prussian Protestant Pastor Book from the Reformation to the Expulsion in 1945 . Hamburg 1968, pp. 131 and 146