Jeżyczki

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Jeżyczki (German Neuenhagen, Abbey - district of Schlawe / Pomerania ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural community Darłowo ( Rügenwalde ) in the district of Sławno ( Schlawe ).

Geographical location

The farming village Jeżyczki is located in Western Pomerania , eleven kilometers southeast of Darłowo ( Rügenwalde ). Its area is bounded by the Grabowa ( Grabow ) in the west, by Jeżyce ( Altenhagen ) in the north, by the Nowy Kraków forest in the east and by Przystawy ( Pirbstow ) in the south . The terrain is slightly hilly, the highest point is 36.5 meters above sea level.

Place name

The name Neuenhagen Abbey aims to distinguish it from Neuenhagen Amt (Polish: Jezierzany) located on Jezioro Wicko ( Vietzker See ). "Abbey" means that it belonged to the Buckow monastery - in contrast to the "official" village of Neuenhagen.

history

Neuenhagen, Abbey is a settlement that was likely to have originated in the 13th century. At that time it belonged to Buckow Monastery . The time of origin is likely to have been a little later than that of the neighboring town of Altenhagen (now Polish: Jeżyce). After the Reformation , the abbey village came to the Rügenwalde office . 1780 are counted in Neuenhagen: 1 free school, 16 farmers, 4 street farmers, 8 Büdner and 1 school house with a total of 31 fire places.

In 1830 the smaller half of the village, called the "annex", was built. At that time the place had 298 inhabitants, whose number rose to 603 by 1885 and was 569 in 1939.

Until 1945 Neuenhagen was a municipality in the district of Petershagen (Pęciszewko) in the district of Schlawe i. Pom. in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania . The Petershagen registry office was located in Neuenhagen . The local court was oriented towards Rügenwalde .

Towards the end of the Second World War , Neuenhagen was occupied by Red Army soldiers on March 6, 1945 . In 1947 Neuenhagen came under Polish administration under the People's Republic of Poland . The native population was the Poles expelled . Neuenhagen was renamed Jeżyczki by the Polish authorities . The village is now part of the Gmina Darłowo in the powiat Sławieński of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship .

church

Before 1945, the majority of the inhabitants of Neuenhagen, Abbey were of Protestant denomination. The place did not have its own church, but was oriented towards Petershagen (Pęciszewko). The parish was in the parish of Rügenwalde in the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union .

Jeżyczki has been Catholic almost without exception since 1945 . The place is integrated into the parish Jeżyce ( Altenhagen ), which belongs to the deanery Darłowo in the diocese of Köslin-Kolberg of the Catholic Church in Poland . Evangelical church members are looked after by the parish office in Koszalin ( Köslin ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

school

The former Neuenhagen school was one class. In the 1920s, a new, this time two-class school building was erected, which was inaugurated in 1928.

traffic

Neuenhagen is connected to the road network via a side road that runs from the Baltic Sea city of Darlowo ( Rügenwalde ) via Pęciszewko ( Petershagen ) and Przystawy ( Pirbstow ) to Malechowo ( Malchow ) on Landesstraße 6 (former Reichsstraße 2 , today also Europastraße 28 ) Stettin - Danzig leads. The nearest train station is Wiekowo ( Alt Wieck ) on the PKP line 202 Stargard (Pomerania) - Danzig.

literature

  • The Schlawe district. A Pomeranian Heimatbuch , ed. by Manfred Vollack, 2 volumes, Husum 1988/1989

Coordinates: 54 ° 20 '  N , 16 ° 24'  E