Klępino Białogardzkie

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Klępino Białogardzkie
Klępino Białogardzkie does not have a coat of arms
Klępino Białogardzkie (Poland)
Klępino Białogardzkie
Klępino Białogardzkie
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Białogard
Gmina : Białogard
Geographic location : 54 ° 0 ′  N , 16 ° 4 ′  E Coordinates: 54 ° 0 ′ 0 ″  N , 16 ° 4 ′ 0 ″  E
Residents : 118 ()
Telephone code : (+48) 94
License plate : ZBI
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Klępino Białogardzkie ( German  Klempin ) is a district of the Polish municipality Białogard in the powiat Białogardzki .

Geographical location

Klępino Białogardzkie is located six kilometers south-east of Białogard on a secondary road connection to Bukówko ( New Buckow ) / Wojewodschaftsstraße 167 Koszalin ( Köslin ) - Tychowo ( Groß Tychow ). The nearest train station is Białogard. The “landmark” of the village is the formerly so-called “Klempiner Berg”, which rises from the relatively flat Feldmark at a height of 74 meters.

Local history

The village of Klempin is mentioned for the first time in a document on August 2, 1299 in connection with the granting of Luebian law to the city of Belgard by the Pomeranian Duke Bogislaw IV . In 1454 the town of Belgard received Klempin as a combing village from Duke Erich I as a gift. It was not until the French era and thanks to the reforms of Freiherr vom Stein that this dependency was lifted by edicts from 1807 and 1811.

A major fire destroyed almost half the village on Sunday, August 31, 1930. It was caused by children who had played with matches.

In the middle of the 19th century, 30 families with 177 members lived in the village. There were 16 residential buildings, a school building and 37 farm buildings. By 1939 the number of inhabitants rose insignificantly to 195 people with 45 households. In 1931, the community area covered 623 hectares.

The agricultural land was cultivated by 21 farms. The craft was represented by a carpentry and a blacksmith's shop, the trade with a butcher and a grocery store. Both shops, however, had to close when the war began in 1939.

Klempin belonged to the administrative and civil registry district Pumlow . The competent district court was Belgard. The last incumbent before 1945 was Werner Haeger mayor.

On March 4, 1945, all but a few people in the village fled from the approaching Red Army troops . The soldiers entered the village a day later, there was no major damage. However, afterwards there were numerous building destruction and human injuries through the arbitrariness of the soldiers. In November 1945 the local population began to be expelled , the village of Klempin came to Poland as Klępino Białogardzkie and is now part of the rural community (gmina wiejska) Białogard.

church

Klempin belonged to the parish of Siedkow , to which the parish Pumlow and the parish villages Darkow and Dubberow (with the chapel in Klein Dubberow) belonged. Thus the place belonged to the parish of Belgard in the ecclesiastical province of Pomerania of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union . In 1940 the parish had 2151 parishioners.

Today Klępino Białogardzkie is in the Parish Koszalin ( Köslin ) in the area of ​​the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

school

A single-class elementary school existed in the middle of the 19th century.

literature

  • Belgard County. From the story of a Pomeranian home district. ed. v. Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee, Celle 1989.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Website of the Powiat Białogardzki, Klępino Białogardzkie , accessed on February 19, 2013