Kocanowo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kocanowo
Coat of arms is missing
Help on coat of arms
Kocanowo (Poland)
Kocanowo
Kocanowo
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Greater Poland
Powiat : Poznań
Geographic location : 52 ° 29 ′  N , 17 ° 20 ′  E Coordinates: 52 ° 29 ′ 22 "  N , 17 ° 20 ′ 9"  E
Residents : 296 ()
Postal code : 62-010
Telephone code : (+48) 61
License plate : POZ
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Poznan-Ławica



Kocanowo is a village of the municipality Pobiedziska in Powiat Poznański in the Greater Poland Voivodeship in western central Poland with a mayor's office . The place is located about 3 km northwest of Pobiedziska and 31 km northeast of the regional capital Poznań .

history

After the second partition of Poland in 1793, the place belonged to the Schroda district and from January 4, 1900 to the Posen-Ost district . The community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia from 1905 gives 41 inhabited houses on 517.2 hectares for the place. The 264 residents, made up of 124 German-speaking Protestants, 137 Polish-speaking Catholics and one with German as their mother tongue and two with German and one other mother tongue, were divided into 41 multi-person households. The Protestant parish belonged to the parish of Pudewitz , the Catholic to the parish of Pudewitz. For January 1, 1908, it is stated that the place was part of the Pudewitz police district . On September 21, 1908, the site was up to the establishment of the Second Polish Republic in Kronau renamed. On December 1, 1910, the place had 306 inhabitants. With the occupation by Germany in World War II , the place was renamed Kronau again on October 26, 1939 .

From 1975 to 1998 the place belonged to the Poznan Voivodeship .

Individual evidence

  1. mapa.szukacz.pl. Retrieved January 28, 2016 .
  2. Pobiedziska municipality. Retrieved January 28, 2016 .
  3. a b c Uli Schubert: Gemeindeververzeichnis.de. January 2, 2014, accessed January 28, 2016 .
  4. a b c Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia from 1905. Issue V. Province of Posen. (PDF) March 2005, accessed on January 28, 2016 (copy).
  5. ^ A b c Rolf Jehke: Territorial changes in Germany and German administered areas 1874 - 1945. November 15, 2013, accessed on January 15, 2016 .