Laski (Moskva)

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Laski
Laski does not have a coat of arms
Laski (Poland)
Laski
Laski
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Łódź
Powiat : Łódzki wschodni
Gmina : Novosolna
Geographic location : 51 ° 49 ′  N , 19 ° 39 ′  E Coordinates: 51 ° 49 ′ 12 ″  N , 19 ° 39 ′ 0 ″  E
Residents :
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Warsaw



Laski is a village in Poland in the Łódź Voivodeship . The place belongs to the Schulzenamt Moskwa in the Gmina Novosolna .

history

Laski was founded in 1797 by German settlers, four years after the region with the second partition of Poland as part Südpreußens to Prussia had arrived. The population of the place and originated from Pomerania .

In 1807 the region became part of the newly established Duchy of Warsaw , and from 1815 it was part of Congress Poland .

In 1825 there were 6 settler places with 47 inhabitants (including servants) in Byszewy and Laski, ten years later there were only 5 places for both places together where as many colonists with 37 relatives lived (because at that time that Servants made up about 30% of the village population, the actual number of inhabitants should have been around 55 people). At that time Laski and Byszewy belonged together with Plichtów , also a place founded by German settlers, to the Moskva manor .

With the establishment of the Protestant parish Brzeziny in 1826 Laski was parish there.

Probably as early as 1830, but no later than 1842, the children from Laski attended the cantor school in Głogowiec .

From 1859 to 1954 Laski belonged to the Gmina (municipality) Lipiny .

After the January uprising of 1863/64, a large part of the German families from Laski emigrated to Volhynia or the city.

At the end of the 19th century there were still only five houses with 59 inhabitants in the village.

During the First World War , the place was in the middle of the battlefield of the Battle of Lodz . It is not known whether there was damage to the place or whether Laski residents were killed in the war.

In 1935 there were still about 20 Germans living in Laski.

At the time of the German occupation in World War II , Laski belonged to the Reichsgau Wartheland .

References

See also

Footnotes

  1. a b Albert Breyer: The German villages in the area around Lodz with a map of German settlements in the area around Lodz , in: German monthly books in Poland, magazine for the past and present of Germanness in Poland, volume 2 (12), issue 5/6, November / December 1935.
  2. ^ Oskar Kossmann: Map development of the rural German settlement in north-western Congress Poland (1800, 1825, 1835, 1935) , in: Oskar Kossmann: Die Deutschen in Polen since the Reformation, Marburg 1978.
  3. a b Eduard Kneifel: The Evangelical Lutheran Congregation Brzeziny near Lodz / Poland 1829-1945 , Vierkirchen / Schwabach 1983, p. 9.
  4. ^ A b Oskar Kossmann: The Germans in Poland since the Reformation. Marburg / Lahn: J. G. Herder Institute 1978, p. 371.
  5. ^ Oskar Kossmann: The Germans in Poland since the Reformation. Marburg / Lahn: J. G. Herder Institute 1978, p. 294.
  6. ^ A b Eduard Kneifel: The Evangelical Lutheran Congregation Brzeziny near Lodz / Poland 1829-1945 , Vierkirchen / Schwabach 1983, p. 25.
  7. According to the sources mentioned, it has been proven to belong to the end of the 19th century and 1933 to 1945, which leads to the assumption that the place belonged to this Gmina during the entire period mentioned.
  8. a b Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Volume V, page 83
  9. ^ A b Eduard Kneifel: The Evangelical Lutheran Congregation Brzeziny near Lodz / Poland 1829-1945 , Vierkirchen / Schwabach 1983, p. 84.
  10. ^ Albert Breyer: The German villages around Lodz with a map of German settlements around Lodz , in: German Monthly Issues in Poland, Journal for the Past and Present of Germanness in Poland, Volume 2 (12), Issue 5/6, November / December 1935, p. 202.
  11. ^ Map distribution of the Germans and their rural property in the Lodz area , in: Oskar Kossmann: Lodz. A historical-geographical analysis , Würzburg 1966.
  12. ^ Eduard Kneifel: The Evangelical Lutheran Congregation Brzeziny near Lodz / Poland 1829-1945 , Vierkirchen / Schwabach 1983, p. 87.