Lesiaki (Cewice)
Lesiaki | ||
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Pomerania | |
Powiat : | Lębork | |
Gmina : | Cewice | |
Geographic location : | 54 ° 25 ' N , 17 ° 41' E | |
Residents : | 53 (March 31, 2011) | |
Telephone code : | (+48) 59 | |
License plate : | GLE | |
Economy and Transport | ||
Street : | Siemirowice - ext . 212 ↔ Unieszynko - Pogorzelice / DK 6 | |
Rail route : | no rail connection | |
Next international airport : | Danzig |
Lesiaki ( German Lessaken ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship . It belongs to the municipality of Cewice ( Zewitz ) in the powiat Lęborski ( Lauenburg district in Pomerania ).
Geographical location
The village is located in Western Pomerania , about forty kilometers east-southeast of Stolp ( Słupsk ), in a wooded terminal moraine landscape not far from the Baltic Sea .
history
In 1686 the Gutsdorf, then called Lessaken, was a fief of the Lietzen family . After acquiring part of Lessaken, which consisted of a farm in Lessaken and a wooden cave in Swantee (today Święte in Polish), the Münchows bought a second one. Some parts were all modified in 1777 .
After several changes of ownership, all three parts came to Kaspar Friedrich von Massow together with the goods Kose ( Kozy ), Kosemühl ( Kozin ) and Klein Rakitt ( Rokitki ) . During this time Lessaken had two farmers, two half-farmers and a total of four fireplaces.
In 1804, Lessaken was owned by Nikolaus Leopold von Zitzewitz , and in 1860 Heinrich Wilke bought it . The subsequent owners of the approximately 424 hectare manor were then Leopold von den Osten (1884), Max Deinert (1910), Fritz Günther Strobell (1928), and in 1938 still the Strobell family .
At the beginning of the 1930s, the district of Lessaken was 7.3 km 2 in size. In 1945 there were four places of residence in the municipality of Lessaken:
- Old Lessaken
- Forest house Swantee / Schwansee
- Lessaken
- Swamtee (Polish Święte )
The community belonged to the official and registry office district Bochowke (Bochówko) in the district of Stolp in the administrative district of Köslin of the Prussian province of Pomerania .
Towards the end of the Second World War , Lessaken was occupied by the Red Army on March 9, 1945 . Soon afterwards the region was placed under Polish administration together with the whole of Western Pomerania . Lessaken received the Polish place name Lesiaki . In the following time the German inhabitants of Lessakens were expelled .
The place was assigned to the Schulzenamt Karwica ( Gerhardshöhe ) in the Gmina Cewice in the powiat Lęborski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975 to 1998 Slupsk Voivodeship ).
Later, 26 villagers displaced from Lessaken in the Federal Republic of Germany and 28 in the GDR were identified.
Population development
year | Residents | Remarks |
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1867 | 48 | seven households, spread over four residential buildings |
1871 | 47 | all evangelicals |
1905 | 70 | |
1925 | 103 | 98 Evangelicals and five Catholics |
1933 | 59 | |
1939 | 70 |
church
Before 1945, the village population of Lessaken was predominantly of Protestant denomination. It belonged to the parish Mickrow (today Polish: Mikorowo) in the church district of Stolp-Altstadt in the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union .
Since 1945, almost all of the Catholic population has lived in Lesiaki. Mikorowo is still the seat of the parish to which the village belongs, but which is now in the newly formed deanery Łupawa ( Lupow ) in the Pelplin diocese of the Catholic Church in Poland . The Protestant church members living here are parish in the Kreuzkirche parish in Słupsk ( Stolp ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland , which maintains a branch church in the nearest town of Lębork ( Lauenburg in Pomerania ).
school
The children from Lessaken went to school in Wutzkow ( Oskowo ) until 1945 .
traffic
Voivodeship road 212 runs near the village , and here it follows the route of the former German Reich road 158 . It is crossed here by a subordinate secondary road that connects Siemirowice ( Schimmerwitz ) with Unieszynko ( Klein Wunneschin ) with Pogorzelice ( Langeböse ) on Landesstraße 6 (former Reichsstraße 2 , now also Europastraße 28 ) and leads through Lesiaki. A rail connection existed via the Zewitz (Cewice) station 2.5 kilometers away on the Lauenburg – Bütow railway line .
literature
- Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Königl. Prussian Duchy of Vor and Hinter Pomerania . Part II, Volume 2: Description of the court district of the Royal. State colleges in Cößlin belonging to the Eastern Pomeranian districts . Stettin 1784, pp. 978-979, paragraph (78).
- Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania. Evidence of his German past . Lübeck 1989, pp. 692–694, location description Lessaken . (PDF)
Web links
- Gunthard Stübs and Pomeranian Research Association: The Lessaken community in the former Stolp district in Pomerania. (2011)
- Rolf Jehke: Hohenlinde District (Pom.) (2011)
Individual evidence
- ^ CIS 2011: Ludność w miejscowościach statystycznych według ekonomicznych grup wieku (Polish), March 31, 2011, accessed on June 26, 2017
- ↑ a b Gunthard Stübs and Pomeranian Research Association: The Lessaken community in the former Stolp district in Pomerania. (2011)
- ^ Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania. Evidence of his German past . Lübeck 1989, p. 694 Description of the location Lessaken . (PDF)
- ↑ a b Prussian State Statistical Office: The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population ( the municipalities and manor districts of the province of Pomerania ). Berlin 1873, pp. 160-161, no. 250.
- ^ Ostpommern eV
- ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. stolp.html # ew39stlplessak. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).