Linówko

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Linówko (German Klein Lienichen ) is a place in Gmina Ińsko (German Nörenberg ) in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It is located about five kilometers west of Ińsko between the western tip of the Jezioro Ińsko ( Enzigsee , Lienicher Lanke ) and the Lienischer See.

history

The large stone graves near Klein Lienichen , ten grave systems of the Neolithic beaker culture, came from prehistoric times . They were destroyed in the 19th century.

Klein Lienichen mansion (around 1935)

Klein-Lienichen formerly belonged to the Dramburg der Neumark district , then to the Saatzig district in the administrative district of Stettin in the Pomeranian province . The place comprised the village and a feudal manor and formed with the Vorwerk with the residential areas Friedrichsthal and Karlsthal (also called Carlshof) as well as with the Gut Ziegenberg north of the village in the Klein Lienichen forest and with the manor Langenhagen (Długie) AB an approx 6,000 acres of estate that has been in the possession of the von Mellenthin family in uninterrupted succession for more than 400 years . Formerly a fief of those von Wedel , it was given to the family of Mellenthin of the Elector of Brandenburg directly to the fief. The government councilor Friedrich von Mellenthin had a neo-Gothic mansion built in 1852, surrounded by its farm buildings, overlooking the lake and forest. He bequeathed this property to his son Carl von Mellenthin .

The last owner was the widow Alexandrine Johanna Erdmuthe von Mellenthin , born von Tiedemann, who married Maximilian von Mellenthin († 1922) in 1913. In 1939 there were 50 horses, 200 cattle and 300 pigs on the 950 hectare manor. In 1942 the Ziegenberg estate was sold to the state forest.

Special features of the community area were a large boulder near the Lienicher See and the Protestant village church, a half-timbered building with a low west tower. On the altar wall was a medieval altar shrine with carved figures of Anna, Maria and a martyr. The pulpit was a simple carving from the Baroque period that was painted over in oak. Until 1945 Klein Lienichen belonged to the Protestant parish Steinhöfel (Kamienny Most) in the parish of Freienwalde (Chociwel) in the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union and is now parish in the Trinity parish in Stettin in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

literature

  • Paul Schulz (ed.): The Saatzig district and the independent city of Stargard - A Pomeranian homeland book . Rautenberg, Leer 1984, ISBN 3-7921-0307-9 .
  • Johannes Hinz : Pomerania. Signpost through an unforgettable country. Flechsig-Buchvertrieb, Würzburg 2002, ISBN 3-88189-439-X , p. 174.

Web links

Coordinates: 53 ° 26 '  N , 15 ° 28'  E