Linia (Powiat Wejherowski)
Linia / Lëniô | ||
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Pomerania | |
Powiat : | Wejherowo | |
Gmina : | Linia | |
Geographic location : | 54 ° 27 ' N , 17 ° 56' E | |
Residents : | 1405 |
Linia ( Kashubian Lëniô ; German Linde , formerly Linia ) is a village with the seat of the bilingual rural community of the same name in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the powiat Wejherowo ( New Town in West Prussia ).
Geographical location
The village is located in the former West Prussia , about 20 kilometers southeast of the city of Lębork (Lauenburg in Pomerania) and 32 kilometers southwest of Wejherowo (Neustadt in West Prussia) .
A side road leads through the village, coming from Lębork (on Landesstraße 6 , former German Reichsstraße 2 , today also European Route 28 ) to Łebno ( Lebno , on Voivodship Road 224 ).
Linia (Linde) was from 1905 to 2000 a train station on the railway line from Pruszcz Gdański (Praust) via Kartuzy (Karthaus) to Lębork (Lauenburg in Pomerania) and to Łeba (Leba) . The section was closed.
history
As part of the liberation of the peasants , a deed dated July 27, 1808 passed eleven properties in Linia , which at that time belonged to the Carthaus directorate, into the possession of the farmers who had built them. Since 1874, the municipality of Linde has belonged to the Occalitz district (now in Polish: Okalice), which also includes the municipalities of Klutschau (Tłuczewo), Kantrschin (Kętrzyno), Wahlendorf (Niepoczołowice) and Werder (Zakrzewo).
In the following period the Occalitz district was renamed the Zewitz (Cewice) district.
Until 1920 Linde belonged to the district of Neustadt in the administrative district of Danzig in the Prussian province of West Prussia of the German Empire .
After the First World War , the district with Linde had to be ceded to Poland in 1920 for the purpose of establishing the Polish Corridor . With the attack on Poland in 1939, the annexed area of the Polish Corridor, in violation of international law , became part of the German Reich . The Neustadt district was incorporated into the Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia , to which Linde belonged until 1945.
On October 24, 1940, the Linde district was formed - in the Neustadt district in West Prussia in the Gdansk administrative district in the Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia . It consisted of the communities Kantrschin, Klutschau, Linde, Wahlendorf, Waldeck and Werder.
Towards the end of the Second World War , the Red Army occupied the region in the spring of 1945 . Had not fled far as German citizens, they were in the period that followed sold .
In 1945 Linia was integrated into the powiat Wejherowski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975-1998 Gdańsk Voivodeship ). Linia has been the Schulzenamt since 1973 and the seat of the Gmina of the same name .
Population development
year | Residents | Remarks |
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1852 | over 300 | |
1871 | 505 | in 65 inhabited houses |
1905 | 839 |
literature
- Hans Prutz : History of the Neustadt district in West Prussia . Danzig 1872 ( e-copy ).
- Franz Schultz : The Lauenburg district in Pomerania. 1912 ( digitized version )
Web links
Footnotes
- ^ Hans Prutz : History of the Neustadt district in West Prussia . Danzig 1872, p. 170 .
- ^ Kraatz: Topographical-statistical description of the Prussian state . Berlin 1856, p. 371.
- ^ Hans Prutz : History of the Neustadt district in West Prussia . Danzig 1872, pp. 224–225, no. 106 .
- ↑ http://wiki-de.genealogy.net/GOV:LINNDEJO84XK ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.