Mysłowice (Sławoborze)

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Mysłowice (German Moitzelfitz ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Sławoborze (rural community Stolzenberg) in the powiat Świdwiński (Schivelbeiner Kreis) .

Village church (photo from 2013)

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 90 km northeast of Stettin and about 30 km south of Kołobrzeg (Kolberg) .

The closest neighboring towns are Powalice (Petershagen) in the west, Słowieńsko (Schlenzig) in the south, Sławoborze (Stolzenberg) in the east and Drzeń (Dryhn) in the north . The Molstowbach flows north of the village from northeast to southwest .

history

The village was probably created in the 14th century in the Duchy of Pomerania . The original form of settlement is that of an anger village . Later it was changed to a street village .

On the Great Lubin map of the Duchy of Pomerania from 1618, the village is entered as "Moistelvitz". It has been handed down that Moitzelfitz had been a fief of the noble von Blankenburg family since the 17th century . In 1666 Moitzelfitz belonged together with the neighboring Petershagen to a Peter von Blankenburg , in 1756 both belonged to a Peter Ludwig von Blankenburg . Later Moitzelfitz was divided into two parts. One of the owners of Moitzelfitz A was George Heinrich von Blanckenburg († 1779), district administrator of the neighboring Schivelbein district in Neumark.

In 1819 both shares in Moitzelfitz were bought by a member of the von Arnim family . In 1841 a commoner named Raddatz bought the Moitzelfitz manor.

In the first half of the 19th century, the separation between manor and farmers was carried out. An Aussiedlerhof ("dismantling") was built northeast of the village in the Feldmark. This was called Ludwigskathen, but the name went out of use at the end of the 19th century.

In the 19th century, two farms were laid out: at the beginning of the 19th century, about 2 kilometers south of Moitzelfitz, the Wedderwill farm , and in the 1880s the Schönau farm about 2 kilometers east . Both farms were detached from Gut Moitzelfitz around 1890 and sold.

Even before the First World War, the Moitzelfitz manor was divided into more than 20 newly created farm positions ("resettled"). In addition, a so-called residual material remained.

After the separation, the rural community Moitzelfitz and the estate district Moitzelfitz existed side by side. After the estate was settled in 1910, the manor district was incorporated into the rural community. The rural community Moitzelfitz belonged to the Kolberg-Körlin district of the Prussian province of Pomerania until 1945 . In addition to the village of Moitzelfitz, the residential areas Schönau and Wedderwill belonged to the municipality of Moitzelfitz .

In 1945 Moitzelfitz came to Poland, like all of Western Pomerania. The population was driven out . The place name was Polonized as "Mysłowice".

Development of the population

  • 1816: 196
  • 1864: 392
  • 1871: 363
  • 1885: 322
  • 1895: 411
  • 1919: 524
  • 1937: 551

church

The village church is a simple half-timbered building from the end of the 18th century.

Until 1945 Moitzelfitz was a subsidiary of Petershagen and thus belonged to the Pomeranian ecclesiastical province of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union .

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Harry von Arnim (1824–1881), German diplomat, ambassador in Paris until 1874

literature

  • Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , pp. 417-423.

Web links

  • Moitzelfitz on the website of the Kolberger Lande association

Footnotes

  1. Moitzelfitz municipality in the Pommern information system .
  2. a b c d e f g Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , p. 419.

Coordinates: 53 ° 54 '  N , 15 ° 38'  E