Nieborowo

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Nieborowo (German Isinger ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Pyrzyce (municipality of Pyritz) in the Powiat Pyrzycki (Pyritzer Kreis) .

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 30 kilometers southeast of Stettin and about 5 kilometers northwest of the district town of Pyritz .

The closest neighboring towns are Chabowo (Alt Falkenberg ) and Chabówko (Neu Falkenberg) in the north, Żabów (Sabow) in the southeast, Stare Chrapowo (Alt Grape) in the southwest and Nowe Linie (Leine) in the west .

history

The apparently first mention of the place comes from a document dated 1226, according to which Duke Barnim I of Pomerania took the Kolbatz monastery under his protection and confirmed his property with an exact border description. In this boundary description, the place written here "Ysingher" is also mentioned. However, this document is recognized as a forgery, which the monastery should serve in the 14th century in the dispute over the Gollnower Heide .

The condition in the second half of the 18th century is handed down in Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann's Detailed Description of the Current Condition of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania (1784): At that time, Isinger's property was divided into two parts. The larger part, to which 16 farms, five kossaten, five Büdner, a jug and a blacksmith, a total of 43 households ("fire places") belonged, was royal property and belonged to the office of Kolbatz . The smaller portion, which included five farmers, including Schulze, and three kossäts, a total of 14 households, was owned by the city of Pyritz . At the village church there was a pastor ("preacher"), a sexton and a preacher's widow's house. For local disputes, a court called "Voigtgedinge" was held annually by the Kolbatz Office and the Magistrate of Pyritz.

Until 1945, the municipality of Isinger belonged to the Pyritz district of the Pomerania province . In addition to Isinger, Chausseehaus was run as a residential area . Isinger had 501 inhabitants in 1933 and 525 inhabitants in 1939.

After the Second World War , Isinger, like all areas east of the Oder-Neisse border , came to Poland. The village received the Polish place name "Nieborowo".

Personalities: sons and daughters of the place

literature

Web links

  • Isinger at Meyers Gazetteer (with historical map)
  • Isinger at www.pyritz.org

Footnotes

  1. ^ Klaus Conrad (arrangement): Pommersches Urkundenbuch . Volume 1. 2nd edition (= publications of the Historical Commission for Pomerania. Series 2, Vol. 1). Böhlau Verlag, Cologne / Vienna 1970, No. 236.
  2. Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania. 2nd part, 1st volume. Stettin 1784, p. 111. ( Online )
  3. Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania. 2nd part, 1st volume. Stettin 1784, p. 94. ( Online )
  4. ^ Isinger municipality in the Pomeranian information system.
  5. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Pyritz district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).

Coordinates: 53 ° 12 '  N , 14 ° 48'  E