Nosaline

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nosaline
Nosalin does not have a coat of arms
Nosalin (Poland)
Nosaline
Nosaline
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Sławno
Gmina : Postomino
Geographic location : 54 ° 26 '  N , 16 ° 46'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 25 '54 "  N , 16 ° 46' 10"  E
Residents : 184 (2006)
Postal code : 76-113
Telephone code : (+48) 59
License plate : ZSL
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Danzig
administration
Website : www.postomino.pl/499-nosalin.htm



Nosalin (German name: Nitzlin ; before: also: Vorteillin ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural community of Postomino ( Pustamin ) in the powiat Sławieński ( Schlawe ). From 1975 to 1998 it was administratively assigned to the Slupsk Voivodeship .

Geographical location

Nosalin
source: www.slupczewski.pl, Michał Słupczewski

The village is about two kilometers east of the Wieprza ( Wipper ). The part of the village Nosalinek (German name: Neu Nitzlin ) is located directly on the river on a bridge . This is followed by grassy areas to the east, and there are also smaller forest areas.

On the western side of the Wieprza - opposite Nosalin - is the village of Staniewice ( Stemnitz ; about 2.4 kilometers away). To the east of Nosalin, the same distance is the village of Pałówko ( New Paalow ) and - a little closer to Nosalin - the village of Pałowo ( Old Paalow ). The northern neighboring village is Pieszcz ( Peest ; also 2.4 kilometers away).

The place is connected to the E 28 (A6) via a side road leading to the south . You first pass the railway line 202, which leads from Stargard ( Stargard in Pomerania ) via Słupsk ( Stolp ) to Gdańsk ( Danzig ), and 4.1 kilometers from Nosalin you come through the village of Wrześnica ( Freetz ).

history

Not much is known about the history of the village from documented sources. It is assumed that the place has always been a pure farming village without a farm. The village had been a fiefdom of the von Below family since 1466 . Around 1780 it was one of the largest villages in the area, with 17 farmers, a blacksmith, a schoolmaster and 34 campfire sites. In the meantime, one of three parts of the village came into the possession of the von Krockow family (from 1635 to 1637). In 1804 it was again wholly owned by the von Below family. In 1835 the latter sold it to the Prussian state, which is probably related to the Stein-Hardenberg reforms . Since then it has been an independent farming village. On March 8, 1945 the village was occupied by Russian troops. The farms were taken over by Poland. In April 1947 all Germans were expelled.

The structure and the spatial, oval-shaped structure of the village changed little after 1945. A few buildings have been preserved in their original form. Most, however, have been rebuilt.

church

Parish

The population was completely Protestant before 1945 and belonged to the parish in Peest .

school

Before 1945, the village school consisted of two classes that were taught in a separate school building with two teacher's apartments. The school building was built around 1930.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Hugo Römer: Nitzlin . In: Manfred Vollack (Hrsg.): Der Kreis Schlawe - A Pomeranian Heimatbuch, Volume 2 - The cities and rural communities , Husum, 1989.
  2. a b c Nosalin (page about the village of Nosalin on www.postomino.pl, Polish)