Notyst Mały
Notyst Mały | ||
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Basic data | ||
State : | Poland | |
Voivodeship : | Warmia-Masuria | |
Powiat : | Mrągowo | |
Gmina : | Mrągowo | |
Geographic location : | 53 ° 53 ' N , 21 ° 27' E | |
Residents : | ||
Postal code : | 11-700 | |
Telephone code : | (+48) 89 | |
License plate : | NMR | |
Economy and Transport | ||
Street : | Użranki - Notyst Dolny → Notyst Mały | |
Rail route : | no rail connection | |
Next international airport : | Danzig |
Notyst Mały [ ˈnɔtɨst ˈmawɨ ] ( German Klein Notisten ) is a place in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship . He belongs to the Gmina Mrągowo ( rural community Sensburg ) in the powiat Mrągowski (district Sensburg ).
Geographical location
Notyst Mały is located in the eastern center of the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, 28 kilometers southwest of the former district town of Lötzen (in Polish Giżycko ) and ten kilometers northeast of the current district metropolis of Mrągowo (Sensburg) .
history
The place once called Klein Notisten was a widely scattered village. Between 1874 and 1945 it was incorporated into the district of Groß Jauer ( Jora Wielka in Polish ). He belonged to the district of Lötzen in the administrative district of Gumbinnen (1905 to 1945: administrative district of Allenstein ) of the Prussian province of East Prussia .
The seat of the responsible registry office was Groß Jauer until 1945.
In 1910, 280 residents were registered in Klein Notisten. Their number decreased to 255 by 1933 and was still 219 in 1939.
Due to the provisions of the Versailles Treaty , the population in the Allenstein voting area , to which Klein Notisten belonged, voted on July 11, 1920 on whether they would continue to belong to East Prussia (and thus to Germany) or join Poland. In Klein Notisten, 180 residents voted to remain with East Prussia, Poland did not receive any votes.
With the whole of southern East Prussia , Klein Notisten came to Poland in 1945 as a result of the war and has since borne the Polish name form “Notyst Mały”. Today the village is the seat of a Schulzenamt ( Polish sołectwo ), which is also responsible for Notyst Dolny and Notyst Wielki (Groß Notisten) . As such, it now belongs to the Gmina Mrągowo (rural municipality Sensburg ) in the powiat Mrągowski ( Sensburg district ), before 1998 the Olsztyn Voivodeship , since then part of the Warmia-Masurian Voivodeship .
religion
church
Until 1945, Klein Notisten was parish in the Protestant parish church in Königshöhe (Polish: Użranki) in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union and in the Catholic parish church of St. Adalbert in Sensburg (Mrągowo) in the Diocese of Warmia .
Today Notyst Mały belongs to the Protestant parish Użranki, a branch parish of the St. Trinity Church in Mrągowo in the Masuria diocese of the Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland and the Catholic parish church in Użranki in the Diocese of Ełk (Lyck) of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland .
traffic
Notyst Mały is located on a side road that leads from Użranki (Königshöhe) into the village.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Polish Postal Code Directory 2013, p. 816
- ↑ Dietrich Lange, Geographical Location Register East Prussia (2005). Little notists
- ^ Rolf Jehke, Groß Jauer district
- ↑ a b Klein Notisten at GenWiki
- ↑ Uli Schubert, community directory, Lötzen district
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Landkreis Lötzen (Polish Gizycko). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ Herbert Marzian , Csaba Kenez : "Self-determination for East Germany - A Documentation on the 50th Anniversary of the East and West Prussian Referendum on July 11, 1920"; Editor: Göttinger Arbeitskreis , 1970, p. 80
- ↑ Walther Hubatsch : History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia. Volume 3: Documents. Göttingen 1968, p. 492