Pęczerzyno

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Pęczerzyno (German name: Panzerin ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It belongs to the municipality Brzeżno ( Briesen ) in the district Schivelbein .

Geographical location

Pęczerzyno is eleven kilometers southwest of the district town of Świdwin ( Schivelbein ) on a side road connection between Słonowice ( Schlönwitz ) and Więcław ( Venzlaffshagen ). The place was laid out in the form of an anger village. In the south the village is bounded by the Stara Rega ( Fuchsfließ ), in the southwest by the Jez. Pęczerzyno ( Panzerine Lake ). The contemplative and charming landscape between Fuchsfließ and the lake was called " Panzeriner Switzerland " in German times .

Local history

Panzerin is mentioned in the Neumark Landbuch as early as 1337 , at that time with a church. In the 15th century, the von Kankelwitz family lived here. In 1540 Partzerin came to the Order of St. John .

In 1690 Christian Dopke is named as the owner of Panzerin.

382 inhabitants in 95 households counted the 1016.3 hectare large community in 1939. In the place 21 farmers were resident. Until 1932 Panzerin belonged to the district of Schivelbein, until it was absorbed by the district of Belgard (Persante) .

Together with the communities of Schlönwitz and Polchlep , Panzerin formed the administrative and civil registry district of Schlönwitz and was located in the area of ​​the Schivelbein District Court .

On March 6, 1945, Polish troops occupied the place. In autumn 1945 the local population began to be expelled . Panzerin came into Polish hands as Pęczerzyno and is now part of Gmina Brzeżno in the Świdwiński Powiat .

church

Church of Panzerin

Parish

Panzerin was an independent parish in the Schlönwitz parish until 1945 . In 1940 there were 400 parishioners. She belonged to the church district Schivelbein in the church province of Pomerania of the Protestant church of the Old Prussian Union . The last German clergyman was Pastor Johannes Jentsch.

Today Pęczerzyno is in the parish of Koszalin ( Köslin ) in the Pomeranian-Greater Poland diocese of the Polish Evangelical-Augsburg Church .

Village church

The Panzeriner Church was a small rectangular boulder building with a clear height of only 5.30 meters. It could have been built in its foundation walls as early as 1280, as it is one of the oldest churches in Western Pomerania . In the 16th century the church was renewed, the corners formed with decorative ashlars and the east gable made of half-timbering. The First World War ruined the plan for a new building .

The church has only one door on the south side, the low height of which only allows visitors to enter the church with their heads down in humility. Was changed shortly before 2011, the church was given a door to the west. Inside, there is a late Gothic shrine altar from around 1500.

One bell had to be delivered in the First World War , the smaller one - from 1500 - suffered the same fate in the Second World War . However, it was found in the Hamburg bell camp after 1945, was damaged and without a crown. It was handed over to the Protestant parish in Siesbach in the Palatinate , but it no longer came into use and had to be melted down due to the excessive damage.

school

Before 1945, the elementary school was headed by Emil Fengler as the last German school owner.

literature

  • Belgard County. From the history of a Pomeranian home district , ed. v. Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee, Celle, 1989