Parsovo

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Parsowo (German Parsow ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Biesiekierz (rural community Biziker) in the Powiat Koszaliński (Kösliner Kreis) .

Geographical location

former castle of the von Gerlach family (photo from 2006)

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 15 kilometers southwest of the district town of Koszalin (Köslin) and ten kilometers northeast of the city of Karlino (Körlin an der Persante) . State road 6 runs south and east of the village from southwest to northeast .

The nearest neighbor is two kilometers west of the village Świemino (Schwemmin) .

history

The village was first mentioned with the current place name Parsow in a document from 1227, with which Duke Barnim I of Pomerania and his mother gave this village, together with twelve other villages, to the newly founded Marienbusch monastery. With a deed from 1252, Parsow came to Hermann von Gleichen , the future bishop of Cammin, as part of an exchange from the Belbuck monastery .

Later Parsow was owned by the noble family von Parsow , which died out in 1658. This was followed by the von Heydebreck family , the castle captain Jakob von Heydebreck as the first owner .

In 1779 the Secret Finance Councilor Friedrich Wilhelm von Gerlach Parsow acquired. He also owned other goods and had already acquired the neighboring Schwemmin in 1765 . The von Gerlach family owned the manor until 1945 . After Friedrich Wilhelm von Gerlach died in 1780, his sons divided up the property. Parsow and Schwemmin came to his eldest son Ludwig Wilhelm August von Gerlach , who was the court president in Köslin. He died in 1809 and in his will determined the Parsow and Schwemmin estates to be a family affidavit . The first owner of the entails was his son, who later became District Administrator Carl Heinrich von Gerlach .

In 1939 Parsow had 291 inhabitants. Before 1945, the municipality of Parsow belonged to the district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania .

In 1945 the village, like all of Western Pomerania, came to Poland. The last landlord Carl August von Gerlach-Parsow (1883–1945) was abducted and died. The village received the Polish place name Parsowo .

Attractions

  • Castle , middle wing built in 1782, north wing from 1860, south wing from 1910, rebuilt in 1922. The building itself survived 1945, the inventory was looted.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

Personalities related to the place

  • Carl Heinrich von Gerlach (1783–1860), district administrator, deputy state marshal of the Pomeranian provincial council, member of the Prussian manor house, landlord on Parsow

literature

Web links

Commons : Parsow  - Collection of Images
  • Parsow at Meyers Gazetteer (with historical map)

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. 242.
  2. ^ 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. 549.
  3. ^ Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania . Part III, Volume 1. Anklam 1867, pp. 400-401 ( online ).
  4. Jürgen von Gerlach: von Gerlach. Life pictures of a family in six centuries. German Family Archives, A genealogical collection, Volume 160, Verlag Degener & Co., owner Manfred Dreiss, Insingen 2015, ISBN 978-3-7686-5209-4 , p. 293 ff.

Coordinates: 54 ° 6 '  N , 15 ° 58'  E