Pavlovo (Kaliningrad, Baltiysk)

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district
Pavlovo / Lochstädt
Павлово
Federal district Northwest Russia
Oblast Kaliningrad
Rajon Baltiysk
Founded 1299
Earlier names Lochstete (after 1404),
Lochstedt (after 1525),
Locksteth (after 1540),
Lochstädt (until 1946)
Height of the center m
Time zone UTC + 2
Telephone code (+7) 40145
Geographical location
Coordinates 54 ° 43 ′  N , 19 ° 59 ′  E Coordinates: 54 ° 43 ′ 15 ″  N , 19 ° 58 ′ 30 ″  E
Pavlovo (Kaliningrad, Baltijsk) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Pavlovo (Kaliningrad, Baltiysk) (Kaliningrad Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Kaliningrad Oblast

Pawlowo ( Russian Па́влово , also imeni Pawlowa , German Lochstädt , Prussian Lochstete ) is a district of the city of Baltijsk ( Pillau ) in the Russian Oblast Kaliningrad .

Geographical location

The place is located in the historical region of East Prussia , on the southern headland of the Samland , about seven kilometers north of the city center of Pillau ( Baltijsk ).

Lochstädt Castle

The ruins of one of the largest castles of the Teutonic Order were located here . In the castle formerly had hole depth townspeople found a Seedurchfahrt between the Baltic Sea and Fresh lagoon , which is about 1308 to 1311 as a result of storm surge silted up , whereupon the old depth opposite the castle Balga emerged. Before the Lochtädter Tief was silted up, Lochstädt Castle was crucial for controlling shipping traffic between the lagoon and the Baltic Sea. Around 1780, Lochstädt Castle was the seat of the Lochstädt Domain Office, which consisted of two outworks and 13 villages.

During the fortification of the city of Pillau, the castle was partially destroyed, and other heavy damage occurred during World War II . In the 1990s, archaeologists suspected parts of the amber room in the castle ruins .

history

Lochstädt, on the northern foothills of the Frischen Nehrung and southwest of the city of Fischhausen on the north bank of the Frischen Haff , on a map from 1910.

The place is first mentioned as Witland at the end of the 9th century by Wulfstan . In 1246 it was called "castrum Witlandesort quod dicitur nunc Locstete". Laukstyte was the name of a Prussian noble from Witlandsort. The name, derived from Prussian, points to glittering water ( laukstits : glittering, sparkling).

In the Polish-Swedish War of 1626-1629 was Lochstädt on May 18, 1627 troops Gustav Adolfs , in Pillau , including landed, and on 25 May 1626 a ceasefire agreement was with the here Duchy of Prussia concluded that up to 29 Lasted September of the same year.

Around 1816 the tenants of the amber shelf intended to found a public bathing beach on the Baltic Sea beach near Lochstädt-Neuhäuser; the royal government, however, advocated the creation of a beach near Cranz .

In 1831, around 2,180 acres of land belonged to the former domain fore , of which in 1805 only 211 acres were arable land, 68 acres were meadows, and five acres were used as garden land; the rest of the land was pasture or partly unusable land. Assuming that additional repair costs of 2,000 thalers had to be invested , the dilapidated Vorwerk was offered for sale in 1829 at an official estimate of 2601.83 thalers.

Population development

year Residents Remarks
1816 56
1831 77 51 in the main town and 26 in the Neuhäuser settlement
1858 88 including 87 Evangelicals and one Catholic

church

Already in pre-Reformation period was Lochstädt a parish seat time with the St. Adalbert Church in Tenkitten the church Old Pillau assumed. After the collapse of St. Adalbert's Church, which was rededicated to the Protestant parish church in 1525, the services were relocated to the chapel of Lochstädt Castle , which has since been considered the "parish church". It was built in Gothic style in the last decade of the 13th century. An old confessional from St. Adalbert's Church was kept in the sacristy of the castle chapel. The altar, pulpit, baptismal font and organ were newly procured after 1670. Although the south wing of the castle with the sacristy was preserved after the Second World War , it was demolished in the 1960s. The parish of Lochstädt , from which the branch church Alt Pillau was separated in 1885, belonged to the parish of Fischhausen within the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union until 1945 . The pastors lived in Tenkitten.

literature

  • Leopold Krug : The Prussian Monarchy; presented topographically, statistically and economically. According to official sources . Part I: Province of Prussia . Berlin 1833, p. 134, paragraph 7.
  • Karl Emil Gebauer : Customer of the Samland or history and topographical-statistical picture of the East Prussian landscape Samland . Königsberg 1844, pp. 96-97.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Johann Friedrich Goldbeck : Complete topography of the Kingdom of Prussia . Part I: Topography of East Prussia . Marienwerder 1785, pp. 9-10.
  2. Ferdinand Gottschalk : The Schweisch-Polish war in Prussia from 1626-1629 . In: Prussian provincial sheets . Volume 26, Königsberg 1841, pp. 129-184, in particular pp. 155 ff.
  3. Heinrich Ludwig Elditt : The Amber shelf in Prussia . In: New Prussian Provincial Papers . Fourth episode. Volume 6, Königsberg 1869, pp. 422–462, in particular pp. 435 ff.
  4. a b c Leopold Krug : The Prussian Monarchy; presented topographically, statistically and economically. According to official sources . Part I: Province of Prussia . Berlin 1833, p. 134, paragraph 7.
  5. Alexander August Mützell and Leopold Krug : New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state . Volume 3: Kr – O , Halle 1822, p. 120, item 2595.
  6. Adolf Schlott: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Königsberg according to official sources . Hartung, Königsberg 1861, p. 70, Zifer 190 and 191.