Przytok (Sianów)

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Przytok (German name: Zwölfhufen ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It belongs to the urban and rural community Sianów ( Zanow ) in the Koszalin ( Köslin ) district.

Geographical location

The former estate village Przytok is located in the valley of the Polnica ( Pollnitz ) on the connecting road from Sianów on the national road 6 ( European route 28 ) Stettin - Danzig to Polanów ( Pollnow ) on the voivodship road 205 Bobolice ( Bublitz ) - Sławno ( Schlawe ). The district town of Koszalin is 18 kilometers away, and the Skibno ( Schübben-Zanow ) train station on the Stargard railway in Pomerania - Gdansk is 12 kilometers away.

Place name

The name Przytok as a place name occurs three times in Poland.

history

Around 1780 the "ritterfreye Vorwerk " had 1546 acres , 167 rods and 4 carp ponds on the border with the municipality of Szczeglino ( Steglin ). Around 42 farmers and cottagers from Panknin (now in Polish: Pękanino), Damerow (Dąbrowa), Karnkewitz (Karnieszewice) and Zitzmin (Sieciemin) were at that time subject to manual and tension service at Gut Zwölfhufen . The name of the landowner in 1908 was Redes .

Twelvehufen was a village in the Karnkewitz community until 1945 and was then in the Schlawe i district. Pom. in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania .

After 1945 the manor district of Zwölfhufen became part of Poland and, under the name Przytok , part of the Gmina Sianów in the Powiat Koszaliński of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship (until 1998: Köslin Voivodeship ).

church

Until 1945, twelve hooves belonged to the parish of Zitzmin (Polish: Sieciemin), which was integrated into the parish of Damerow (Dąbrowa). The parish was in the parish of Rügenwalde in the church province of Pomerania of the Protestant Church of the Old Prussian Union .

Today the population of Przytok is predominantly Catholic .

school

The children from Zwölfhufen attended school in Karnkewitz until 1945 .

literature

  • Manfred Vollack (Ed.): The Schlawe district. A Pomeranian homeland book. 2 volumes, Husum 1989.