Radacz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Radacz (German Raddatz ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Borne Sulinowo (urban and rural community Groß Born) in the Powiat Szczecinecki (Neustettiner Kreis) .

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 130 kilometers east of Stettin and about 10 kilometers west of Szczecinek (Neustettin) . Jezioro Radacz (Raddatzsee) lies east of the village .

history

The village was first mentioned in 1403. It was a fief of the noble von Kleist family .

Raddatz is entered on the Lubin map from 1618 .

In Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann's detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania (1784), Raddatz is listed among the noble residences of the Neu-Stettin district. In Raddatz time there was a Vorwerk , so the farm estate, nine Vollbauer points, six half Bauer places a pitcher and a forge. The Vorwerke Bramstädt , Neuendorf , Vor-Pankow and Hinter-Pankow, as well as the Bramstädtsche Mühle , a watermill , also belonged to Raddatz . There were a total of 27 households (“fire places”).

Before 1945 Raddatz formed a rural community in the Neustettin district . The residential areas Bramstädt , Bramstädter Mühle , Grünewiese and Neuendorf also belonged to the community . In 1939 there were 425 inhabitants in the municipality.

After the Second World War , Raddatz came to Poland, as did all of Western Pomerania. The place name was Polonized to Radacz .

Attractions

  • Church , a half-timbered building from 1744. Here there was a pulpit since 1747, which was made from a float of the Polish King John III. Sobieski , which a member of the Kleist family had acquired.

Personalities: sons and daughters of the place

References

literature

Footnotes

  1. Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Königl. Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania . Part II, Volume 2, Stettin 1784, pp. 767–768, No. 53. ( Online )
  2. ^ Entry in the private information system Pomerania .
  3. ^ Franz Kugler : Pomeranian Art History (= Baltic Studies , Volume 8, 1st Issue). Stettin 1840, pp. 255-256.

Coordinates: 53 ° 42 '  N , 16 ° 32'  E