Redło (Połczyn-Zdrój)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Redło
Redło does not have a coat of arms
Redło (Poland)
Redło
Redło
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Świdwin
Gmina : Połczyn-Zdrój
Geographic location : 53 ° 46 '  N , 15 ° 58'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 46 '0 "  N , 15 ° 58' 0"  E
Residents : 1100
Postal code : 78-325
Telephone code : (+48) 94
License plate : ZSD
Economy and Transport
Street : 152 Voivodeship Road : Połczyn-Zdrój - Świdwin - Płoty
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Redło ( German  Redel ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . Today it is part of the urban and rural community Połczyn-Zdrój (Bad Polzin) in the Powiat Świdwiński .

Geographical location

The small Lower Pomeranian village of Redło, which belonged to the Belgard (Persante) district before 1945 , is located on the main road no. 152, which connects Połczyn-Zdrój with the district town of Świdwin (Schivelbein) . The distance to Świdwin is eight kilometers, and to Połczyn-Zdrój, the seat of the municipal administration, it is four kilometers. The place had a train station on the Świdwin - Połczyn Zdrój railway line , which was closed in 2006. The Hagelbach flows through the village.

history

Redel manor around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection
Church in Redło
Redło Church

Redel was founded around 1450 by the knight family of the same name on an old settlement. A chapel is reported as early as the 16th century, but it probably fell victim to the Thirty Years' War . In 1652 the von Redels founded a new place of worship.

At the end of the 17th century, three owners are named in Redel: Jesko von Redel, Rüdiger von Kriesen and Otto Casimir von Glasenapp . In 1856 a manor is mentioned, the sole owner of which was Arthur von Manteuffel .

In 1928, the rural community Redel was formed from the previous municipality Redel and the dissolved manor district Groß Wardin ( Wardyń Dolny ).

In 1939 the village of Redel had 625 inhabitants in 168 households.

Redel was a separate district. The last head of office until 1945 was Emil Marquardt, last mayor Siegfried Weidt. The rural community belonged to the registry office Alt Schlage and the district court district Bad Polzin. After being captured by Russian troops on March 4, 1945 without a fight, Redel came to Poland as a result of the Second World War . In the memory of the then displaced resident population, March 17, 1945 remained as “Redel’s Bloody Sunday”: after the invasion, drunken Red Army soldiers accidentally blew themselves up with hand grenades Women were shot.

Today Redło (with Wardyń Dolny) is a district of Gmina Połczyn-Zdrój .

school

Redel had its own school building, which was partly used as a kindergarten during the last years of the war. The last German teachers are still known by their names Maybehr, Fritz Hundt and Paul Langbecker.

church

Parish

Redel was a separate parish and belonged with the parishes Alt Schlage (today: Sława ) and Zuchen ( Sucha ) to the parish of Ziezeneff ( Cieszeniewo ). There was the seat of the parish office, from which Pastor Paul Blank was the last German pastor to look after the parish before 1945.

At that time, 578 of a total of 2,663 parishioners belonged to the Redel branch parish. There was no church patronage. The parish belonged to the parish Belgard ( Białogard ) of the ecclesiastical province of Pomerania in the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union .

Today the place belongs to the parish Koszalin (Köslin) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg (i.e. Lutheran) Church in Poland .

Parish church

A church donated by the owners of Redel in 1652 had to be demolished in 1845 due to its dilapidation. In 1859 Redel received a new building made of hewn field stones with a turret, in 1922 a bell cage for two bells was added. On August 25, 1946, the since then Catholic Church was consecrated to St. John the Baptist and in 1974 its own parish Redło was founded.

Sons and daughters of the place

literature

  • Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee (ed.): The Belgard district. From the story of a Pomeranian home district. Belgard-Schivelbein home district committee, Celle 1989.
  • Hans Glaeser-Swantow: The Evangelical Pomerania. Part 2: Authorities, churches, pastors, clergy, institutions and associations, Stettin 1940.

Web links

Commons : Redło, powiat świdwiński  - collection of images, videos and audio files