Sąborze

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Sąborze
Sąborze does not have a coat of arms
Sąborze (Poland)
Sąborze
Sąborze
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Pomerania
Powiat : Slupsk
Gmina : Damnica
Geographic location : 54 ° 28 '  N , 17 ° 11'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 28 '0 "  N , 17 ° 10' 47"  E
Residents : 186
Telephone code : (+48) 59
License plate : GSL
Economy and Transport
Street : DK6 : Szczecin - SlupskGdansk
Rail route : Line 202: Stargard Szczeciński - Gdansk
Railway station: Damnica
Next international airport : Danzig



Sąborze (German Ludwigslust ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship . It belongs to the rural community Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) in the Powiat Słupski ( Stolp district ).

Geographical location and transport links

Sąborze is located in Western Pomerania , about twelve kilometers east of the district town of Słupsk ( Stolp ) in an area defined by wide arable land. On the northern edge of the village runs the Polish state road 6 (former German Reichsstraße 2 , now also Europastraße 28 ), and it is eight kilometers to the next train station Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) on the railway line from Stargard Szczeciński to Danzig .

Place name

The German naming is linked to the first name of an unknown Ludwig , the Polish form of the name probably refers to the ducal name Sambor or Sąbor .

history

Ludwigslust emerged from the municipality of Mahnwitz (today in Polish: Mianowice) at the turn of the 19th to the 20th century , to which it previously belonged as a Vorwerk and then as a district. The then 299 hectare estate was settled.

In 1895 Ludwigslust had 16 inhabitants. In 1925 there were 27 residential buildings in Ludwigslust. In 1939, 172 inhabitants were registered, who were spread over 42 households.

Until 1945 Ludwigslust was a municipality in the district of Stolp in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania . The community area was 352 hectares, and Ludwigslust was the only place of residence of the community. In 1939 there were 23 farms here. The community was incorporated into the administrative and civil registry district Mahnwitz, the gendarmerie district Hebrondamnitz (Damnica) and the district court area Stolp . The last mayor was Max Papenfuß .

When the Red Army came into the village with tanks on March 8, 1945, before the end of World War II , only a few residents tried to flee. The Soviet troops did not encounter any military resistance . At that time there were numerous refugees in the village, including many from East Prussia , especially from the Heiligenbeil district and the Prussian Holland district . After the Soviets had set up a kolkhoz in Mahnwitz on March 20, the Ludwigslust population had to work there. The first Poles came to the village at the end of April, and on May 13, 1945, Polish militia took control. By June the Poles had taken over all the farms. When a typhus epidemic broke out, there were numerous victims in the village. In autumn 1946 the Poles drove out the first villagers, and in 1947 the rest of the villagers were deported, except for one villager who worked in the mill for the Soviets. When the Soviets gave up the mill in the spring of 1948, this last native was also expelled. Later 53 villagers displaced from Ludwigslust were identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 35 in the GDR . Ludwigslust was renamed Sąborze by the Poles .

The village is now part of the Gmina Damnica in the powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975-1998 Slupsk Voivodeship ). The place is the seat of a Schulzenamt , to which the village Paprzyce (Papritzfelde) is affiliated. Not quite 200 people live in Sąborze today.

church

Before 1945 all the villagers were of Protestant denomination. Ludwigslust belonged to the parish of Sageritz (today Polish: Zagórzyca) in the church district of Stolp-Altstadt in the eastern district of the church province of Pomerania in the church of the Old Prussian Union .

Since 1945 the population of Sąborze has been almost entirely of the Catholic denomination. Zagórzyca ( Sageritz ) is again the parish seat, but the parish is now subordinate to the deanery Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland . Protestant church members living here now belong to the Kreuzkirche parish in Słupsk ( Stolp ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

school

In the single-stage elementary school in Ludwigslust in 1932, a teacher taught 59 school children.

literature

  • Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania. Evidence of his German past . Lübeck 1989, pp. 706–708. (Description of location Ludwigslust ; PDF )
  • Hans Glaeser-Swantow: The Evangelical Pomerania . Part 2, Stettin 1940.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania. Evidence of his German past . Lübeck 1989, pp. 707–708 ( description of location Ludwigslust ; PDF)