Sarbinowo (Dobiegniew)

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Sarbinowo
Sarbinowo does not have a coat of arms
Sarbinowo (Poland)
Sarbinowo
Sarbinowo
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Lebus
Powiat : Strzelecko-Drezdenecki
Gmina : Dobiegniew
Geographic location : 52 ° 56 '  N , 15 ° 52'  E Coordinates: 52 ° 55 '43 "  N , 15 ° 51' 47"  E
Height : 55 m npm
Residents :
Postal code : 66-520
Telephone code : (+48) 95
License plate : FSD
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Sarbinowo ( German Schüttenburg ) is a village in the Polish Lebus Voivodeship . It is affiliated to the municipality Dobiegniew (Woldenberg) in the powiat Strzelecko-Drezdenecki .

Geographical location

The place is located in Neumark at an altitude of about 55 meters above sea level, about ten kilometers southeast of the administrative center of the municipality in Dobiegniew , 24 kilometers east of the town of Strzelce Krajeńskie (Friedeberg) and 48 kilometers northeast of the town of Gorzów Wielkopolski (Landsberg an der Warta) .

history

The village of Schüttenburg was founded as a colony village near Friederichsdorf at the beginning of the 19th century. Around 1818 it consisted of twelve houses and had 88 inhabitants. In 1858 there were 29 houses and 256 residents here. The main sources of income for the colonists came from agriculture and forestry.

Until 1945 the village of Schüttenburg belonged to the Friedeberg Nm district. , from 1816 to 1938 in the Frankfurt administrative district of the Prussian province of Brandenburg , from October 1938 to 1945 in the Grenzmark Posen-West Prussia administrative district of the Pomerania province .

Towards the end of the Second World War , the region was occupied by the Red Army in the spring of 1945 . Soon afterwards Schüttenburg was placed under Polish administration. Immigration from Poland began. In the period that followed, the residents of Schüttenburg were expelled . The German village of Schüttenburg was renamed Sarbinowo .

Population numbers

  • 1818: 88
  • 1858: 265, including two Jews
  • 1925: 235, including a Catholic, no Jews
  • 1933: 236
  • 1939: 214

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ A b Johann Daniel Friedrich Rumpf and Heinrich Friedrich Rumpf: Complete topographical dictionary of the Prussian state . Volume 3, Berlin 1821, p. 71
  2. a b W. Riehl and J. Scheu (eds.): Berlin and the Mark Brandenburg with the Margraviate of Nieder-Lausitz in their history and in their present existence . Berlin 1861, p. 461.
  3. http://gemeinde.schuettenburg.kreis-friedeberg.de/
  4. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. friedeberg.html # ew39ischuttenb. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).