Sińce

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Sińce
Sińce does not have a coat of arms
Sińce (Poland)
Sińce
Sińce
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Białogard
Gmina : Białogard
Geographic location : 53 ° 57 '  N , 15 ° 54'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 56 '36 "  N , 15 ° 54' 5"  E
Residents : 110
Telephone code : (+48) 94
License plate : ZBI
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Sińce (German Schinz ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural municipality Białogard ( Belgard ) in the powiat Białogardzki .

Geographical location

Sińce is eight kilometers southwest of Białogard and can be reached on a side road via Standemin . The area is tranquil and hilly and is crossed by the Topiel ( Nonnenbach ) river , which used to drive a mill here.

history

The estate and farming village of Schinz was an old Podewil fief. In 1730 the estate was sold to Franz Hever, he was followed by numerous changing owners, including a line from Dassel , most recently Walter Weske until 1945. When the estate bought the three existing farms, Schinz became a pure estate village in 1867. At that time 178 people lived in 14 houses with eight farm buildings.

In Schinz, mainly cattle breeding was practiced, with the breeding of Trakehner stallions being particularly successful.

In 1928 the community of Klein Reichow was integrated into the manor district and merged to form the rural community of Schinz. In 1939 the place had 326 inhabitants and 74 households. Schinz (with Klein Reichow) was in the district of Belgard (Persante) until 1945 and belonged to the district and registry office district Standemin in the district court district of Belgard. The last German incumbents were: Chief Minister Walter Weske and registrar Max Krebs. The police force in the person of Oberlandjäger Karl Bark from Podewils ensured peace and order .

When the Red Army marched into Schinz on March 4, 1945 , the Soviet soldiers broke into the distillery and looted it. Landowner Walter Weske found a violent death in his distillery. Between autumn 1945 and September 1947, the local population was removed from the site sold . Schinz came into Polish hands and today, as Sińce, belongs to the rural community of Białogard.

church

Ecclesiastically, Schinz belonged to the parish Standemin in the parish of the same name . Thus the place was in the parish of Belgard in the ecclesiastical province of Pomerania in the Protestant church of the Old Prussian Union . The church patronage was last exercised by Walter Weske.

Today Sińce belongs to the parish of Koszalin ( Köslin ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Polish Evangelical-Augsburg Church .

There was already a school in Schinz before 1867.

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.

Individual evidence

  1. Julius Theodor Bagmihl : Pommersches Wappenbuch , Volume 3, 1847, p. 155