Sołdany (Biała Piska)

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Sołdany
(Submerged Place)
Sołdany does not have a coat of arms
Sołdany (Lost Place) (Poland)
Sołdany (Submerged Place)
Sołdany
(Submerged Place)
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Warmia-Masuria
Powiat : Pisz
Gmina : Biała Piska
Geographic location : 53 ° 31 '  N , 22 ° 1'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 30 '43 "  N , 22 ° 1' 27"  E
Residents : 0



Sołdany ( German  Soldahnen ) was a small East Prussian village in what is now the Warmia-Masurian Voivodeship in Poland . Its local office is in the area of ​​today's Gmina Biała Piska ( town and country municipality Bialla , 1938 to 1945 Gehlenburg ) in the Powiat Piski ( Johannisburg district ).

Geographical location

The barely recognizable Ortsstelle of Sołdany located in the southern eastern part of the Warmia and Mazury, about 20 kilometers southeast of the county seat Pisz ( German  Johannesburg ) and 750 meters northeast of the border between the provinces of Warmia-Mazury and Podlasie . Until the 1950s, a land route led from Jakuby (Jakubben) to Kosaki (Kossaken , 1938 to 1945 Wächtershausen) through the Sołdany, which no longer exists today.

history

The after 1540 Scholdahnen and until 1945 Sold ancestors called small village was in 1478 by the Teutonic Order as Freigut 13 hooves founded. It consisted of several large and small courtyards.

In 1874 Soldahnen was incorporated into the newly established Morgen district.

Soldahnen had 116 inhabitants in 1910. In 1933 there were 91, and in 1939 the number was 92.

In war-induced Sold ancestors came in 1945 with the whole southern East Prussia to Poland and received the Polish form of the name "Sołdany". As early as the late 1940s, however, its track is lost and is now considered a desert without any recognizable remains of a place.

Religions

Until 1945 Soldahnen was parish in the Protestant Church of Kumilsko (Polish: Kumielsk ) in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union and in the Roman Catholic Church of Johannisburg (Polish: Pisz ) in the Diocese of Warmia .

school

Soldahnen became a school location in 1897.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Dietrich Lange, Geographical Register of Places East Prussia (2005): Soldahnen
  2. a b c Soldahnen in family research Sczuka
  3. Rolf Jehke, Morgen District
  4. ^ Uli Schubert, community directory, district Johannisburg
  5. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District Johannisburg (Polish Pisz). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  6. ^ Walther Hubatsch , History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 3 Documents , Göttingen 1968, p. 491