St. Peter and Paul (Jeże)
Church of St. Peter and Paul in Jeże (Kościół Świętych Apostołów Piotr i Pawła w Jeżach) Church of Gehsen |
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The once Protestant, now Catholic Church in Jeże (Gehsen) |
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Construction year: | 1865-1866 |
Inauguration: | December 18, 1866 |
Style elements : | Brick gothic |
Client: | Evangelical Church Community Gehsen ( Church Province East Prussia ) / Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union |
Location: | 53 ° 29 '12.5 " N , 21 ° 52' 35" E |
Location: |
Jeże Warmia-Masuria , Poland |
Purpose: | Roman-Catholic , until 1945 Evangelical-Lutheran parish church |
Parish: | No. 5b, 12-200 Jeże |
Diocese : | Ełk |
The Church of St. Peter and Paul in Jeże ( German Gehsen ) is a building from the middle of the 19th century. Until 1945 it was a Protestant church for the East Prussian parish Gehsen; Today it is the parish church of the Roman Catholic parish in Polish Jeże.
Geographical location
Jeże is located in the east-south of the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship on state road 63 . The location of the church is in the southern local area in the east of the main road from Pisz (Johannisburg) to Kolno .
Church building
At the church in Jeże is a brick building with a small western gable turrets and a semicircular eastern apse . It was inaugurated on December 18, 1866. It was not until five years later - on November 4, 1871 - that the organ was also ready for use. The church peal consists of two bells .
Until 1945 the church was in the service of the Protestant church. It was then taken over by the Catholic Church, initially as a branch church of the Church of St. John the Baptist in Pisz , and later as the parish church of the independent parish of Jeże.
Parish
Evangelical
Church history
In 1846 a Protestant parish was founded in Gehsen . Places that previously belonged to the church in Johannisburg and to the church in Kumilsko (1938–1945 Morgen , Polish Kumielsk ) were united to their parish . Until 1945 the parish was incorporated into the church district Johannisburg in the church province of East Prussia of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union . In 1925 it had 2,489 members. The state authorities were responsible for church patronage .
Flight and expulsion of the local population meant the end for the Protestant parish in Gehsen. Protestant residents living here today adhere to the parish in Pisz within the Masurian diocese of the Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland .
Parish locations (until 1945)
For parish Gehsen were next to the vicarage Gehsen 14 villages and towns:
Surname | Change name from 1938 to 1945 |
Polish name | Surname | Change name from 1938 to 1945 |
Polish name | |
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Bear quarry, forest | Niedźwiedzie Bagno | * Königsdorf until 1904 Piskorzewen |
Piskorzewo | |||
Dlottowen | Fischborn (East Pr.) | Dłutowo | * Königstal until 1905 Dziadowen |
Dziadowo | ||
Eichental, forest | Szast | * Lipniken | Lipniki | |||
Great Pasken | Mining Königstal | Paski Wielkie | Rakowken | Sernau | Rakówko, now: Turowo Duże |
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Big Wollisko | Heron nest | Wolisko Wielkie | * Turowen | Turau | Turowo | |
Henriettental, forest | Wondollek | Wondollen | Wądołek | |||
Little Wollisko | Little Egret Horst | Wolisko Małe | Wobble | Wróble |
Pastor (until 1945)
The pastors at the Gehsen church officiated as Protestant clergy from 1846 to 1945:
- Leopold Czypulowski, 1846–1858
- Johann D. Hermann Hassenstein,
1858–1865 - Heinrich Rudolf V. Hensel, 1865–1875
- Ernst Theodor Teschner, 1874–1878
- Karl Oskar Aug. Nikolaiski, 1878–1882
- Karl August Bogdan, 1884–1885
- Johann Hermann Bolz, 1886–1893
- Paul Hensel , 1893-1907
- Robert Griggo, 1901
- Otto Arthur Dignath, 1907–1912
- Ernst Stern, 1913–1922
- Johannes Carl Julius Zachau, 1922–1935
- Herbert Friedriszik, 1936–1939
- Horst Sturm, 1939–1942
- Hans Strasdas, 1941–1945
Church records
The church records of the Gehsen parish have been preserved and are being kept in the Evangelical Central Archive in Berlin-Kreuzberg :
- Burials 1846–1876.
Roman Catholic
Before 1945 there were very few Catholics in the Gehsen region. They were parish in the Roman Catholic parish church in Johannisburg in the deanery Masuria II (seat: Johannisburg) in the diocese of Warmia .
Many with the influx of Polish and mostly Catholic new citizens could in Jeże form their own Catholic community, first of all a filial community of the parish in Pisz was. In 1987 the Warmian bishop Edmund Piszcz established his own parish here , to which the branch church in Borki (Adlig Borken) belongs today. The parish Jeże is incorporated into the deanery of Pisz in the diocese of Ełk in the Roman Catholic Church in Poland .
References
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Walther Hubatsch : History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 2 Pictures of East Prussian Churches. Göttingen 1968, p. 119, fig. 545.
- ↑ a b Parafia Jeże in the Diocese of Ełk
- ^ A b Walther Hubatsch: History of the Protestant Church in East Prussia , Volume 3 documents. Göttingen 1968, p. 491.
- ↑ The * indicates a school location.
- ↑ Friedwald Moeller: Old Prussian Protestant Pastor's Book from the Reformation to the Expulsion in 1945. Hamburg 1968, p. 40.
- ↑ church records Gehsen the Evangelical Central Archives