Starlings Ślepce

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stare Ślepce (German Alt Schleps or Schleps ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It belongs to the Gmina Sławoborze (rural community Stolzenberg) in the powiat Świdwiński (Schivelbeiner Kreis) .

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 95 km northeast of Stettin and about 29 km south of Kołobrzeg (Kolberg) .

It has the shape of a street village . The northern part forms the Nowe Ślepce (New Schleps) residential area, the southern part the Krzesimowo (Emmyhütte) residential area . Stare Ślepce forms the central part.

Voivodeship Road 162 runs just east of the village in a north-south direction, parallel to Dorfstrasse . The closest neighboring towns are in the north on Słowenkowo (Neugasthof) , in the east Lepino (Leppin) , in the south on Sławoborze (Stolzenberg) and in the west Poradz (Petersfelde) with the Kalina (Meierei) and Drzeń (Dryhn) residential areas . To the north-east is the small lake Poratz , around which haunted stories entwined.

history

The place was first named in 1322 as "Schlebitz". "Slepte" is entered on the Great Lubin map of the Duchy of Pomerania from 1618. The place name later developed into "Schlepsdorf" and "Schleps".

In the 18th century Schleps did not appear as a village, but as an outbuilding of the noble von Blankenburg family . It belonged to the manor in Leppin . In Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann's description of the Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania (1784), Schleps is listed as the Vorwerk of the manor in Rogzow . In the 18th century, Rogzow and the neighboring Leppin were in the same hand for a long time.

Presumably around 1750, about 1 km north of the Schleps Vorwerk, a new Vorwerk was laid out by Henning Anselm von Blankenburg, owner of the Leppin manor and prelate of the Camminer cathedral monastery. The new Vorwerk was initially named "Blankenburgsfelde" or "Blankenfelde" after the landowner family, and later " New Schleps ", based on the older Vorwerk (old) Schleps.

After 1856, about 1 km south of Alt Schleps, the landowner von Leppin built a glassworks that was named Emmyhütte . However, the operation of the glassworks was not economical, especially since it was dependent on expensive British imported coal.

In 1876 three Schivelbeiner merchants named Jakobus, Mannheim and Müller acquired Alt Schleps, Neu Schleps and Emmyhütte. These possessions were thus separated from the Leppin estate. In Emmyhütte, they tore down the glassworks and instead built 20 leaseholds. They built a manor house in Alt Schleps.

In 1902, again after a change of ownership, the new owners of Alt Schleps and Neu Schleps built further leasehold farms, which connected to the existing buildings of Emmyhütte to the north. In this way, a cohesive development in the form of a street village was created. The farm in Alt Schleps was managed as a so-called residual property with 119 hectares of land (as of 1939).

Around 1890 the Schleps manor district was formed, which included Alt Schleps, Neu Schleps and Emmyhütte. After 1902, the rural community of Schleps took its place . The rural community Schleps belonged to the Kolberg-Körlin district of the Prussian province of Pomerania .

In 1945, Alt Schleps, like all of Western Pomerania, came to Poland. The population was driven out . The place name was Polonized as "Stare Ślepce".

Development of the population

  • 1816: 055
  • 1864: 101
  • 1885: 084
  • 1895: 101, Schleps manor district
  • 1905: 233, rural community Schleps
  • 1919: 267, rural community Schleps
  • 1939: 256, rural community Schleps

See also

literature

  • Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , pp. 595-599.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen . Part III, Volume 1. Anklam 1867, p. 369 ( online ).
  2. Schleps municipality in the Pomeranian information system.
  3. a b c d e f g Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , p. 596.

Coordinates: 53 ° 55 '  N , 15 ° 41'  E