Strzyżyno

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Strzyżyno
Strzyżyno does not have a coat of arms
Strzyżyno (Poland)
Strzyżyno
Strzyżyno
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Pomerania
Powiat : Slupsk
Gmina : Damnica
Geographic location : 54 ° 29 ′  N , 17 ° 22 ′  E Coordinates: 54 ° 29 ′ 29 ″  N , 17 ° 22 ′ 16 ″  E
Residents : 280
Telephone code : (+48) 59
License plate : GSL
Economy and Transport
Street : Bobrowniki - Potęgowo
Rail route : Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk Railway
Station name:
Strzyżyno Słupskie
Next international airport : Danzig



Strzyżyno (German Stresow, district Stolp / Pomerania , Kashubian Strzëżëno ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural community Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) in the powiat Słupski (district Stolp ).

Geographical location and transport links

Strzyżyno is located in Western Pomerania , about 25 kilometers east of the district town of Słupsk ( Stolp ) on the right bank of the Lupow (Łupawa). A side street that connects Bobrowniki ( Bewersdorf ) with Potęgowo ( Pottangow ) leads through the village, which is connected to the neighboring town of Łebień ( Labehn ) via another street . Strzyżyno is a train station on the Stargard Szczeciński – Gdańsk railway , which is called Strzyżyno Sł (upskie) .

The Strzyżyno Słupskie train station

Place name

The German place name Stresow is a Pomeranian and provincial Saxon name that occurs several times . The Polish place name occurs only here.

history

Strzyżyno used to be a Vorwerk to Klein Gluschen (today Polish: Głuszynko) and like this one in 1639 a Ritzen fief and from 1688 a Grumbkow fief. In 1766, Klein Gluschen came into the possession of Major General Peter Christoph von Zitzewitz . Between 1803 and 1834 it was owned by the von Kösteritz family , after which it changed hands. Between 1930 and 1932 the estate was relocated and 32 jobs were created.

In 1910 Stresow had 184 inhabitants. Their number rose to 304 by 1933 and was 277 in 1939.

Before 1945 Stresow belonged to the four villages Kurweil , settlement Bewer Straße , settlement Labehner road and Stresow station for official and civil registry district Klein Gluschen (Głuszynko) in the district of Stolp in the administrative district of Koszalin in the Prussian province of Pomerania . Gendarmerie district was Pottangow (Potęgowo), district court area Stolp (Słupsk).

On March 9, 1945, Soviet infantry from the direction of Labehn (Łebień) penetrated Stresow and occupied the village and the train station. Typhus broke out on April 10, and many residents and refugees from East Prussia fell victim to the disease. In August 1945 Poles took possession of the place. The village population was deported . The German farming village Stresow became the Polish Strzyżyno, which today is part of the Gmina Damnica in the Powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975-1998 Stolp Voivodeship ) and today has 280 inhabitants.

church

The Stresow population was almost without exception Protestant denomination until 1945 . The village was one of 13 places that were parish in the parish of Dammen (now in Polish: Damno), which belonged to the church district of Stolp-Altstadt in the eastern district of the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . The last German clergyman was Pastor Magnus Erdmann .

Since 1945 the residents of Strzyżyno have been predominantly Catholic . The pastoral connection continues as before: the - now Catholic - parish Damno ( Dammen ) belongs to the deanery Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland . Protestant church members living here are assigned to the Główczyce branch church of the Kreuzkirche parish in Słupsk ( Stolp ) in the Pomeranian-Greater Poland diocese of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland .

school

In the primary school, which was opened in 1932, one teacher taught 38 school children. The last German teachers were Berthol Lange and Fritz Scheewe .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Königl. Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania . Part II, Volume 2, Stettin 1784, pp. 967-968, No. 53.