Sucha Huta

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Sucha Huta
Sucha Huta does not have a coat of arms
Sucha Huta (Poland)
Sucha Huta
Sucha Huta
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Pomerania
Powiat : Gdański
Gmina : Przywidz
Geographic location : 54 ° 9 '  N , 18 ° 21'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 8 '47 "  N , 18 ° 20' 46"  E
Residents : 229 (March 31, 2011)
Telephone code : (+48) 58
License plate : GDA
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Gdansk Airport
administration
Mayor : Stanisława Holza
Address: Sucha Huta 8
83-041 Mierzeszyn



Sucha Huta [ ˈsuxa ˈxuta ] ( Kashubian Sëchô Hëta , German drying hut ) is a village in the municipality of Przywidz ( Mariensee ), Powiat Gdański in Poland . It is located about 35 km southwest of Gdansk on Voivodeship Road No. 226. This is also where the Schönecker Weg, a green hiking trail (named after the town of Schöneck (in Polish: Skarszewy , Kashubian Skarszewë or Skarszewò )) runs.

history

The area belonged to the Polish-Lithuanian Prussian Royal Share since 1466 . Aschenbrenner , charcoal burner and glassmaker lived in the surrounding forests . In the 17th century Sucha Huta suffered from the Polish-Swedish War (1629) and the Second Northern War (1655).

In 1772 Sucha Huta came to the Kingdom of Prussia in the course of the First Partition of Poland , where it became part of the new Stargard district . 1818 dry hut belonged then to the new county Berent in the administrative district of Gdansk ( province of West Prussia ). In 1871, Trockenhütte came to Germany as part of Prussia .

One and a half years after the First World War , in January 1920 joined dry hut under the provisions of the Versailles Treaty to Danziger Höhe and with that from 1920 to 1939 to mandate Gdansk League of Nations. In 1939, in an act not recognized by international law , the Third Reich annexed the mandate area and incorporated it into the newly established occupation authority Danzig-West Prussia , to which Trockenhütte belonged as part of the new district of Danzig until the end of the Second World War .

Towards the end of the Second World War, the region was occupied by the Red Army in the spring of 1945 . In the summer of 1945, in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement , the Soviet occupying power handed over the village together with the entire area of ​​the Free City, all of Western Pomerania and southern East Prussia to Polish administration. The Polish place name Sucha Huta was introduced for dryers . As far as the inhabitants of German ethnicity had not fled, most of them were subsequently expelled from Sucha Huta .

In the years 1975-1998 the place was administratively part of the Gdansk Voivodeship .

Sons and daughters of the place

Individual evidence

  1. ^ CIS 2011: Ludność w miejscowościach statystycznych według ekonomicznych grup wieku (Polish), March 31, 2011, accessed on June 27, 2017