Tadzino

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Tadzino
Tadzino does not have a coat of arms
Tadzino (Poland)
Tadzino
Tadzino
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Pomerania
Powiat : Wejherowo
Gmina : Gniewino
Geographic location : 54 ° 41 '  N , 18 ° 1'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 40 '58 "  N , 18 ° 1' 8"  E
Residents : 270
Telephone code : (+48) 58
License plate : GWE
Economy and Transport
Street : Bolszewo / DK 6 - Żelazna / ext. 213
Rail route : no rail connection
Next international airport : Danzig



Tadzino ( German Tadden , also Thadden , Kashubian Tadzëno ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the rural community Gniewino ( Gnewin ) in the powiat Wejherowski ( Neustadt district in West Prussia ).

Geographical location

The village in Kashubia is located on the border between Western Pomerania and the historical region of West Prussia , about 17 kilometers northwest of today's district town Wejherowo ( Neustadt in West Prussia ) and 33 kilometers northeast of the former district town of Lauenburg in Pomerania (now in Polish: Lębork).

A side road leads from Bolszewo ( Bohlschau ) on the Polish state road 6 (former German Reichsstraße 2 , today also European route 28 ) Stettin - Danzig through the village and leads to Żelazna ( Hohenwaldheim ) on the voivodship road 213 Słupsk ( Stolp ) - Celbowo ( Celbau ) .

Between 1902 and 1992 there was a connection via the Lisewo Kaszubeskie ( Lissow ) station to the Neustadt line in West Prussia - Chottschow - Garzigar of the Stolper Bahnen . This route is no longer in operation.

history

Tadden (Thadden) is the ancestral home of the von Thadden family of the same name , who were resident in the area of ​​the Teutonic Order of the Dukes of Pomerellen-Danzig in East Pomerania.

The former Gutsdorf (historical names also: Thatt , Dott ) belonged to the Lauenburg district in Pomerania in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania until 1945 . It was integrated with the communities Gnewin (now Polish: Gniewino) and Mersin (Mierzyno) and the estate varieties Bychow (Bychowo), Enzow (Jęczewo), Gnewinke (Gniewinko), Klein Perlin (Perlinko) and Lissow (Lisewo) in the Gnewin district . District court district was Lauenburg (Lębork). The district of Platschow (Płaczewo) belonged to the municipality of Tadden . A total of 67 inhabitants lived in the municipality in 1905, 364 in 1933 and 365 in 1939.

Towards the end of the Second World War , the Red Army occupied the region in the spring of 1945 . Soon afterwards, Tadden was placed under Polish administration along with the whole of Western Pomerania and West Prussia . Subsequently, Polish civilians began to immigrate to Tadden. The village was given the Polish name Tadzino . In the period that followed the Alteinwohner were from Tadden sold .

The village became part of Gmina Gniewino in the powiat Wejherowski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975 to 1998 Gdansk Voivodeship ). The place is the seat of a Schulzenamt , in which Tadzino and Płaczewo ( Platschow ) are integrated. Today 270 inhabitants are registered here.

church

There was and is no place of worship in Tadden or Tadzino. Before 1945 the village was parish with 12 other places in the Protestant parish Gnewin (today Polish: Gniewino) in the parish of Lauenburg in Pomerania of the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . In 1940 the parish had 2061 parishioners. The last German clergyman was Pastor Johannes Scheel . The Catholic church members were incorporated into the parish Gohra (Zamostne) before 1945 .

Today the population of Tadzino is almost without exception Catholic. The village now belongs to the Gniewino ( Gnewin ) parish in the Gniewino deanery in the Pelplin diocese of the Catholic Church in Poland . Evangelical church members are assigned to the parish of the Kreuzkirchengemeinde in Słupsk ( Stolp ) in the diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland , whose subsidiary church is in Lębork ( Lauenburg in Pomerania ).

literature

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