Tatynia

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Tatynia
Tatynia does not have a coat of arms
Tatynia (Poland)
Tatynia
Tatynia
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : West Pomerania
Powiat : Policy
Gmina : Policy
Geographic location : 53 ° 34 '  N , 14 ° 31'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 34 '7 "  N , 14 ° 30' 33"  E
Height : 5 m npm
Residents : 314 (2013)
Postal code : 72-015
Telephone code : (+48) 91
License plate : ZPL
Economy and Transport
Next international airport : Szczecin-Goleniów



Tatynia (German Hagen ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship . It forms a Schulzenamt in the Gmina Police ( city ​​and rural community of Pölitz ) in the Powiat Policki ( Pölitzer district ).

Site (photo from 2009)
Half-timbered church from 1772 (photo from 2009)

Geographical location

The place is located in eastern Western Pomerania , about 3 km southwest of the village Jasienica ( Jasenitz ), 4 km northwest of the town of Police ( Pölitz ) and 18 km north of Stettin ( Szczecin ). Through the village flows from west to east of the river Gunica ( Aalbach ).

history

The village was founded in the 13th century by a knight named Gobelo Luchte and was initially called Gobelenhagen . In 1276 Gobelo Luchte made the village available to an Augustinian canon monastery founded in Ueckermünde in 1260 , which moved its seat to here. But as early as 1309 the monastery was moved to the village of Tatin, further north near Ziegenort , which the canons had acquired and renamed Neu-Gobelenhagen. The previous Gobelenhagen then bore the name Alt-Gobelenhagen .

Later, probably around 1329, the monastery was moved to Jasenitz and Neu-Gobelenhagen was closed. The previous old Gobelenhagen was called Hagen.

In 1739 the Hagen Vorwerk was laid out near the village of Hagen .

In place of the former monastery church, a half-timbered church was built in 1772.

The rural community of Hagen belonged to the Randow district in the Prussian province of Pomerania until 1939 . The residential area Rönnewerder also belonged to the community . With the dissolution of the Randow district, Hagen came to the Ueckermünde district in 1939 .

After the end of the Second World War , Hagen was renamed together with the so-called Stettiner Zipfel , the eastern part of Western Pomerania, part of Poland and Tatynia , on the western bank of the Oder .

Development of the population

  • 1925: 693 inhabitants
  • 1933: 620 inhabitants
  • 1939: 655 inhabitants

literature

Web links

Commons : Tatynia (powiat policki)  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Footnotes

  1. Główny Urząd Statystyczny, online query as Excel file: Portret miejscowości statystycznych w gminie Police (powiat policki, województwo zachodniopomorskie) w 2013 r. Update of the 2011 census (Polish, accessed on 21.01.2016)
  2. ^ Municipality of Hagen in the Pomeranian information system.
  3. ^ A b c Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Landkreis Randow. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).