Warblewo (Slupsk)

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Warblewo (German Warbelow ) is a village in the powiat Słupski of the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship .

Geographical location

Warblewo is located in Western Pomerania , about 11 kilometers southeast of Słupsk ( Stolp ) and 95 kilometers west of the regional metropolis of Gdansk .

history

The village Warbelow belonged to the end of World War II to the county Stolp , administrative region of Pomerania , in the province of Pomerania .

In a document from 1478 Warbelow is mentioned under the name Verbelow . Warbelow was an old fiefdom of the Massow family . In 1619 the manor was sold to Georg von Nettelhorst from Courland for twelve years . After changing owners several times, Warbelow went to the Count of Reichenbach . In 1762 it was sold to the inspector Johann Schröder, but the royal court did not approve the purchase contract. Other owners were Kaspar Friedrich von Massow and Johann Benjamin Planitzer. In 1777 the estate was allodified .

Around the year 1784 there was a farm in Warbelow, a water mill, four farmers, three cottagers , a smithy, a schoolmaster, and the Neu Warbelow colony on the field of the village , which consisted of a farm and three farms, and a total of 22 households. After August Martin von Schon had married the heiress Wilhelmine von Planitzer, the estate was owned by the Schon family , who still owned it in 1845. Then it was sold to Lieutenant Meier by the Blücher Hussars , and in 1852 the famous ornithologist Eugen Ferdinand von Homeyer bought it for 70,000 thalers . The founder of scientific ornithology in Pomerania set up an ornithology museum on site. After the death of his wife, he sold the estate in 1873 to August Neitzke, whose family then owned the estate until 1945. The last owner before 1945 was Erich Neitzke, who inherited the estate in 1929.

Towards the end of the Second World War, Warbelow was occupied by the Red Army on March 9, 1945 . On April 7, 1945, Russians took all the younger men, women and girls from Warbelow with them and brought them to Stolp and locked them up in the Raphael-Wolff-Stift . From there they were deported to Russia. Warbelow was placed under Polish administration together with the whole of Western Pomerania. The place was renamed Warblewo . Gradually, the German residents were expelled and replaced by immigrating Poles . In 2008 Warblewo had 267 residents.

Personalities associated with the place

literature

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