Warblino

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Warblino (German Warbelin ) is a village in the municipality of Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp district ) of the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship .

Geographical location

Warblino is located in Western Pomerania , about 28 kilometers northeast of the city of Słupsk ( Stolp ) and four kilometers southeast of the church village Główczyce ( Glowitz ).

history

In old documents the former manor village is called Varbelyn in 1461 and Verbelin in 1509 . Like Zipkow , Dochow and Großendorf, Warbelin used to belong to the fiefdom of the Stojentin family . Around 1700 the Podewils family came into the possession of Warbelin. At that time, the Warbelin estate was part of the extensive Rumbske goods conglomerate. Due to the division comparison of 1731, the later Minister of the Budget of Frederick the Great , Otto Christoph von Podewils (1719–1781), became the owner of Zipkow, Großendorf and Warbelin. Around 1784 there was a farm in Warbelin, five farmers, two cottagers , a grain and cutting mill and a total of 14 households. The owner of the estate at this time was Friedrich Heinrich Graf von Podewils (1746–1804). At that time Kashubian was still predominantly spoken in the village . In 1797 a member of the Mitzlaff family was sitting on Warbelin. Subsequently, the estate belonged to a member of the Blankensee family . Before 1823 the estate had 101 inhabitants and nine people lived near the mill. Around 1843 the Warbelin and Zipkow estates were owned by a woman from Blankensee. In 1854 the estate was sold to a Mr. Bochert for 51,000 thalers . Before 1867, the Warbeliner mill was owned by the master miller Ferdinand Carl Raddatz. In 1938 Kurt Lüpke was the owner of the Warbelin estate.

In 1925 there were 30 residential buildings in Warbelin. In 1939 there were 272 inhabitants in Warbelin, who were spread over 55 households.

Before 1945 Warbelin belonged to the District Großendorf the county Stolp in Administrative district Köslin of Pomerania . The parish area was 543 hectares. Warbelin village was the only place of residence in Warbelin parish. The estate last had a size of 203 hectares, of which 140 hectares were arable land. In addition to the estate, there were 32 other farms in the municipality of Warbelin. There was an inn in the village.

Towards the end of the Second World War , Warbelin was occupied by the Red Army on March 9, 1945 without a fight . At that time there were refugee groups from East Prussia and West Prussia in the village . There have been numerous attacks on civilians by Soviet troops. A villager was shot dead by a Russian one day after the invasion and many men were abducted. Former Polish prisoners of war set up a Polish administrative office in the village as early as April 1945. The Poles occupied the courtyards, land and apartments. The Polish militia subsequently carried out the eviction of the villagers. On September 4, 68 people were deported westwards. Gradually the entire village population was driven out by the Poles. Warbelin was renamed Warblino .

Later, 106 villagers displaced from Warbelin in the Federal Republic of Germany and 87 in the GDR were identified.

Today about 170 inhabitants live in the village of Warblino.

school

Before 1945 Warbelin had its own elementary school. In 1932 this school was single-stage; a single teacher was teaching 61 school children here at the time.

church

The villagers present before 1945 were Protestant . Warbelin belonged to the parish of Glowitz and thus to the parish of Stolp-Altstadt.

traffic

The voivodship road 213 Słupsk - Krokowa ( Stolp - Krockow ) runs about three kilometers north of the village and leads over eastern Pomerania to West Prussia .

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, p. 1014, no. 152 and p. 1022-1023, no. 169
  2. ^ AA Mützell: New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state . Volume 5, Halle 1823, p. 102, No. 611 and No. 612 .
  3. ^ Julius Theodor Bagmihl : Pommersches Wappenbuch . Volume 1, Stettin 1843, p. 128 .
  4. Königlich-Prussischer Staatsanzeiger , No. 179 of July 31, 1867, p. 3004, left column .
  5. ^ The Warbelin community in the former Stolp district (Gunthard Stübs and Pommersche Forschungsgemeinschaft, 2011).
  6. ^ A b Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania . Lübeck 1989, p. 1008 ( Online; PDF )