Gołogóra, West Pomeranian Voivodeship

Gołogóra ( German Breiteberg, Schlawe / Pomerania ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the urban and rural community Polanów ( Pollnow ) in the district of Koszalin ( Koszalin ).

Geographical location

Gołogóra located 16 kilometers south of Polanów and 14 kilometers north of Bobolice ( Bublitz ) and is accessible via a spur road near Drzewiany ( Drawehn ) of the voivodeship DW 205 branches off to the east. Between 1920 and 1945 the town was the terminus of the narrow gauge railway Schlawe - Pollnow - Sydow Schlawer the paths that connected by tunnel support the site to its rail network.

Neighboring towns of Gołogóra are: Drzewiany ( Drawehn ) to the west, Żydowo ( Sydow ) in the north, Bobięcino ( Papenzin ) in the east and Sępólno Wielkie ( United Karzenburg ) in the south. The eastern boundary of the municipality is now the city's dividing line between the two provinces West Pomerania and Pomerania.

History

By 1945 Breiteberg was (also Brede mountain ) the southernmost and highest (200 meters) village of the district Schlawe in Pomerania and came to the county borders of the counties of Pomerania and Rummelsburg. The towns of Arnsberg (now Polish: Gosław ) Johannishof (popularly owls Kathen, today Dalimierz ) and Small cottage ( Zarczyce ) belonged to the community, which - as demonstrated by prehistoric finds - was on very old building ground. The place was one of the villages that the Swenzone Peter Pollnow of the Cistercian monastery had given Pelplin in West Prussia on 30 April 1321. This occurred this donation to the monastery from Buckow at Rügenwalde.

After the Reformation Breiteberg was a fief of the family of Woedtke. In 1852 the estate was sold to George A State, only the Good B remained with the family of Woedtke. While the estate was settled around 1904 A, the estate was sold to George B 1919 Young and 1930 partially settled. A major fire had a devastating effect, only a Resthof goes into the possession of a family Ott.

1818 lived in Breiteberg 177 inhabitants, whose number rose to 244 in 1905 and finally in 1939 was 333. In Breiteberg was before 1945 a two-class primary school teacher with two apartments.

By 1945 Breiteberg was assigned to the office district and the civil registry district Sydow, at the same time the district court area Pollnow. The village was i Pom district Schlawe. in the district of the Prussian province of Pomerania Pomerania.

On February 28, the occupied Soviet armored troops during their advance from Karzenburg about Drawehn by Sydow the place. Already in the summer of 1945, Poland took over the farms, and the German population was expelled. Width mountain was named Gołogóra and was integrated into the Province Koszalin. Nowadays it hosts 120 people and the village since the last administrative reform part of the powiat Koszaliński in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship.

Church

Breiteberg had no church of its own until 1945. The village with a predominantly Protestant population was (1940 with filial community Gutzmin total of 2135 members of the congregation ) assigned to the parish Sydow in the same parish church in the Church of the Old Prussian circle Bublitz Union. Last German clergyman was Rev. Peter Bultmann.

Today, the predominantly Catholic population of the parish Gołogóra Żydowo that counts a total of 2295 members of the congregation with the Branch communities Chocimino and Drzewiany heard. It belongs to the deanery in the Diocese of Koszalin - Kolobrzeg Polanów of the Catholic Church in Poland. In Gołogóra today there is a chapel dedicated to the Divine Mercy ( Mercy Bożego ).

The Protestant inhabitants of Gołogóra be supervised by parish in the Diocese of Koszalin - Pomerania Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

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