Jamno (Koszalin)

Jamno ( German Jamund ) is a town in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland. It forms a part of the municipality of Koszalin ( Koszalin ).

  • 5.1 Literature
  • 5.2 footnotes

Geographical location

The place is located in Eastern Pomerania south of the Jamno ( Jamno lake ), a lake beach of the Baltic Sea. About 5 miles south of the capital is the center of Koszalin, about 6 kilometers southeast of Góra Chełmska ( Goll mountain).

History

The first mention of Jamund dates from the year 1278 when Hermann von Gleichen, Bishop of Pomerania, the village had about the newly founded Cistercian monastery in Koszalin. 1331 gave Bishop Friedrich von Eickstedt the village of the town of Pomerania; it became one of the city owned villages.

1713 were counted 24 smallholdings and eleven Kossätenstellen. 1889 half of the village was destroyed by fire. Two other fires, a First World War and after the one in 1932, also did great damage.

By 1945 Jamund was a " folkloristic retreat in which components and testimonies of older rural culture had received ".

Before 1945 Jamund formed a municipality in the district of the Prussian province of Pomerania Pomerania.

In 1945 Jamund how completely Pomerania to Poland. Residents were replaced by Polish immigrants.

Development of population figures

Church

The oldest parts of the church building date from the 14th century. The church building has been rebuilt many times later, as the nave was extended to the north in the 19th century.

In the sacristy there were a gilded monstrance and ciborium, which originated probably from the repealed during the Reformation, St. Mary's Chapel on the Gollen.

Personalities: sons and daughters of the town

  • Johann Christian Ludwig Hook (1767-1835), German Lutheran pastor and writer, founder of the Pomeranian provincial newspapers
  • Wilhelm Kirchhoff (1800-1861), German jurist, poet and long-time mayor of the city of Pomerania Vorpommern

References

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