Łebunia

Łebunia ( German Labuhn, Lauenburg / Pomeranian, Kashubian Łebùniô or Lëbùno ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the rural community Cewice ( Zewitz ) in the powiat Leborski ( Lauenburg county in Pomerania ).

  • 6.1 Literature
  • 6.2 External links

Geographical location

Łebunia located in Pomerania, about eleven miles south of the county town Lębork ( Lauenburg in Pomerania ).

Neighboring towns of Łebunia are: to the north Osowo Leborskie ( Wussow ), to the east Zakrzewo (Werder ), the Southern Bucovina ( Buckowin ) and the military airfield of Siemirowice ( Schimmerwitz ), and to the west Cewice ( Zewitz ) and Maszewo Leborskie ( United Massow ).

Place name

The German place name Labuhn stands for three Pomeranian places. The Polish place name is found only here.

History

By 1945 Labuhn was a village in Lauenburg in Pomerania in the district of Koszalin in the Prussian province of Pomerania. The village was the seat of a civil registry office, the (Polish Cewice today ) was also responsible for Zewitz. Conversely, Zewitz seat and the eponymous site of an administrative district, which was also associated with Labuhn.

The municipality Labuhn were at that time still the villages Boor and water mill.

In 1910, 601 people lived in the community and in Gutsbezirk Labuhn. The population was 555 in 1933, already 567 in 1939 and rose to 666 today Łebunia

The now Polish village is now the district of Gmina Cewice in powiat Leborski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( Stolp 1975-1998 Voivodeship ).

Church

Parish / parish

Labuhn is an old village with a church - since the Reformation - predominantly Protestant population. The few Catholic church members belonged before 1945 to the parish of Lauenburg (now Polish Lębork ).

Once Labuhn was a branch church in the evangelical parish Buckowin ( Bukovina ), was until 1945, however, its independence as a separate parish church in Lauenburg county in Pomerania Ostsprengel the Church of the Church of the Old Prussian Union. Until 1901 it covered 14 villages, as then, however, seven villages were spun off into a separate parish Krampkewitz ( Krepkowice ).

By 1945, ran through the parish Labuhn the provincial boundary between Pomerania and West Prussia, where the villages Labuhn, Zewitz ( Cewice ) Wussow ( Osowo Leborskie ), the chapel community Groß Massow ( Maszewo Leborskie ) and Poppow ( Popowo ) in Pomerania, the villages Occalitz ( Okalice ) and Werder ( Zakrzewo ) but were already in West Prussia.

In the year 1940 2100 church members were counted in the parish Labuhn.

However, now Catholic - - After 1945 Łebunia was vicarage and the church was named after the Archangel Michael ( " Kościół Świętego Michała Archanioła " - Michael's Church ).

The parish is in the deanery Łebunia Sierakowice ( Sierakowitz ) incorporated in the diocese Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. It includes the villages of Bukovina ( Buckowin, as a branch church), Okalice ( Occalitz ) Osowo Leborskie ( Wussow ) Osowiec and Malczyce ( Henriettenthal ).

Here surviving Protestant church members are incorporated into the Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ) with the branch church in Lębork ( Lauenburg in Pomerania ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

Pastor

Between the Reformation and 1945, officiating in 16 Protestant clergymen Labuhn:

  • Johann Cossius, 1580
  • Georg Chille
  • Martin fin
  • Christian Henzelius, about 1680-1700
  • Johann Georg Bausius, 1700-1732
  • Martin Boehm, 1732-1762
  • Friedrich Gallasius, 1764-1768
  • Johann Samuel Hechsel, 1769-1725
  • Johann Friedrich hechsel (son of 8 ), 1796-1804
  • August David Benjamin Schwartze, 1804-1850
  • Heinrich Christian Herzberg, 1850-1861
  • Karl Johannes Dumpling, 1862-1873
  • Albert Sellentin, 1874-1888
  • Otto Wilhelm Georg Büttner, 1888-1902
  • Gustav Barckow, 1903-1939
  • Christlieb Meyer, 1939-1945

Among the clergy the person of the priest Schwartze (1804-1850) stands out. He was widely known for his knowledge of medicine and in 1831 appointed at the prevailing cholera here for District Sanitation Commissioner. Also, to the school system, he acquired great merit.

Traffic

The village is located on the province road 214, of Leba ( Leba ) on the Baltic Sea and Lębork more about Kościerzyna ( Berent ) and Skórcz ( Skurz ) until after Warlubie ( Warlubien, 1942-45 Warlieb ) results in the Kujawsko - Pomerania. Between 1920 and 1939, the eastern city limits was also a section of the German -Polish border at the Polish Corridor, previously it marked the border between the Prussian provinces of Pomerania and West Prussia.

Rail connection existed 1902-1975 (up to 2004 or freight) for the five kilometers to railway station Wussow = Osowo Leborskie on the railway line Lębork - Bytów ( Lauenburg in Pomerania Buetow ) and 1905-1920 and 1939-2000 through the station 14 km away Linde (Kreis Neustadt ) = Linia - Zakrzewo on the railway line Pruszcz Gdański - Leba ( Praust - Leba ). Both train lines were shut down.

References

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