Lesiaki, Pomeranian Voivodeship

Lesiaki ( German Lessaken ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the municipality Cewice ( Zewitz ) in the powiat Leborski ( Lauenburg county in Pomerania ).

Geographical location

Surrounded by forest village Lesiaki located in Pomerania, in a terminal moraine near the Baltic Sea. Distance from Berlin to the southwest is about 380 kilometers.

Place name

The Polish name Lesiaki comes once before in the region of Łódź.

History

In 1686 the Lessaken that time was called a fief of the estate village Lietzen family. After the acquisition of part of Lessaken, the (now Polish Święte ) consisted of a farm in Lessaken and a Holzkavel in Swantee that Münchows bought a second time. Some parts were allodifiziert 1777.

After several changes of ownership, all three parts came together with the goods Kose ( Kozy ), Kosemühl ( Kozin ) and small Rakitt ( Rokitki ) Kaspar Friedrich von Massow. During this time Lessaken had two farmers, two half- farmers and a total of four fireplaces.

In 1804, Nicholas had Lessaken Leopold von Zitzewitz, and 1860 it was bought by Heinrich Wilke. Subsequent owners of approximately 424 acres of the manor were then Leopold of the East (1884 ), Max Deinert (1910 ), Fritz Günther Strobell (1928 ), and 1938 still the family Strobell.

In 1910, 75 residents were registered in Lessaken. Their number was 1933, 59 and 1939 to 70

By 1945, belonged to the municipality Lessaken the three districts Alt Lessaken, Swantee (Polish: Święte ) and Swantee / Swan Lake Forest house. It belonged to the official and the civil registry district Bochowke ( Bochówko ) in the district of Stolp in Pomerania Region of the Prussian province of Pomerania.

Towards the end of World War II Lessaken was occupied on March 9, 1945 by the Soviet Army. Later came Poland, who occupied the farms and houses and expelled the villagers. 28 expelled from Lessaken villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 26 in the GDR. Lessaken was renamed Lesiaki.

The village now belongs to the mayor's office Karwica (Gerhard height ) in the Gmina Cewice in powiat Leborski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Slupsk Province ) belongs.

Church

The village population of Lessaken was before 1945 mainly Protestant denomination. It belonged to the parish Mickrow (now Polish: Mikorowo ) in the church Stolp - old town in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union.

Since 1945, almost all Catholic population lives in Lesiaki. Mikorowo is still the seat of the parish to which the village belongs, which now, however, the newly formed Office of the Dean Łupawa ( Lupow ) is in the diocese Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. The living here evangelical church members are the parish in the Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland, in the nächstgelenen city Lębork ( Lauenburg in Pommern ) maintains a branch church.

School

The children from Lessaken went to 1945 in Wutzkow ( Oskowo ) to school.

Traffic

Near the village of the province road 212 runs here on the route of the former German Empire Road 158 runs. It is here crossed by a subordinate secondary road that Siemirowice ( Schimmerwitz ) with Unieszynko (small Wunneschin ) with Pogorzelice (Lange Evil) along Route 6 ( former National Highway 2, now also European Route 28) and performs Lesiaki. A rail connection existed until 1975 on the 2.5 km distant station Cewice ( Zewitz ) at the ahnstrecke Lębork - Bytów.

References

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