Ostre Bardo, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship

Ostre Bardo ( German Klingenberg, circle Bartenstein ) is a small village in the Polish Warmian -Masurian and belongs to the urban and rural community Sepopol ( Schippenbeil ) in Bartoszycki powiat ( county Bartenstein ).

  • 3.1 Church building
  • 3.2 parish
  • 3.3 Religious Books
  • 5.1 footnotes
  • 5.2 Weblink

Geographical location

Ostre Bardo located 16 kilometers northeast of the county town Bartoszyce ( Bartenstein ) and can be reached on a side street of Sepopol ( Schippenbeil ) about Stopki ( Stolzenfeld ). The road ends in Ostre Bardo, two kilometers before the Polish- Russian border. Before 1945, they went on over the now Russian Rjabinino ( Korwlack ) and Tjomkino ( Mertensdorf ) until after Prawdinsk ( Friedland ( Ostpr. ) ). A rail connection does not exist.

History

On June 11, 1874, then Klingenberg place indicated seat and the eponymous site of the newly built Amtsbezirks Klingenberg, who belonged to the district of Friedland, then until 1945 the district Bartenstein in the district of the Prussian province of East Prussia, Königsberg until 1927. On June 30, 1874, new Gutsbezirk New Klingenberg has been divided from the belonging to Klingenberg Vorwerk New Klingenberg along with Amalie mountain.

In 1910, the rural community Klingenberg 71 and Gutsbezirk Klingenberg counted 132 inhabitants. On September 30, 1928, the rural community of Klingenberg and the estate districts Gostkow closed (Russian: Raskowo ), Klingenberg and New Klingenberg for new rural community Klingenberg together in the 1933 and 1939 336 495 inhabitants were already registered. Shortly before the last count, also the now newly formed community Pohiebels was ( it would be today on Russian territory, but no longer exists ) was incorporated into the municipality of Klingenberg.

As a result of the Second World War came Ostre Bardo with the southern part of East Prussia to Poland and received the Polish place name " Ostre Bardo ". The place now belongs to the city and rural municipality ( gmina ) Sepopol ( Schippenbeil ) in the powiat Bartoszycki in the Warmia and Mazury ( Olsztyn Voivodeship 1975-1998 ) and is the seat of a Schulz Office.

District Klingenberg

Between 1874 and 1945, Klingenberg was office village of its jurisdiction Klingenberg, which was initially formed by two rural communities and three agricultural estates and whose area extends today to Polish and Russian territory:

Church

Church building

The Klingenberg church dates from the 16th century and was extensively renovated in the 17th century. Until 1945 she was a Protestant church, was then expropriated and now serves the Greek-Catholic Church as place of worship.

Parish

Klingenberg is an old church and village was an independent church since the Reformation. Here, however, no parish was established, but the parish Klingenberg was parish officially with German Wilten (now Russian: Jermakowo ) and belonged to the parish of Friedland (Russian: Prawdinsk ), 1927 Church Circle Bartenstein (Polish: Bartoszyce ) within the Ecclesiastical Province of East Prussia the Church of the Old Prussian Union. For parish Klingenberg included the - today located both on Polish and on Russian territory - places: Amalie Berg ( PL), Gostkow, now Raskowo (RUS ), Klingenberg, now: Ostre Bardo ( PL), Korwlack, now Rjabinino (RUS ) New Klingenberg (PL) and Pohiebels (RUS ).

After 1945 there was hardly any evangelical church members because of flight and expulsion in Ostre Bardo. This established the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which can look back on a larger number parishioners of Ukrainian descent here, a separate parish, which belongs to archeparchy Przemysl -Warsaw. In Ostre Bardo living evangelical church members are now assigned to the parish in Bartoszyce ( Bartenstein ), which is a branch church of the parish in Ketrzyn ( Rastenburg ) in the Diocese of the Evangelical - Augsburg Church Mazury in Poland.

Church records

The still existing church book records of the parish Klingenberg kept today in the Evangelical Central Archive in Berlin- Kreuzberg ::

  • Baptisms: 1712-1934
  • Marriages: 1717-1944
  • Burials: 1717-1944
  • Confirmations: 1838-1943
  • Supper Participants: 1767-1811 and 1892-1944.

Personality of the place

  • Miron Sycz ( born January 3, 1960 in Ostre Bardo ), Polish politician of Ukrainian nationality

References

Footnotes

Weblink

  • Place of Warmia and Mazury
  • Gmina Sepopol
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