Pobłocie, Słupsk County

Pobłocie ( German Poblotz ) is a village in Gmina Główczyce (Town Glowitz ) in the Pomeranian Voivodeship in northern Poland.

  • 4.1 Literature
  • 4.2 External links
  • 4.3 footnotes

Geographical location

Pobłocie ( Poblotz ) is located in Eastern Pomerania, about nine kilometers east of Główczyce ( Glowitz ), 32 kilometers northeast of Slupsk ( Stolp ) and 79 kilometers west of the regional capital Gdańsk.

History

Poblotz (referred to in older Lehnsbriefen Poblitz ) was originally a manor. The farm was located in the 17th and 18th century belonged to the Pomeranian or so-called ' blue line ' of the family of Hoym. To 1784 there were in Poblotz a Vorwerk with a manor house, a water mill, ten farmers, three Kossäten, a blacksmith, a schoolmaster as well as on the field mark of the village, the Vorwerk Parschen, a sheep and a dairy. Overall, there were in the village 42 hearths (households).

By 1945 Poblotz belonged to the district of Stolp in Pomerania. The place had a three-level elementary school. About a hundred school children were taught by two teachers in three classes.

Towards the end of the Second World War, the region was occupied in the spring of 1945 by the Red Army, then placed under Polish administration and thereafter renamed Pobłocie. The German population was expelled in the following months. The first deportation took place in spring 1946. On November 9, 1946 25 families were displaced.

The village has about 800 inhabitants.

Parish

The villagers were predominantly Protestant. 1925 lived twelve Catholics in the village, which corresponded to 1.6% of the population. The village belonged to the parish Zezenow and thus to the church Stolp -Altstadt.

In the village -born personalities

  • Karl Georg von Hoym (1739-1807), Prussian statesman

References

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