Poganice

Poganice ( German Poganitz, Kasch. Pògóńce ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Potegowo ( Pottangow ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical location

Poganice located in Pomerania, about 25 kilometers east of the county town of Slupsk ( Stolp ) at the Lupow ( Łupawa ) and was once the most important crossing of this river. Was it up to 1945, the German Empire Street 2, which crossed the river here, as it is today, the Polish national road 6 (now also European Route 28), now here is a link from the Polish- German border at Kołbaskowo ( Kolbitzow ) and Stettin until after Gdansk and on to Pruszcz Gdański ( Praust ) manufactures. The nearest train station is nine kilometers east Potegowo located on the railway line from Stargard to Gdansk.

Place name

Older forms of the name are Poganitz ( 1569 ), Pogganitz ( 1595 ) and Pogantze ( 1628).

History

The historic settlement form after is the former estate village Poganice a small village streets. The King and Duke of Pomerania Eric I belehnte 1451 the Grumbkow Family with Poganitz, in whose possession it remained until the 17th century. The most significant owners were the Brandenburg state Minister Joachim Ernst von Grumbkow and the Prussian Minister Philipp Otto von Grumbkow.

In the 17th century Poganitz was temporarily owned by the Pirch family whose property it was constantly from 1706.

About 1784 Poganitz had a Vorwerk, four farmers, four Kossäten, a schoolmaster, and a water mill - a total of 15 fireplaces.

1804 owned by Hans Felix Pirch Poganitz before then in 1825 became the property of the families Rieck, post and Rieck Eggebert. Last Men on Poganitz was 1931-1945 Erich von Rieck Eggebert.

In 1910 Poganitz counted 225 inhabitants. Their number was down to 227 in 1933 and dropped to 1939 to 192 to the municipality Poganitz gehörtendie two districts Ewald Green (Polish: Moskotowo ) and Bandemersruh or Monbijou ( Będziemierki ). She was incorporated into the official and the civil registry district Grumbkow ( Grąbkowo ) - the district court area and district of Stolp Stolp in Pomerania Region of the Prussian province of Pomerania.

On March 7, 1945, the inhabitants of Poganitz went before the approaching Soviet troops in the yield on the flight and arrived over Pottangow ( Potegowo ) Stojentin ( Stowięcino ) and Great Podel ( Podilli Wielkie ) up to the Lebamoor. Here, however, they were overrun by the Red Army. On March 8, 1945 Poganitz came without a fight in the hands of the Russians, who set up a headquarters here and the good retained in their management. In the summer of 1945, Poland and established on September 1, 1945, its own administration. They took possession of houses and farms and deported the indigenous population to the west. From Poganitz the Polish Poganice that a village in Gmina Potegowo in powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Slupsk voivodship ) is today was. With its 133 inhabitants Poganice now belongs to the mayor's office Zochowo ( Sochow ).

Church

By 1945, the population of Poganitz almost exclusively Protestant denomination was. The village belonged to the parish Lupow (now Polish: Łupawa ) in the Church Stolp - old town in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. Last German minister was Pastor Gerhard Gehlhoff.

Since 1945, the inhabitants of Poganice predominantly Catholic denomination. The connection to the parish village is still there, but part of the parish Łupawa ( Lupow ) now for the newly formed eponymous deanery in the Diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members are now the Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland assigned.

School

Traveled around 1784 there were in Poganitz a schoolmaster. In the 19th century, the school was housed in a small building. In 1878, the Chausseehaus free, had served taking the road duty, and was extended to the new school. 1926 there was a renovation.

In the single-stage in 1932, a school teacher taught 40 school children. Last German teacher was Walter Bohlmann, who was expelled from Poganice on 1 May 1947.

Personalities: sons and daughters of the town

  • Ewald George of Pirch (1728-1797), lawyer and Hofgerichtspräsident in Koszalin

References

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