SÄ…borze

Sąborze ( German Ludwig Lust) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the rural community Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical lag and transport links

Sąborze located in Pomerania, about twelve miles east of the county town of Slupsk ( Stolp ) in a certain environment of vast areas of arable land. On the northern edge of the village, the Polish national road 6 ( former German Reich Straße 2, now also European Route 28 ), and up to the next station Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) on the railway line from Stargard to Gdansk is eight kilometers away.

Place name

The German naming is linked to the name of an unknown Ludwig, the Polish form of the name probably refers to the ducal name Sambor or Sabor.

History

Ludwig Lust is the turn of the 19th to the 20th century from the community Mahnwitz (now Polish: Mianowice ) emerged, who had been there earlier than Vorwerk and then as a district. The then 299 -acre estate was settled.

In 1895 Ludwig Lust counted 16 inhabitants. In 1925 were in Ludwigslust 27 residential buildings. In 1939 172 residents were registered, which were distributed to 42 households.

By 1945, Louis was like a municipality in the district of Stolp in Pomerania in the administrative district of the Prussian province of Pomerania. The municipal area was 352 acres in size, and Ludwig Lust was the only city of the municipality. In 1939 there were 23 farms here. The community was the official and the civil registry district Mahnwitz, the Gendarmerie District Hebrondamnitz ( Damnica ) and incorporated the district court area Stolp. Last mayor was Max Papenfuß.

As the Red Army came before the end of World War II on March 8, 1945 with tanks in the village, tried to escape a few inhabitants. In military resistance, the Soviet troops did not meet. At this time, many refugees were in the village, including many from East Prussia, especially from the district Heiligenbeil and from among Prussian Holland. After the Soviets had set up a collective farm in Mahnwitz on March 20, the Ludwigsluster population had to work there. End of April, the first Poles arrived in the village, and on May 13, 1945, took the Polish militia rule. By June, the Poles had taken over all courts. When a typhus epidemic broke out, there were numerous victims in the village. In the fall of 1946 the Poles expelled the first villagers, and in 1947 the remainder of the village population was deported until a villager who worked in the mill at the Russians. When the Russians abandoned the mill in the spring of 1948, this last locals was expelled by the Poles. 35 displaced from Ludwigslust villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 53 in the GDR. Ludwig Lust was renamed by the Poles in Sąborze.

The village is now a part of Gmina Damnica in powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975-1998 Slupsk voivodship ). The town is the seat of a Schulz Office, which also includes the village Paprzyce is affiliated ( Papritzfelde ). Today live not quite 200 people Sąborze.

Church

Before 1945, all the villagers were Protestant denomination. Ludwig pleasure belonged to the parish Sageritz (now Polish: Zagórzyca ) in the church Stolp - old town in the Ostsprengel the Church Province of Pomerania in the Church of the Old Prussian Union.

Since 1945, the population of Sąborze almost complete Catholic denomination is. Zagórzyca ( Sageritz ) is again the parish seat, but the parish is now the Dean Główczyce ( Glowitz ) assumed in the diocese Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members are now part of Cross Church in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

School

In the single-stage in 1932 elementary school in Ludwigslust a teacher taught 59 school children.

References

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