BÅ‚otnica, West Pomeranian Voivodeship

Błotnica ( German mirror ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland. It is the Gmina Kolobrzeg ( Kolberg rural community ).

Geographical location

The village is located in Eastern Pomerania on the province road 102 between Trzebiatów ( Treptow an der Rega ) in the southwest and Kolobrzeg ( Kolberg) in the northeast, about 100 kilometers northeast of Stettin.

Neighboring towns are on the southwest by the province road the village Bogusławiec ( Charlottenhof ) with the living space Budzimskie (base coupler skating ), in the north Przećmino ( Prettmin ) and in the south Niemierze ( buyer).

The village lies on the same Błotnica ( Spie Bach).

History

The first mention of the village dates from 1368, when the city bought the Kolberg Dorpe tor mirror of a knight Heinrich von der Osten. The village then remained until the 19th century belonged to the city Kolberg. The place name has been temporarily written Spey, Spige and Spiegs. On the Lubinschen map of Pomerania from 1618, the village is registered as a mirror.

By the Seven Years' War (1756-1763) consisted of a mirror Vorwerk, three full Farms, three quarters of a farm and two Kossätenhöfe. During the Seven Years' War, the village was destroyed. Then mirror was completely re-created as a street village with four farms on each side of the road. The country of the former grange was distributed to the farmers. Around 1780 consisted of Spie eleven households ( " hearths " ), including eight farms and a water mill.

In the 19th century, various courtyards ( " extensions " ) were created on the field Mark of Spie, of which only base coupler skating was run as a separate living space.

1895 was the village railway connection with the breakpoint mirror Prettmin the Kolberger small train.

Before 1945, Spie formed a rural community in Kolberg- Körlin the Prussian province of Pomerania.

After 1945, Spie, as the whole of Pomerania, to Poland. It was the Polish place names Błotnica, which was created on the basis of the traditional medieval Slavic name of the mirror Bach, Blotznitz. The population was replaced by Poland.

Development of population figures

References

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