Bruk, Pomeranian Voivodeship

Bruk ( German fracture) is a place in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the urban and rural community Dzierzgoń ( Christburg ) in the powiat Sztumski ( Stuhm ). Bruk is the seat of a Schulz Office, which also includes the neighboring towns of Pawłowo ( Peterhof ) and Piaski Sztumskie (sand Huben ) are assigned.

  • 3.1 Evangelical
  • 3.2 Catholic

Geographical location

Bruk is situated 18 kilometers northeast of the county town Sztum ( Stuhm ) in the far east of the Pomorskie Voivodeship on a side street that Dzierzgoń ( Christburg ) over the province road 515 Budzisz ( Budisch ) and Żuławka Sztumska ( Posilge ) connects. The formerly existing state railway line from Maldyty ( Małdyty ) to Malbork ( Marienburg) to the next station in Dzierzgoń is no longer in operation.

History

The estate village was first mentioned in 1409, in 1645 as bridging and before 1871 with the addition Noble. On May 7, 1874, the village eponymous and administrative capital of the newly established office district fracture in the district Stuhm was in the district Marienwerderstraße the Prussian province of West Prussia ( 1919-1939 Regierungsbezirk West Prussia in the province of East Prussia, 1939-1945 Region of Marienwerderstraße in Danzig- West Prussia ).

On 1 December 1910, the Gutsbezirk fraction counted 138 inhabitants. At that time already belonged to the neighboring Bebersbruch (Polish: Bobrowo ) to do so. In 1928, the Gutsbezirk fraction was converted into a rural community and the villages of Bruch's lowlands ( Bruckie Żuławy ) Czeskawolla (Polish: Kczewska Wola ), Peterhof ( Pawłowo ) and sand Huben ( Piaski Sztumskie ) incorporated. The population grew until 1933 to 303 in 1939 and amounted to 305

As a result of the Second World War came to break Poland and received the Polish name Bruk. Today, the village is home to a Schulz Office within the Gmina Dzierzgoń in powiat Sztumski the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975-1998 Elbląg Voivodeship ).

District break (1874-1945)

Between 1874 and 1945, several villages formed the District break:

Heard in 1874 eleven municipal units for the district of breakage, it was on January 1, 1945, only four: Anke Wed, breakage, and Neuhöferfelde Polixen.

Church

The former quarry and today's Bruk was or is not Kirchdorf. The church members were and are otherwise parochial places assigned.

Protestant

By 1945, breaking part of the evangelical parish Lichtenfelde (now Polish: Jasna ) in the church Marienwerder ( Kwidzyn ) in the Church of the Province of West Prussia ( from 1939 Ecclesiastical Province of East Prussia ), the Church of the Old Prussian Union. Today Bruk is situated in the catchment area of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Pasłęk ( Prussian Holland), a branch church of Ostróda ( Osterode ) in the Diocese of the Evangelical - Augsburg Church Mazury in Poland.

Catholic

Before 1945, the Catholic Church limbs fracture in the parish were Posilge (now Polish: Żuławka Sztumska ) eingegeliedert, which belonged to the diocese of Warmia. Today is the neighboring village bagart (Tree Garth ) vicarage, of the deanery Dzierzgoń ( Christburg ) in the Diocese of Elbląg ( Elbing ) is one of the Catholic Church in Poland.

Footnotes

  • Place of Pomeranian Voivodeship
  • Gmina Dzierzgoń
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