Domachowo, West Pomeranian Voivodeship

Domachowo ( German Hans Hagen ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the Gmina Polanów ( Pollnow ) in the district of Koszalin ( Koszalin ).

Geographical Location

Domachowo located 33 kilometers east of the county town of Koszalin on a side street, in the Jacinki ( Jatzingen ) of the Province Road 206 ( Koszalin - Polanów ) branches off and leads in a northerly direction over Bukowo ( (Wendish ) Buckow ) to Sławno ( Schlawe ). By 1945, Hans Hagen breakpoint on the railway line Schlawe - Pollnow the Schlawer tracks.

Neighboring towns of Domachowo are in the north Laski, in the northwest Bożenice ( Bosens ), in the south Bukowo ( (Wendish ) Buckow ) and to the west Krytno ( Kritten ) and Sowno (Alt Zowen ).

Place name

On what the person Attribution " Hans Hagen " is based in German, is not known. The place name comes three times before in Mecklenburg- Vorpommern. The Polish form of the name " Domachowo " also occurs in Poland three times.

History

The Year of the village is also not known. It is said to have been a Vorwerk of goods Wendish Buckow before 1870. In 1858, first mentioned as Good. Owners of such property are from 1896 Max Glagau, then his grandson Hans Harald Ritter and Edler von Xylander, and after his death in 1941 until 1945 Erika von Xylander widow.

1867 lived in Hans Hagen 120 people, in 1925 there were 203 The place then covered an area of 575 hectares. The estate with manor house and park was on the east side of the road to Latzig ( Laski ) - Schlawe ( Sławno ). Opposite was a book park with various houses. The workers' houses were south of the estate.

By 1945, Hans Hagen was a district of the municipality (Wendish ) Buckow. It belonged to Jatzingen ( Jacinki ) and Schwarzin ( Swierczyna ) for the district of Buckow district Schlawe i Pom. in the province of Pomerania Region of Pomerania. The competent registry office was also in Buckow, while the district court in Pollnow ( Polanów ) was.

On March 6, 1945 the Red Army troops marched into Hans Hagen. While the lady of the house was getreckt with her daughter shortly before the Russian invasion to the west, the villagers the request of the lady of the house are on the trek to participate not followed and attacked the Soviet soldiers in the hands. 21 citizens were deported to the Soviet Union.

As a result of the war, Hans Hagen became Polish, and is now under the name Domachowo part of Gmina Polanów, now the powiat Koszaliński in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship ( to 1998 Koszalin Voivodeship ) belong.

Church

Before 1945, the population of Hans Hagen was almost exclusively Protestant denomination. The village belonged to the church in Kummerow (now Polish: Komorowo ), which - like the church in Zirchow ( Sierakowo Sławieńkie ) - a branch church of the parish Krag ( Krag ) was. It was in the church Schlawe in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. Last German minister was Pastor William Vedder.

Today the inhabitants of Domachowo mainly belong to the Catholic Church in Poland. The parish is in the Diocese of Koszalin - Kolobrzeg ( Kolberg - Koszalin ). The evangelical church members are supervised by parish Koszalin ( Koszalin ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg ( Lutheran ) Church in Poland.

School

The Hans Hagen children attended the school before 1945 (Wendish ) Buckow.

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