Głębock, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship

Głębock ( German Tiefensee, Circle Heiligenbeil / East Prussia ) is a village in the northwest of the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Lelkowo ( Lichtenfeld ) in the powiat Braniewski ( circle brown mountain).

  • 6.1 roads
  • 6.2 rails
  • 8.1 Literature
  • 8.2 External links

Geographical location

Głębock is located three kilometers south of the Polish- Russian border to Kaliningrad ( Königsberg area ( Prussia) ) on the southeastern shore of the eponymous Jezioro Głębockie ( Tiefensee ) within the Masurian Lake District. The former county town Heiligenbeil (now Russian: Mamonowo ) is located 25 kilometers to the northwest, the present district metropolis Braniewo ( Brown Mountain ) is only 30 kilometers to the west.

Place name

The Polish name Głębock comes once before in the Province of Lower Silesia, the German place name Tiefensee is a commonly used local name.

History

The previously mentioned Tiefensee estate village belonged in the 16th century to Gutsherrschaft Arnstein (now Polish: Jarzen ) and remained with their history for centuries to come together. Owners were the families of Rautter of Troschke and the Groeben. Only when Louis of the Groeben (1842-1904) Tiefensee sold, was out of the Vorwerk an independent asset which then, however, divided the East Prussian Land Company in pension settlement pieces.

In 1909, acquired August Steer ( 1867-1945 ), a native of Westerville near Osnabrück, the Restgut with a size of 148.5 acres. He let expand the house. This, like the other buildings of the estate Tiefensee are preserved.

In 1910, the municipality Tiefensee counted 203 inhabitants. The number rose to 1933 to 573 in 1939 and was then 575

On June 11, 1874, the rural community Tiefensee was incorporated in the District Schonwalde ( Grabowiec ). These membership remained until 1945. Until that time, the town belonged to the district Heiligenbeil in the district of Königsberg the Prussian province of East Prussia.

Since 1945 Tiefensee is Polish under the name Głębock and is now part of Gmina Lelkowo in powiat Braniewski in the Warmia and Mazury ( Elbląg Voivodeship 1975-1998 ). The town is the seat of a Schulz Office and is now 570 inhabitants.

Church

Parish Church

The Tiefenseer church, like most other places of worship in the church circle Heiligenbeil survived the war not without prejudice.

Parish

In predominantly Protestant population Tiefensee was until 1945 the seat of a rectory. At the parish belonged to last about 1,200 church members who lived in nine surrounding villages:

  • Arnstein ( Jarzen )
  • Arnstein mill ( Jarzeński Mlyn )
  • Grünhöfchen
  • Milk Bude ( Mlecznik )
  • Monti tablets ( Mątyty )
  • Mühlenhof ( Młynowo )
  • Schönfeld ( Sówki )
  • Tiefensee ( Głębock )

The parish Tiefensee was until 1945 in the East Prussian church circle Heiligenbeil (now Russian: Mamonowo ) incorporated in the ecclesiastical province of East Prussia the Church of the Old Prussian Union.

Today the Church in Głębock branch church in the parish Dębowiec ( Eichholz ) is the dean's office Pieniężno (flour sack) in the Archdiocese of Warmia of the Catholic Church in Poland. Protestant church members belong to the Diocese of the Evangelical - Augsburg Church Mazury in Poland.

Pastor

Between the Reformation and the expulsion in 1945 as a Protestant clergyman officiated in Tiefensee:

Personality of the place

  • Bruno Frankewitz ( born December 8, 1897 in Tiefensee ), German officer in World War II

Traffic

Głębock can be reached despite its remote border location good about the Polish voivodeship (DW) 510. It runs on the route of the former German Reich road 126 from the Southeast Prussian Old Christchurch Castle (now Polish: Stary Dzierzgoń ) on flour sack ( Pieniężno ) up to Königsberg ( Prussia) (now Russian Kaliningrad ) and to the northeast the Prussian Grand Skaisgirren (now Russian: Bolschakowo ) led. In Pieniężno (flour sack) DW hits 510 on the two major traffic routes DW 507 ( Braniewo ( Brown Mountain ) ↔ Dobre Miasto ( Guttstadt ) ) and DW 512 ( Pieniężno ↔ Bartoszyce ( Bartenstein ) ).

In Głębock two roads meet from the nearby towns Grabowiec ( Schonwalde ) or Jarzen ( Arnstein ) on the DW 510

Rails

Rail Technically Głębock is far away from the roads very repulsed. Between 1885 and 1945 the village railway station on the major Nordsüdstrecke of Königsberg ( Prussia) on Zinten was (now Russian: Kornewo ) to Olsztyn (now Polish: Olsztyn ), which today only from Pieniężno (flour sack) on the portion of Braniewo ( Braniewo ) runs to Olsztyn.

Until 2007, there was rail connection over the ten kilometers to railway station Sągnity ( Sang Itten ) of the former railway line from Zinten ( Kornewo ) about Lidzbark Warmiński ( Heilenberg ) and Mrągowo (Sensburg ) to Ruciane ( Niedersee ), which was only still operated from Sągnity.

Tourism

The secluded location of Głębock has a positive effect on tourism from who seeks the quiet of the countryside and the idyllic venue Jezioro Głębockie and place.

References

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