Kończewo

Kończewo ( German: Kunsow, Kashubian: Kòniszewò ) is a village in the northwest of the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Kobylnica ( Kublitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical Location and Transport

The Kaschubendorf Kończewo located in Pomerania, about twelve kilometers south-west of the county town of Slupsk ( Stolp ), at the edge of a wide valley bog. In the West -wide farmland dominate the local area, densely grown in the south forest. The northeastern village boundary is formed by the Kwacza ( Quacke ).

Through the town a side street, in Losino ( Lossin ) of the Polish national road 21 ( Slupsk - Miastko ) runs branches, former German Reich road 125 from Stolpmünde to Rummelsburg ) and after Kuleszewo ( Kulsow ) and continue to Barcino ( Bartin ) to the voivodeship 209 ( Sławno ( Schlawe ) - Bytów ( Buetow ) leads station is Słonowice ( Schlönwitz ) on the railway line Pila - Ustka ( Schneidemühl - Pommern- Stolpmünde ). .

Neighboring villages are: Sierakowo Słupskie ( Zirchow ) in the Northeast, Kuleszewo ( Kulsow ) in the south, Słonowice ( United Schlönwitz ) in the west and Widzino ( Veddin ) in the north.

Place name

Name occurrences are: Conezowe (1301 ), Koneschow ( 1392 ), Konesowo, Koniszewo, Kunsow (until 1945)

History

The settlement form after Kunsow is a small village streets. In the year 1301 the Viscount Matthew is called by Schlawe as the owner. Since 1393 it had Laurenz and Dereke Koske that those are considered ancestors von Zitzewitz. In the 15th century the family Massow was located here.

In 1784 Kunsow had a Vorwerk, ten farmers, half peasant, a forge and a schoolmaster at a total of 22 households. 1804 Franz Georg von Kleist the owner, and in 1861 it bought a Manteuffel '.

By 1876 Kunsow belonged ( with Quack castle (now Polish: Kwakowo ) and Scharsow ( Skarszów ) ) to the district Rummel castle in Pomerania, then to the district Stolp - in the district of the Prussian province of Pomerania Pomerania.

In the 19th century Kunsow came into the possession of the bourgeois family Siemers, whose descendants it belonged until 1945. After all, the manor had a farm size of 504 acres, this whole 375 acres of farmland. In addition to the Good there were 36 farms in the village. Were counted in 1910 still 521 inhabitants, there were 1933 and 1939, only 402

Kunsow before 1945 was the seat of a civil registry office. Also, it was the central place of the administrative district Kunsow, which also includes the communities Kulsow (now Polish: Kuleszewo ) Sagerke ( 1938-45 Brackenberg, today Polish: Zagórki ) and Zirchow ( Sierakowo Słupskie ) belonged. District court area was Stolp, gendarmerie district Kublitz.

Towards the end of World War II Kunsow was occupied on 7 March 1945 by troops of the Red Army. Then Kunsow was put together with all Pomerania under Polish administration, and after a few weeks, Poland took possession of the place. The entire village population was expelled. Kunsow was renamed Kończewo. The village is today a district of Gmina Kobylnica powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Voivodeship Stolp ) is. Here now live nearly 700 inhabitants.

Church

Kunsow has no church of their own. Before 1945, the population was predominantly Protestant denomination. The village belonged to the parish Zirchow (now Polish: Sierakowo Słupskie ) in Stolp county in the City Church Ostsprengel the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. In the parish, in 1940 a total of 1819 members of the congregation counted, and the branch church belonged Kulsow ( Kuleszewo ) and the parishioners places Lossin ( Losino ) Sagerke ( 1938-45 Brackenberg, Polish: Zagórki ) and Sanskow ( Zajączkowo ). Last German minister was Pastor Siegfried Fink leg.

Since 1945, the majority of Bervölkerung of Kończewo Catholic denomination. The place belongs to the branch church Kuleszewo ( Kulsow ) to the parish Kwakowo ( Quack Castle), which was founded in 1974 and currently has 2300 members of the congregation. It belongs to the deanery Slupsk - Zachód ( Stolp -West) in the Diocese of Koszalin - Kolobrzeg of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members are incorporated into the Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

School

In the single-stage in 1932, a primary school teacher taught 56 school children. The last German school governor was Erich wet.

References

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