Kruszewiec, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship

Kruszewiec ( German Krause village ) is a village in Poland, in the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, powiat Kętrzyński.

  • 2.1 Population development
  • 3.1 Traffic
  • 4.1 Literature
  • 4.2 footnotes

Geography

Geographical location

Kruszewiec is immediately adjacent to the east of the city Kętrzyn. The village is a village road which along voivodeship road 592 ( droga wojewódzka 592 ) is located.

History

The Grand Master of the Teutonic Order Konrad von Erlichshausen was 1444 Nicklis Crowse the right to plant a village on the site of today Kruszewiec. For a brief period, 1826-1832, the service was held here in the Polish language. During the Second World War, the village was used as a deposit for the Fuehrer's Headquarters Wolf's Lair. In January 1945, the Red Army marched into the area and as a result of the war Krause village was Kruszewiec as part of the People's Republic of Poland. In 1954, the village was the center of a Gromada, in which in 1960 on an area of 93 km ², 3,110 people lived. Following a restructuring of the 1968 Gromada 25 Soltysships, divided into five Soltysships for the Gromada Kruszewiec. After the Gromadas were dissolved in Poland, the village was the seat belonged to a Schulz ministry in the community Kętrzyn to which the villages Cegielnia, Karolewo, Krużgany and Wymiarki.

Population Development

1818 lived in the village of 189 people in 26 residential buildings. 1933 lived 393 inhabitants in the village, there were 381 in 1939. Kruszewiec in 1970, there were 452 inhabitants.

Economy and infrastructure

Traffic

The village is located at the Province Road 592 ( droga wojewódzka 592 ). To the west, it leads to the immediately adjacent Kętrzyn and ends after about 47 kilometers in Bartoszyce. To the east, the road ends after about 30 kilometers in Giżycko.

The nearest railway station is in Kętrzyn where there are direct to Olsztyn and Poznan.

The nearest international airport is Kaliningrad, which is about 100 kilometers northwest located on Russian territory. The nearest international airport on Polish territory is located about 195 kilometers west of Lech Walesa Airport, Gdansk.

References

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