Łabuń Wielki

Labun Wielki ( German Labuhn, Regenwalde ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the urban and rural community Resko (rain forest ) in the powiat Lobeski ( circle Labes ).

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Geographical location

Labun Wielki is located about four kilometers northeast of the former county town Resko (rain forest ) and 28 kilometers north- west of the present county metropolis Łobez ( Labes ) on a side street that Modlimowo ( Muddelmow ) on the Polish national road 6 ( former German Reich Straße 2, now also European Route 28) Szczecin - Danzig with Resko on the province road 152 ( former National Highway 161) Płoty ( Plathe ) - connects Buślary ( Buslar ) - Łobez ( Labes ) - Świdwin ( Schivelbein ). In Labun Wielki opens into this road another side road that ( Molstow ) about Iglice ( Geiglitz ) leads here from Orzeszkowo ( Neuhof ) in the Valley of Mołstowa.

From 1909 to 2000, the total railway connection through the station Komorowo Pomorskie ( Kummerow ) on the railway line Worowo - Wysoka Kamieńska ( Wurow - Wietstock ), and also from 1895 to 1961 ( for freight traffic until 1996) on the station Labun Maly ( New Labuhn ) on the railway Regenwalde novel ( Rymań ) Kolberg ( Kolobrzeg ) Kolberger the little train or Polish State Railways. Both lines are shut down.

One and a half kilometers southeast of Labun Wielki is the Jezioro Labun ( Labuhn Lake).

Place name

The German form of the name Labuhn called three Pomeranian villages. The Polish name represents a distinction to two kilometers southeast to place Labun Maly ( New Labuhn )

History

By 1945 Labuhn was a village in the district of rain forest in the Prussian province of Pomerania. Until 1938 it was in the administrative district of Stettin, then it came to the government district of Pomerania. The community Labuhn was in the consular district Pommern (now Polish: Resko ) incorporated, which included the communities Justin ( Gostyń Lobeski ), Kummerow ( Komorowo ), Lowin ( Ługowina ) Ornshagen ( Żerzyno ) and Paatzig ( Piasko ). Labuhn was the seat of a civil registry office, which was also responsible for Kummerow ( Komorowo ) and Geiglitz ( Iglice ). District court district was Regenwalde ( Resko ).

In 1905, the rural community and the Gutsbezirk Labuhn counted together 640 inhabitants. Their number was still 569 1910, rose to 1933 to 581 and dropped to 1939 to 530

Since 1945 the place has been called Labun Wielki and is part of Gmina Resko in the powiat Lobeski in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Voivodeship Szczecin ).

Church

Parish

By 1945, the population of Labuhn predominantly Protestant denomination was. Labuhn formed with New Labuhn (now Polish: Labun Maly ) own parish and was the seat of the parish Labuhn, which also includes the two branch churches Kummerow ( Komorowo ) with bag ( Saki ), Höfchen ( Mokronos ) and beet Hagen ( Porąbka ) and Geiglitz ( Iglice ) included with Stölitzhöfchen ( Stołążek ).

In 1940 the entire parish counted 1362 church members, of which 522 of the parish Labuhn, 284 the parish Kummerow and 356 of the parish Geiglitz belonged. The church patronage held the landed gentry of the parish parish.

The parish belonged to the church Labuhn Regenwalde Ostsprengel in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union.

Since 1945, the population of Labun Wielki majority of Catholic denomination is. The village now belongs to the parish Resko (rain forest ) in the Dean's Office in the Archdiocese of Szczecin - Pomerania Resko of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members belong to the Trinity Church in Stettin (until 1945 Gertrude Parish ) in the Diocese of Breslau Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland with the filial church of St. John in Trzebiatów ( Treptow Rega ad ).

References

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