Łojewo, Pomeranian Voivodeship

Łojewo ( German Lojow, Kashubian Łojéwò ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Damnica ( Hebrondamnitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical Location and Transport

Łojewo located in Pomerania, about 27 kilometers northeast of the county town of Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the eastern valley of the Łupawa ( Lupow ). Leads through the village a side road, the Stara Dąbrowa (Alt Damerow ) near the Polish national road 6 ( former German Reich Straße 2, now also European Route 28) with Główczyce ( Glowitz ) connects to the province road 213. The nearest train station is seven kilometers away Damnica on the railway line Stargard - Gdansk.

Place name

The place name comes Łojewo in Poland, there are other twice.

History

Łojewo was partly a Stojentinsches, partly a Rexinsches fief. 1523 Jurgen Loygen to loygen was called, in 1569 a Wobeser. 1666 bought Ewald von Puttkamer a share, in 1690 the other. Subsequently, the material was handed over to the family von Zitzewitz.

Through marriage Lojow came in 1746 at the Captain Christian Heinrich von Schlieffen, who sold it in 1777 to Otto Wilhelm Ernst von Bonin.

Around 1784 there was a Vorwerk, seven farmers, four Kossäten, a schoolmaster, a forge and a water mill in a total of 19 households. After changing owners the estate came in 1861 to Georg von Boehn, whose son Joachim was the last owner before 1945.

Until 1945 the church was Lojow district Stolp in Pomerania Region of Pomerania. On the 1,246 acre community area There were a total of four living spaces:

  • Gesorke (Polish: Jeziorka )
  • Lojow
  • Marie Felde ( Świtały )
  • Brick cottages

The main place of residence was Lojow. The community Lojow was incorporated into the official and the civil registry district Bewersdorf ( Bobrowniki ) and belonged to the district court area Stolp. In 1910 Lojow had 241 inhabitants, in 1933 there were 387 and in 1939 369

When the Second World War ended, Soviet troops occupied on March 8, 1945 place without a fight. After the war Lojow was put together with all Pomerania under Polish administration. In the spring of 1946, Poland took the village in possession. Gradually, all local villagers have been displaced. 103 expelled from Lojow villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 203 in East Germany. Lojow was renamed by the Poles in Łojewo.

The village is now part of Gmina Damnica in powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Slupsk voivodship ). The village has 209 inhabitants.

Church

Before 1945, the population of Lojow almost exclusively Protestant denomination was. The place was one of thirteen surrounding villages to the parish dams ( Damno ) in the church Stolp -Altstadt Ostsprengel in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union.

Since 1945, the population of Łojewo is predominantly Roman Catholic. The Church's connection to the village after Damno has remained. The parish Damno is now part of the deanery Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members belong to a branch church Główczyce ( Glowitz ) of the Cross Church in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

School

In the 1932 stage school a teacher taught 52 school children.

References

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