Lulewice

Lulewice ( German Alt Lülfitz, also Lülfitz ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland. It belongs to the rural community Białogard ( Belgard ) in the powiat Białogardzki.

Geographical location

Lulewice is about five kilometers north of Białogard to the voivodeship 166 Żelimucha ( Buchenhorst ) along Route 6 ( = European route 28). The site extends in a valley to the banks of the Radev ( Radüe ). The nearest railway station is on the railway line Białogard Stargard - Gdańsk.

History

The rural community of Old Lülfitz (also: Lullewitz, Lüllewitz or Lüllfitz ) was a typical circular village, in whose center stood the school. It was first documented in the year 1276. 1333 certified the Pomeranian bishop in a letter confirming the affiliation of the village Lülfitz to Kolberger cathedral chapter.

Already in 1454 the most long established dependence of the village from the town Belgard is mentioned in a document. A dispute with the city of Kolberg cathedral chapter Belgard to Lülfitz 1528 were the brothers George I and Barnim IX. , Dukes of Pomerania, simple. After the Thirty Years' War lived in Lülfitz 82 inhabitants.

Between 1688 and 1726 there was an ongoing feud between the village and Lülfitz Kösternitz the " Schetterow ", a swampy meadow area.

The through the stone - Hardenberg reforms (1807 and 1816 ) introduced separation between the city and the Belgard farmers in Lülfitz 1848 completed. When, after the separation in 1882 in the village neighborhood farmers were settled, the scattered settlement and subsequent community Neu Lülfitz arose.

1912, the village was connected to the power grid.

1939 included the community Alt Lülfitz 721.1 acres and was inhabited by 220 people in 51 households. The majority of the population worked in agriculture and forestry.

Until 1945 the village belonged to the district of Belgard ( Persante ). It belonged to the civil registry district Roggow and the District Court area Belgard. Last German mayor was Willi Venske.

On March 7, 1945, Soviet troops invaded in the farming village. The expulsion of the resident population was made until 1946. Lulewice With the name of the village came to Poland and is today a district of the rural community Białogard.

Office Lülfitz

With the communities New Lülfitz, Redlin and Rostin formed Old Lülfitz to 1945 the District Lülfitz, the last German Head Office Emil Marotz was.

Church

Old Lülfitz belonged to the parish of St Mary's parish Belgard and was thus in the church Belgard county in Pomerania church of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union.

Today Lulewice belongs to the parish of Koszalin ( Koszalin ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Polish Evangelical-Augsburg Church.

School

In the past the middle of the village school in 1928 24 girls and 25 boys from Old and New Lülfitz were taught.

References

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