Ostromice

Ostromice ( German Wustermitz ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the urban and rural community Wolin ( Wollin ) in the powiat Kamieński ( Pomerania in Pomerania ).

  • 3.1 External links
  • 3.2 footnotes

Geographical Location and Transport

Ostromice is conveniently located on the Polish national road 3 ( former German Empire Road 111, today also European Route 65) ( Swinoujscie ) to the Silesian Jakuszyce ( Jakobsthal ) leads from Świnoujście on the Czech border. The village is located 12 km south-east of Wolin, and as far as Świnoujście there are 26 km, 66 km to Stettin. The county town of Kamien Pomorski ( Pomerania ) can be reached in 20 kilometers above Parlówko ( Parlowkrug ) (3 km) and the province road 107 ( former National Highway 165). Parlówko is also the nearest railway station on the PKP - line Szczecin - Świnoujście.

History

Ostromice was a village that had the family Flemming as a fief. Around 1784, there were eight full Wustermitz farmers, half peasant, two Kossäten, an inn, a blacksmith, a schoolmaster and a total of 25 households. The village consisted at that time of four parts, A, B, C and D. Wustermitz A with two farmers, half farmer and a Kossäten possessed of Major General Heinrich Ludwig von Flemming deck accessories to his estate Martenthin A. Wustermitz B with three farmers and one was Kossäten accessories of the goods Martenthin B, which had the children of the late Major Friedrich Wilhelm von Flemming. Wustermitz C belonged to the District Marshal Carl Friedrich von Flemming. Wustermitz D belonged to Lieutenant Colonel Johann Ernst von Ploetz.

The population of Wustermitz has almost doubled in the period 1905-1939: 1905 = 271, 1910 = 286, 1933 = 510, 1939 = 473

Until 1945 the church belonged to the district of Pomerania Wustermitz i Pom. in the district of Stettin Prussian province of Pomerania. By 1945 Wustermitz was also the seat of a registry office.

After the end of World War II, the region was placed under Polish administration. Soon after appeared in Poland, who took over the houses and farmsteads. The German village population was expelled by the Poles.

Today Ostromice is a district of Gmina Wolin in the powiat Kamieński the West Pomeranian Voivodeship (Stettin 1975-1998 Voivodeship ). The village has about 500 inhabitants.

For Polish sports enthusiasts the name of the village Ostromice connects with a sad memory: On August 17 here in 1998 lost the two Polish athletes and Olympic champion Tadeusz Ślusarski and Władysław Komar and Jaroslaw Marzec, from a sports festival coming, in a car accident her life. A memorial along Route 3 reminded of this tragedy.

Church

Wustermitz was part of the Protestant parish before 1945 Martenthin (now Polish: Mierzęcin ) in the parish of Wollin ( Wolin ) in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. Today Ostromice belongs to the parish in the Diocese of Szczecin Wroclaw the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland. Catholic hand, the place is part of the Dean's Office Golczewo ( Gülzow ) in the Archdiocese of Szczecin - Pomerania.

References

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