Paproty

Paproty ( German name Parpart, Schlawe / Pomerania ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Malechowo ( Malchow ) in a circle Sławno ( Schlawe ).

Geographical location

The old farming village Paproty located ten kilometers southwest of the county town Sławno in a running in a southerly direction incision of the Valley of the Grabowa ( Grabow ) sloping ground moraines. There is a connecting road between the towns of Malechowo ( Malchow, 4 km, on the regional road 6) and Ostrowiec ( Wusterwitz, 6 km to the voivodeship 205) to reach. Until 1945 there was rail connection via station blessing Thin ( Żegocino ) at the track Schlawe - Pollnow ( Polanów ) - Sydow ( Żydowo ) the Schlawer tracks.

Paproty is bordered by the towns of Malechowo ( Malchow ) to the west, Malechówko ( New Malchow ), Karwiczki ( New Karwitz ) and Smardzewo ( Schmarsow ) in the north, Żegocino ( blessing Thin) and Święcianowo ( Wiesenthal ) in the east and Sulechówko (small Soltikow ) and Sulechowo ( Soltikow ) in the south - the southern boundary marked by the Grabowa.

Place name

The term Parpart, also: Parparino is Wendish origin and means " fern ". This meaning has also the Polish name Paproty ( paproć = fern ). The German name Parpart occurred before 1945 in the Pomeranian circles Pommern ( Gryfice ), and Koszalin ( Koszalin ) on.

History

Prince Wizlaw II of Rügen awarded in the 13th century the monastery Buckow the village Parparino as property. 1275 this gift of Mestwin II is confirmed by Pommerellen. After the secularization Parpart falls to the ducal office Rügenwalde.

In 1640 the free Schulze Martin Schwartz was named Parpart as a creditor of the city Rügenwalde. Around 1780 is to learn about the place that he belongs to the heath villages and 1 free mayor, 11 Baunernhöfe, 3 and 1 Büdner schoolmaster with a total of 16 fireplaces has.

1818 lived 164 inhabitants here. Their number increased to 1885 to 508 in 1939 and amounted to 443

By 1945, belonged to the municipality of the town of New Parpart Parpart (now Polish: Paprotki ). The church belonged to the office and registrar's office Malchow ( Malechowo ) and the district court Schlawe. She lay i Pom district Schlawe. in the district of the Prussian province of Pomerania Pomerania.

On March 7, 1945 the Red Army troops occupied the place. In the aftermath of war Paroart came as Paproty in Polish hands and is now a part of Gmina Malechowo in powiat Slawienski the West Pomeranian Voivodeship ( to 1998 Koszalin Voivodeship ).

Church

Before 1945 the inhabitants of Parpart were almost exclusively Protestant denomination. Kirchdorf was Malchow, which formed a parish with Karwitz and the church circle Rügenwalde the Church Province of Pomerania belonged to the Church of the Old Prussian Union. Last German minister was Pastor Otto Nitschalk.

Since 1945, live in predominantly Catholic Paproty inhabitants. The village continues to be Malechowo, which is now connected to the deanery in the Diocese of Koszalin - Kolobrzeg Sławno.

School

In Parpart was until 1931 a one-class school, which was then passed zweiklassig in New Parpart through acquisition of small einklassigen school. The two last German schoolmasters were the teachers Schumacher and Vandrey.

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