Przewłoka, Pomeranian Voivodeship

Przewłoka ( German Stricker Hagen ) is a village in the municipality of Ustka ( Stolpmünde ) in the powiat Słupski the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship.

  • 3.1 Literature
  • 3.2 External links
  • 3.3 footnotes

Geographical location

Przewłoka located in Pomerania, about 16 kilometers northwest of the city of Slupsk ( Stolp ) and four kilometers east of the port city Ustka on the Baltic Sea.

History

The town was laid out as a small village streets. It belonged to the so-called Hagen villages in the country trip, the alarmed German settlers had founded. In 1426 Ulrich Drosedow sold the Holy Spirit Hospital to Stolp, which was subordinate to the Municipality of the town of Stolp, the village Stricker Hagen. Feudal lords were abbots of the monastery Belbuck that the town of Stolp in fief letters repeatedly confirmed the ownership of Stricker Hagen as a fief since 1486. Over the course of the boundary between Stricker Hagen and the neighboring village Weitenhagen an agreement contract between the municipal authorities of the town of Stolp and the brothers Jürgen and Jacob Ramel was completed in 1526. In the 16th century there were in Stricker Hagen eleven farmers; the village at that time was thus relatively large. Later, the arable land of the village were drawn in part by drifts of sand dunes affected. Affected by the drifts was also the Worochow, later Freichow -Bach, the verstopte. There was a temporary lake, the name of the grass fraction was given. In Stricker Hagen there was a good, against which the peasants of the village of manual and team services were required to be paid. For the management of its own operating surfaces of the farmers who had leased this, this also had a detrimental effect. Particularly bad times broke up for the farmers of Stricker Hagen during the Seven Years War. Around the year 1784 there were in Stricker Hagen a Vorwerk, five farmers, two Kossäten, three Büdner, a schoolmaster, a forester, a blacksmith and a total of 15 households. 1823 Before Stricker Hagen had 166 inhabitants.

In 1925, Stricker stood in Hagen 37 residential buildings. In the year 1939 378 inhabitants were counted in Stricker Hagen, who lived in 95 households. There were in the town Stricker Hagen 35 farms.

Before the end of World War II, the village belonged to the district of Stolp Stricker Hagen in the administrative region of Pomerania Pomerania. The municipal area was 934 hectares. In the municipality of Hagen Stricker there were a total of four Locations:

  • Grass fraction
  • Karlshof
  • Silberberg
  • Stricker Hagen

Towards the end of World War II Stricker Hagen was occupied on 8 March 1945 by the Red Army. There were many attacks by the Soviet soldiers against the villagers and the refugees present in the village of East and West Prussia. After the Soviet troops Poland came to the village and took over the houses and farmsteads. The villagers were expelled by the Poles. Stricker Hagen was renamed Przewłoka.

93 expelled from Stricker Hagen villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 182 in East Germany.

The village has about 180 inhabitants.

Church

The villagers before 1945 present in Stricker Hagen were Protestant. Stricker had Hagen to 1909 gahört to the parish church in Weitenhagen Stolp City and was then umgepfarrt within the same church district in the parish Stolpmünde.

School

Before 1945, Stricker Hagen had its own elementary school. In 1932 this school was a single stage; taught at this point here, a single teacher 58 school children.

References

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