Siecie

Siecie ( German Zietzen ) is a village in the municipality Smołdzino in powiat Słupski ( Stolp ) of the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship.

  • 3.1 Literature
  • 3.2 External links
  • 3.3 footnotes

Geographical location

Siecie located in Pomerania, about 23 kilometers northeast of the city of Slupsk ( Stolp ) and four kilometers south of the church village Smołdzino ( Schmolsin ).

History

In a document from 1282, the village takes the place names Cice. A later form of the place name is Ziezen. In the period from 1514 to 1608, the village was owned by the family Tessenberg. After the death of Schwantes of Tessenberg († 1608), it came in 1608 to the Duchess Erdmuthe of Brandenburg ( 1561-1623 ). Then it belonged successively to the Duchess Anna von Croy (1590-1660), Duke Ernst Bogislaw of Croy (1620-1684) and from 1673 his son Ernest of Croyengreiff († 1700 in Rome), who in 1681 account of his conversion to but Catholicism was disinherited by his father. In the Prussian era Zietzen belonged to the so-called royal villages that were under the Office Schmolsin. Around 1784, there was a Zietzen Vorwerk, twelve farmers, including the mayor, two Kossäten, seven Büdner and a total of 22 households..

In 1925 were in Zietzen 103 residential buildings. In 1939 lived in Zietzen 460 inhabitants in 121 households and the municipality had a total of 102 farms.

Before 1945 Schlochow belonged to the district of Schmolsin in the district of Stolp, administrative region of Pomerania Pomerania. The municipal area was 870 hectares. In the community Zietzen there were a total of four Locations:

  • Hasenkrug
  • New Zietzen
  • White mountain
  • Zietzen

In the village there were a dairy and an inn.

Towards the end of World War II occupied on March 9, 1945, the Red Army the village. There were attacks against civilians and numerous villagers, including Mayor Grommisch present in the village, were abducted. Since Zietzen lay on the Baltic Sea in the Soviet restricted area, all the inhabitants had temporarily left in the first days of April 1945 the village. They were evacuated in the Labehn about 35 kilometers away. Late May 1945, directed the Soviet troops a collective farm. When they withdrew in April 1946, they took all the cattle and machinery. In May 1945, Poland took over the village and confiscated the land and houses. Zietzen was renamed Siecie, 1947, the Germans were expelled. 167 expelled from Zietzen villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 158 in East Germany.

The village is now become (until 1998 Slupsk voivodship ) for powiat Słupski the Pomeranian Voivodeship.

Church

In Zietzen there was in 1490 a chapel was described as Puperrima. Later, she was no longer mentioned in documents. The population before 1945 present in Zietzen was Protestant. In the 17th century Zietzen belonged to the parish of Great Guard. The Duchess Anna singled Schmolsin in addition to the village communities Virchenzin, Zietzen and Vietkow of the Garder parish, and caused in Schmolsin build a new church for them, which was inaugurated on October 28, 1632 .. Zietzen belonged since then to the parish Schmolsin and thus to the Church Stolp - Old Town.

School

By 1830, the villages Zietzen, Virchenzin and Vietkow had a common primary school, which is between these towns on the knight free ' Vorwerk Rambow was. All three villages were moved to a private school. In 1932 the school was Zietzen in three stages; two teachers taught there in three classes 93 school children. On 3 December 1939, a new school building for a two- school was inaugurated, in which in addition to the school rooms and two apartments were on the a farm building was connected.

References

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