Siodłonie

Siodłonie ( German Zedlin ) is a village in the municipality Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ) of the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship.

  • 4.1 Literature
  • 4.2 External links
  • 4.3 footnotes

Geographical location

Siodłonie located in Pomerania, about 25 kilometers northeast of the city of Slupsk ( Stolp ) and five kilometers southwest of the church village Główczyce ( Glowitz ).

History

In the neighborhood of Siodłonie of a great castle ramparts from before or early historic times. This called by the villagers Sweden jumps rampart, which consisted of two hills, between which lay a deep ravine, was located about one kilometer east of the village center. One of the two hills, which was 88 meters long and 32 meters wide, had a square interior with rounded corners. The second ski jump had a less striking form. In Zedlin also a burial mound was found from the Bronze Age.

The Good Zedlin (formerly also Czedelin, Zidlin ) was formerly an ancient fief of the Stojentin family who owned it in 1469. In 1700 the manor came into the possession of the mortgage as dean Caspar Otto von Podewils. After a completed on September 22, 1731 estate settlement occurred then in the possession of his daughter, who brought the goods as dowry in her marriage with Captain Friedrich Ludewig Marshal of Bieberstein. The estate was inherited the only son of the couple, Christian Adam Marshall of Bieberstein. From 1773 to Zedlin was in the possession of a member of Kleist family. Around 1784, there was a Zedlin Vorwerk, eleven farmers, two Kossäten, a schoolmaster and a total of 16 households. In 1803 the brothers Ernst August Christian Heinrich Friedrich Wilhelm Ernst and Albrecht von Krockow acquired the Rumbsker goods including Zedlin and sold for the Ossekener goods conglomerate in Lauenburg. When the elder brother died in 1816, Rowen was passed on to his son, while the other product was the younger brother. When he also died, Otto von Krockow also acquired Rumbske and Zedlin. Since then, the goods remained in one hand. The other owners were William of Krockow, the objection raised in the title of Count Otto Christoph von der Wickerau († 1928) and his sons Hans Kaspar and Christian from the Wickerau, Earl of Krockow.

In 1925 were in Zedlin 38 residential buildings. In 1939 lived in Zedlin 221 inhabitants, which were distributed to 46 households.

Before 1945 Zedlin belonged to the district of Rumbske of the county Stolp in Pomerania Region of Pomerania. The municipal area was 755 hectares. In the municipality there were a total of two Zedlin Locations:

  • Zedlin
  • Zedliner mill

The manor had an operating area of ​​525 hectares, of which 313 acres were farmland. Besides the good there was in the community 15 farms. In the village there was a general store.

Towards the end of World War II Zedlin was occupied on March 9, 1945 by the Red Army. In the village there were quite some time bomb evacuees from pan - Eickelmann. At the time of the Soviet invasion there were also about a thousand refugees in the village, who had arrived in treks from East Prussia and from the district Rummelsburg. There have been numerous attacks by the Soviet soldiers against civilians. After the Soviet troops the Poles came and took over houses and farmsteads. The estate kept the Soviet troops until at least 1948 in possession. The rest of the village was placed under a Polish government office in Rumbske; then a Polish mayor was used. The Zedliner Mayor Lemke was sentenced to three years in prison and only came Christmas 1950 free again. The villagers were expelled by the Poles in the ensuing period gradually. Zedlin was renamed Siodłonie.

92 and sold in the GDR 52 Zedlin villagers were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany.

In 2006 Siodłonie had 221 inhabitants.

Church

The villagers before 1945 in Zedlin present were Protestant. Zedlin belonged to the parish Glowitz and thus to the Church Stolp -Altstadt.

School

Before 1945 Zedlin had its own elementary school. In 1932 this school was a single stage; a single teacher taught here at this time, 34 school children.

Traffic

Two kilometers north of the village the road passes 213 Slupsk voivodship - Krokowa ( Krockow ), which crosses the eastern Pomerania to West Prussia.

References

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