Wszedzień, West Pomeranian Voivodeship

Wszedzień ( German Scheddin ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the rural community Postomino ( Pustamin ) in a circle Sławno ( Schlawe ).

Geographical location

The farming village Wszedzień located 14 kilometers northwest of the county town Sławno and 13 kilometers northeast of Darlowo ( Rügenwalde ) on a country road, the province road 205 ( Sławno - Darłowo ) connects via Stary Kraków ( Old Krakow) with Jarosławiec ( Jershöft ) on the Baltic Sea. Railway connection is provided Darłowo (up to 1945 Pennekow ( Pieńkowo ) to the railroad track Schlawe - Stolpmünde ( Ustka ) ).

Wszedzień lies on a north-facing tongue height of about 15 meters above sea level. before the formerly so-called Scheddiner gate ( between shear Winningen (58 meters) and Goll mountain ( 45 meters) ), which has been eaten by the melting water from the ice age in the Zizower ridge. The natural connection between the Wipper and the Vietzker See ( Jezioro Wicko ), who was then still a bay of the Baltic Sea, was always used by the population as a street.

Neighboring communities of Wszedzień are: in the west Dzierżęcin ( Dörsenthin ), in the north Bylica ( Schoenberg ), Naćmierz ( Natzmershagen ) and Łącko ( Lanzig ), to the east Korlino ( Körlin ) and Chudaczewo (Alt Kuddezow ), and in the south Masłowice ( Masselwitz ) and Kanin ( Kannin ).

Place name

The village was formerly a Wendish settlement. The name is from " Czata " = be derived "Watch ".

History

The remains of megalithic tombs east and southeast of Scheddin suggest an ancient settlement. The village complex was originally an elongated Rundling a pond covered with lime. In old documents the place is not mentioned, but he heard from time immemorial to the Official Rügenwalde. 1456 is called as a witness of citizens Hinrik Slavemer to Scheddin in a Urfehdebrief.

The village was under the jurisdiction of the lower " Hofedinges ," the farmer in court Natzmershagen. For higher jurisdiction of the castellan was responsible in Rügenwalde. The farmers were liable for military service at the farm Drosedow. 1648 are in Scheddin nine farmers called, including a Schulzenhof.

In 1818 175 residents were registered here. Their number increased to 1871 to 363 in 1939 and amounted to 256

By 1945 Scheddin was a municipality in the district of New Hagen, Office ( Jezierzany ) in the district Schlawe i Pom. in the district of the Prussian province of Pomerania Pomerania. The village also belonged to the registry office Natzmershagen ( Naćmierz ) and the District Court area Rügenwalde.

On 7 March 1945, the Red Army occupied the place. Six men ( including Mayor sailors and robbers Trapp ) were deported to Graudenz ( Grudziądz ), where three of them died. In April 1945, the relocation of the entire village to Marienthal ( Pomiłowo ) was decreed. The return took place a few days later in a completely plundered village. In August, Poland took over the place, which was under the name Wszedzień part of Gmina Postomino in powiat Slawienski the West Pomeranian Voivodeship ( to 1998 Voivodeship Stolp ).

Local structure to 1945

Prior to 1945, belonged to the municipality Scheddin of living space

  • Goll (in Polish: Chelmno Słowieńskie ), three farms and a forest worker's house, 2 kilometers south-east of Scheddin, 1939 with 15 residents.

Church

The almost exclusively Protestant Scheddin had no church of their own. God's house was the village church in Lanzig ( Łącko ), belonged to the parish of the place. It was in the church circle Rügenwalde the Church Province of Pomerania in the Church of the Old Prussian Union. Last German minister was Pastor Hans Gaedicke.

Since 1945 Wszedzień is mostly Catholic. The village belongs to ( continue to) to the parish Łącko, but now the dean's office Ustka ( Stolpmünde ) in the Diocese of Koszalin - Kolobrzeg of the Catholic Church in Poland. Evangelical Church members are now part of the parish Koszalin ( Koszalin ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

School

Scheddin before 1945 had a class elementary school for eight years course with 50 to 60 students. Schoolyard was filled-in village pond. Last German teacher was Otto Schwandt.

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