Żelimucha

Żelimucha ( German Buchenhorst ) is a village in the Polish West Pomeranian Voivodeship. It belongs to the rural community Białogard ( Belgard ) within the Powiats Białogardzki.

Geographical location

Żelimucha is located seven kilometers north of the county town Belgard at the 1945 extending limit for county Kolberg- Körlin that here of course of the river Radev ( Radüe ) is formed. About the province road 166, the village is within easy reach of good Białogard or from the national road 6 / Europe 28 road from the direction of Koszalin ( Koszalin ). The next stations are Kościernica ( Kösternitz ) and Białogard.

History

Buchenhorst is a young village and emerged only in the reign of Frederick the Great. The village got its name from the homonymous hill, which was in the break and was overgrown with beeches.

Buchenhorst was initially a Vorwerk Domänengut Belgard. By selling it came into private hands and was manor. 1841 sold the then owner of Dassel small plots of " little people " of the surrounding villages. The main plot with the large manor acquired Christian Waskow, whose family run the business inherited over several generations until 1945.

In 1842 Buchenhorst had 324 inhabitants and was grown in comparison with the manor time. 1939 were counted in the 301.5 -acre site 209 inhabitants, of whom the vast majority worked in agriculture and forestry.

By 1945 Buchenhorst lay in the district Belgard ( Persante ) and belonged to the district of Kösternitz and the civil registry district Roggow. The local court was in Belgard. Last incumbents were Mayor Paul Behling, Chief Administrator Albert Münchow and the registrar Paul Zülow. The Redliner Oberland hunters Gauger made ​​for police security and order.

After the occupation by Soviet troops in early March 1945, the first expulsion of the indigenous population. Buchenhorst came under the name Żelimucha to Poland and is now a district of Gmina Białogard.

Church

Buchenhorst belonged to Marie parish in Belgard and was thus in the church Belgard county in Pomerania within the ecclesiastical province of the Protestant Church of the Old Prussian Union. Last German clergy were the 1945 Fallen Pastor Gerhard Bad and the reigning until 1947 Superintendent John Zitzke.

Today, the site is within the parish in the Diocese of Koszalin - Pomerania Greater Poland the Polish Evangelical-Augsburg Church.

School

Until 1846, the book Horster children had to attend school in Kösternitz. After that they went to the newly opened on-site elementary school. Last German teacher was Axel Trapp.

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