Żoruchowo

Zoruchowo ( German Sorchow, Kasch. Żorëchòwò ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the rural community Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical location

Zoruchowo located in Pomerania, on the left bank of the Lupow ( Łupawa ), 19 kilometers northeast of Slupsk ( Stolp ).

History

From pre- or early times the castle ramparts comes on a hill projection on the meadow valley between Sorchow and Lankwitz. Sorchow originally consisted of three parts: one part was Janitzsches fief, the other two parts were gang Mersches fief. It was not until 1780 united captain Johann Diterich of Janitz the whole village in his hand.

About 1784 Sorchow had three outworks, five farmers and seven Kossäten a total of 21 households.

In 1793, a Braunschweig is Kolberg (now Polish: Kolobrzeg ) as the owner of Sorchow and Brenkenhofsthal ( Przybynin ) and Papsteinthal called. Since 1841 Philip was from Braunschweig to Mr. Sorchow that on whose eldest son Richard passed in 1855, who died in Sorchow 1884. His son, Barnim took over the possession, in 1905 to his son Egon, the last Lord on Sochow came. In 1938 the manor had a plant area of ​​1249 hectares. Besides the good there was in Sorchow still 18 farms.

In 1910 404 residents were registered in Sorchow. Their number was 1933, 340 and 1939 only 316

By 1945 Sorchow belonged to the district of Stolp in Pomerania in the administrative district of the Prussian province of Pomerania. The municipal area also included the three districts degradation, Barnim height and Private Forestry house. Sorchow was then the seat of the homonymous administrative and civil registry district in the Sorchow except the municipalities Lankwitz (now Polish: Łękwica ) Schojow ( Zgojewo ), Wendish Buckow ( 1938-45 Buchstein, now Bukowa ) and Wendish Silkow ( 1938-45 Schwerin height, now Zelkow ) were incorporated. District court district was Stolp.

On March 9, 1945, Soviet troops occupied the town without a fight. In June 1945, Poland came to Sorchow that an administrative body einrichteten here, after they had taken possession of all the houses and apartments. The village population has been displaced due to the so-called Bierut Decrees of Sorchow, the last inhabitants had on August 8, 1947 left the place. Later on in the Federal Republic of Germany identified 119 and in the GDR 88 expelled from Sorchow villagers. From Sorchow the Polish Zoruchowo, now ( 1975-1998 Slupsk Province ) belongs to the Gmina Główczyce in powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship was. Here now live 574 people.

Church

The population of Sorchow until 1945 almost all Protestant denomination. By 1899 the village belonged to the parish of Great Guards (today Polish: Gardna Wielka ), then to the parish Wendish Silkow ( 1938-45 Schwerin height, Polish: Żelkowo ) in the church Stolp - old town in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. Last German minister was Pastor Fritz Käding.

Since 1945 the inhabitants of Zoruchowo are predominantly Catholic. The place is now still connected to Żelkowo (Wendish Silkow or Schwerin height ), but the local church is now a branch church in the parish Wrzeście ( Freist ), in the newly formed Office of the Dean Główczyce ( Glowitz ) incorporated in the diocese Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland been. Here surviving Protestant church members now belong to Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ) in the Diocese of Pomerania - Greater Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland.

School

In the single-stage in 1932 elementary school in Sorchow a teacher taught 47 school children. The last German teacher was Ernst Spiller, the 1942 is like.

Traffic

In the northwest, the province road leads 213 ( Slupsk - Celbowo ( Celbau ) ) over, which can be reached via one of Barnimiec ( Barnim height ) upcoming highway. A rail connection no longer exists, since 1945 the railway line Stolp - Dargeröse the stumbling Railways ( railway station: Żelkowo (Wendish Silkow, 1938-45 Schwerin height), 3 km) destroyed and was dismantled.

References

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