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Dąbrówka
Dabrówka pod Barcinem, a manor in Szubin county; covers 1,788
inorgas [a morga or mórg ranges between some 26 to 56 sq. km.
in this case probably 26 sq. km.]; post office in Barcin, 4 km. away;
railway
station 15 km. away in Broniewice (Amsee).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw
Submitted by: This translation, by William
F. Hoffman, first appeared in the Summer 1996 issue of "Bulletin
of the Polish Genealogical Society of America". (Nov 1998)

Dębica
A town located at 50 degrees 1' latitude
and 39 degrees 2' longitude*, on the river Wisloka, in Ropczyce county
[powiat], it has an area of 1,232 morgs.
There are 286 houses, 1,307 male inhabitants and 1,452 female, for a total
of 2,759, of whom 450 are Catholic and 2,309 Jewish. It is the site of
the county court, a military police post, a notary's office, a post office
and telegraph office. There is a Latin-rite parish in the town, belonging
to the Ropczyce deanery. The parish church is of stone, built in 1318
and at some unknown point dedicated to Sts. Jadwiga and Malgorzata [Margaret].
There is a Jewish "kahal" [community, assembly of elders] and
a synagogue. There is a paupers' fund for support of the poor, but it
is not known by whom it was founded, when, and on what authority. The
property which is the source of the fund's capital consists of 6 morgs
of land and 3,000 Rhenish zlotys in bonds. There is a 4-grade public school.
One doctor, two surgeons, and a pharmacist. The municipal gmina [township,
administrative district] has only 3,000 Rhenish zlotys of assets. Debica
lies on the Vienna governmental highway, and is also a departure point
for a national road to Tarnobrzeg and Nabrzezie. In the town is one of
the more important stations of the Karol Ludwig railway (111 km. from
Krakow) with extensive buildings and storehouses and a rather pretty passenger
station. Industrial plants in Debica are: a steam mill, steam sawmill,
match factory, soap-works, glass-works and alcohol distillery. There is
brisk commercial activity, particularly the transportation of goods by
rail. The populace supports itself primarily by industry and trade. Despite
such advantageous economic conditions, the town is poor; it has only a
few nice brick houses, the rest are squalid mud huts, occupied by the
poor Jewish population. The manorial tract belongs to the Debica demesne,
property of the Counts Raczynski, the central point being the palace in
Zawada, 4 km. from Debica.
*[In many Slownik entries longitude is
given by an obsolete meridian system using Ferro (Hierro) of the Canary
Islands as base point. Ferro lies at about 18 degrees W by the system
now accepted as standard; so to arrive at approximately the correct longitude,
subtract 18 degrees from the longitude given in the article. By modern
reckoning Debica lies at 50 degrees 03', 21 degrees 25'.]
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGST
Polish Footprints November 1997, and appears here with express permission
of the PGST
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw. Translated by Martin
Kurtin.
Debiny
In German, Eichfelde. Near Obodowo, is mentioned as a colony,
about 1 mile from Waldowo near Sepolno krajenskie, 997.27 morgs in
size. In 1868 there were 48 houses, 109 buildings, 322 inhabitants of
whom
249 were Lutheran and 69 Catholic. Source: Slownik
Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted & translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh,
PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Feb
2001)

Dewergi
Dewergi - (Polish Dziewiergi) a peasant village in Oszmiana
powiat, within the gmina and treasury estate of Bakszty (9.6 km. away).
In 1865 it had 109 inhabitants, according to the census.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw. [Vol. XVa, p. 406].
Translated by Michael Gansecki, PGSA August 2000 Rodziny.
Used wth permission.

Dlugopole
- in the county of Nowy Targ
The village is located on the south
bank of Czarny Dunajec. It borders the villages of Krauszow on the east,
Dzial on the north, Czarny Dunajec on the south and Wroblowka on the west.
It also borders the village of Rogoznik on the south where the Czarny
stream flows. It is 8 kilometers from Nowy Targ, and belongs to Ludzmierz
parish 3 kilometers away.
In 1869 the village had 90 houses, 451
people. In 1880, the diocese of Tarnow counted 399 catholics. In 1777,
there were 56 houses and 274 people. In 1799, 74 houses and 342 people,
and in 1829, 77 houses and 385 people.
The small cultivated land contains 808
morgs in oats, fields and gardens 156, fertile pastures 284 and forests
25. The owner of the village is Leona Bzowska.
The average height of the village is
630 meters. It has a water powered sawmill. A small chapel under the name
of St. Florian, patron saint of fire, was erected in the 18th century.
The chapel was built after the village was destroyed by fire. Priests
from Ludzmierz have mass on St. Florians day.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted by: Translated by Rose Szczech
(Jan 1998).

Dl~utowo
Dlutowo, a village on the river Dzialdowka, Mlawa powiat,
Zielun gmina, Dlutowo parish. It has a wooden parish church, a chapel,
and a windmill; the church is said to have been built in 1785. In 1827
there were 42 houses and 301 inhabitants in Dlutowo; at present [i.e.,
when the Slownik was compiled] it has 56 houses, 52 buildings, and 614
inhabitants. The Dlutowo estate consists of the villages of Wawrowo, Konopaty,
Zielun, and Ruda; it has a surface area of 6,203 mÑrgs, including 2,385
of farmland and 1,182 of land belonging to the peasants. Dlutowo parish,
of Mlawa deanery, numbers 2,088 souls.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw [1881, vol. 2, p. 41].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Spring 1998 Bulletin.
Domaradz
Domaradz, or Domaradzow, with Plosina, Katy, Krzywe,
Zatyle, and Poremby, a village in Brzozow powiat, on the Brzozowka, a
tributary of the Wislok (Stobnica?), at 49 degrees 48' north, 39 degreees
37 east from Ferro [would be about 21 degrees 57' by the coordinates used
as standard today], 13 km. northwest of Brzozow, 6 km. north of the post
office in Jasienica. There is a Roman Catholic parish in the village,
a Greek Catholic parish in Izdebki. There are 495 houses in Domaradz along
with Plosina, Katy and Zatyle, and 2,653 inhabitants. The major estate
covers 276 mÑrgs of farmland, 54 of meadows and gardens, 32 of pastures,
and 444 of forests; the minor estate has 2,523 morgs of farmland, 388
of meadows and gardens, 242 of pastures, and 344 of forests. In the village
there is a 1-class state school, a savings society with a capital of 300
Rhenish zl., and a large brewing factory. The major estate belongs to
the Latin bishops [Latin-rite or Roman Catholic, as opposed to Greek Catholic]
of Przemysl. The pedagogue Maksymilian Lyszkowski was born in Domaradz.
The first trace of the founding of a parish here is in records from 1510;
Jan Dziaduski, Bishop of Przemysl, renewed its funding in 1545; whereas
in 1542 Stanislaw Tarlo consecrated the church, under the patronage of
St. Mikolaj, Bishop; but that church, as best we can judge, is not the
same as the one existing today. In 1523 Jan Krzysztof Szembek, Bishop
of Przemysl, incorporated the benefice in Domaradz into the collegiate
chapter in Brzozow. There are 2,452 Catholics in the parish, 45 Jews.
- B. R.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw [1881, vol. 2, pp. 113-114]
A village in Brzozów county. In 1589 it was the
property of the bishops of Przemysl, and had 30 lan’s, 3 zagroda’s,
9 tenant farmers, and a mill. It is mentioned in a document from 1396.
See Lutcza.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1902, vol. 15-1, pp. 428]
Translated by William F. Hoffman, Winter 1999 Bulletin.

Dominikowice
A village in Gorlice powiat, served by
the Roman Catholic parish in Kobylanka, 5.6 km. from Gorlice. The manor
grounds have 163 morgs of farmland, 14 of meadows, 6 of pasturage, 389
of woods. The peasants have 828 morgs of farmland (oat soil [? -- "gleba
owsiana"], 177 of meadows, 65 of pasturage, 62 of woods. It has 159
houses, 1,004 inhabitants, Roman Catholics. The demesne belongs to the
Kobylanka estate, which is the property of Aleksander Skrzyn~ski. Oil
is said to have been discovered on the grounds of Dominikowice. -- M.
Z. S.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego, vol. 2, p. 117, Warsaw 1881
Submitted by: William F. Hoffman (Nov
1997)

Dragano~wka
A village in Tarnopol county, residing on a little
no-name river, which the first arm has its source on the land in Great
Chodaczkow,
the second north-west arm starts on the lands in Domamorycz. These arms
link in Poczapince and go from west to east, crossing Draganowka and
proceeds
one mile further east near the village of Buczniow, ending into the Seret
river.
It is situated 4.4 miles southwest of Tarnopol; it is
situated in the fertile, but cold, part of Galician Podole between the
Styrpa and Seret rivers.
Area (in acres):
Large estates: 1778 - soils, 54 - meadows and gardens, 36 - pastures,
183- forests
Smaller estates: 2543 - soils, 141 - meadows and gardens, 165 - pastures.
People: Roman-Catholics = 1191, Greek-Catholics = 244,
Jewish = 15, total = 1450.
There are two Latin parishes here. They were founded
in 1852 by the Draganowka and Poczapince villages, Maryanna Drohojowskis
Sobolewska and the religious capital (Vienna). The brick church, Virgin
Mary, was consecrated in 1872. The Patron of these is the Austrian Emperor
in his title as head of the religious capital. Aside from Draganowka,
the parish includes the village of Poczapince with 774 Roman-Catholics.
Total Catholics in the whole parish - 1965, Jewish - 25. Parish belongs
to Trembowla decanate. Greek-Catholic parish belongs to Tarnopol decanate
with branch in Poczapince.
In this village there is a school with 1 teacher and
the loan-society with 1468 zlr.w.a. (currency ?). The largest landowner
is Stanislaw Garapich.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw 1881.
Translated by Kyzysztof
Barcikowkis (Katowice, Poland) and Frederick Siegle (Churchville, Pa).

Dręstwo
Drestwo, village on the lake of the same name, in Szczuczyn
powiat, Pruska gmina, Barglowo parish, with 994 morgs of land. In 1827
Drestwo had 38 houses, 288 inhabitants. Drestwo, Rybczyzna or Woznowiejskie,
a lake in Szczuczyn powiat, northeast of Rajgród, stretches 7.5 km.
from southwest to northeast, between the villages of Wozna wies and
Rybczyzna, goes around the village of Drestwo, touches the grounds
of Rajgród and of the villages of Barszcze and Solistówka to the north.
Its area is 180 morgs, and its banks are primarily wooded and boggy.
The river Jegrznia flows through it and connects Lake Drestwo to Lake
Rajgrodzkie. - Br. Ch. [Bronislaw Chleboski]
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1881, vol. 2, p. 145].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Winter 1998 Bulletin.

Drozdzienica.
In German, Drausnitz. A knightly village in the county
of Chojnice. In size: 3684 morgs. It has 22 buildings and 7 dwellings,
102 Catholics and 69 Lutherans. parish of Kamien krajenski.
In German, Drausnitz. A peasant village in the county
of Chojnice. In area 2930 morgs. 103 buildings, 40 dwellings, 155 Catholics
and
190 Lutherans.
parish of Kamien krajenski.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted & translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh,
PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Feb
2001)

Drzewicz
A peasant village in Chojnice county. Parish and
post office in Brusy. School in Cyckowy. Size: 5 150 morgs. 17 buildings,
7 dwelling houses. 71 Catholics, 7 Lutherans.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted & translated
by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (May
2003)

Drzycim
Link to
Suchomski Ancestry Website.
Translation by Jamea D. Summers.

Duczymin
Duczymin koscielny and Duczymin-nowa-wies, a village
in Przasnysz county, Bugzy Ploskie gmina, Krzynowloga parish. It has
a branch church
of that parish built by Antoni Zieliƒski. In 1827 there were 23
houses there and 141 inhabitants. The manorial farmstead of Duczymin
koscielny, along with the villages of D. Koscielny, Rapaty, and Gajka
or Zielony Bor, are 119 km. from Plock, 30 km. from Przasnysz, 5 km.
from Chorzele, and 52 km. from the river Dzialdowka in Strzegowo. Its
area totals 853 morgs, to wit, 351 of farmland and gardens, 118 of meadows,
58 of pastureland, 314 of forests, and 12 of unused land and public squares.
There are 13 wooding buildings
.
The villages of Duczymin koscielny, Rapaty, and Gajka, or Zielony Bor,
have a total of 31 settlements, with 348 morgs of land. The manorial
farmstead of Duczymin-Nowawies with the village of Duczymin Nowa wies
and Jedlinka is 127 km. from Plock, 33 from Przasnysz, 7.5 from Chorzele,
30 from Mlawa. Its area totals 1,115 morgs, to wit, 337 of farmland and
gardens, 88 of meadows, 22 of pastureland, 652 of forests, 5 of undergrowth,
and 12 of unused land and public squares. There are 6 stone buildings
and 12 wooden ones. The border is about half a kilometer away. In some
localities there are deposits of peat, ore, and brown coal. The river
Orzyc flows through the territory.
The village of Duczymin Nowa wies has 48 settlements, 272 morgs of land.
The colony of Jedlinka has 18 settlements and 205 morgs of land.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1881 [Vol. 2, page 207].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Winter 2003 Bulletin.

Dulcza Mala
Dulcza Mala, a village in Mielec county, about 18 kilometers
south west of Mielec, about 7 kilometers north west of the post office
and Roman Catholic parish in Radomysl Wlk. There are 205 houses, 1106
residents. The major estate consists of tillable fields 416, meadow and
gardens 52, pasture 26, forest 994 mor.; the minor estate has tillable
fields 1563, meadow and gardens 162, pasture 327, forest 50 mr. In the
village is a one class school and a common brick kiln. The owner of the
major estate is Count Bobrowski.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw 1881.
Submitted and translated by James Czuchra, Chicago, IL.
Jan 2001

Dulcza Wielka
Dulcza Wielka with Wola dulecka, a village in Pilzno
county, about 25 kilometers north of Pilzno, about 4.5 kilometers from
the post office in Radomysl Wlk. The Roman Catholic parish is in Zdziarzec.
There are 286 houses, 1523 residents. The major estate has tillable fields
474, meadow and gardens 119, pasture 64, forest 1356 mr. The minor estate
has tillable fields 1768, meadow and gardens 281, pasture 126, forest
8 mr. In the village is a one class school. The owner of the major estate
is the Count Raczynski family of Debica. Lu. Dz.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw 1881.
Submitted and translated by James Czuchra, Chicago, IL.
Jan.2001

Duleczka
Wolka
Duleczka Wolka, a village in the Mielec county, about
16 kilometers south west of Mielec, towards Radomysl Wlk. The Roman Catholic
parish and post office are in Radomysl Wlk. There are 62 houses, 386 residents;
the major estate consists of tillable fields 14, meadow and gardens 2,
pasture 2, forest 65 mor.; the minor estate has tillable fields 340, meadow
and gardens 27, pasture 31, forest 1 m. The owner of the major estate
is the Count Raczynski family.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw 1881.
Submitted and translated by James Czuchra, Chicago, IL.
Jan.2001

Dumblance
A village in the parish and rural district of Kopciowo,
Sejny County. It is located 28 versts from Sejny and has 6 houses and
86 residents.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw [1891, vol. 2, pg. 219].
Translated by Dorothy Leivers, Hadlow, Kent, England,
Dorfleiv@aol.com (May
2004)

Dylewo~nowe
A village, Ostroleka powiat,
Dylewo gmina, Kadzidlo parish. In 1827 there were 35 houses
there and 210 inhabitants; it currently has 1,362 morgs of land.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881 [Volume 2, page 245].
Submitted by: This translation, by William
F. Hoffman, first appeared in the November 1998 issue of "Bulletin
of the PGSA". (Nov 1998)

Dylewo-stare
A village, and Dylewo Dwor,
folwark, Ostroleka powiat, Dylewo gmina, Kadzidlo
parish. The gmina office is here. In 1827 54 houses
were counted here and 294 inhabitants; it currently covers 1,334 morgs.
Dylewo gmina has a population of 5,263, covering 18,611 morgs,
and the gmina court, district I, is in Kadzidlo, 6 wiorstas
away; the post office is in Ostroleka, 13 wiorstas away. The
gmina includes: Chudek, Czarnostrzew, Dylewo-nowe, D.-stare,
Gleba, Jeglewiec, Kadzidlo, Kamienowizna, Karaska, Kierzek, Kuczynskie,
Lodziska, Obierwia, Olszewka, Piasecznia, Siarki, Strzalki, Szafarnia,
Szarczalaka, and Szwedrowy Most, all peasant villages. The rural
people (namely in Dylewo) produce linen [or "cloth"].
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881 [Volume 2, page 245].
Submitted by: This translation, by William
F. Hoffman, first appeared in the Winter 1996-1997 issue of "Bulletin
of the Polish Genealogical Society of America". (Mar 1999)

Dzial
- in the district of Podhale
The villge belongs to the parish in
Odrowaz. It lies near the stream Piekielnik, 500 m to the north and 9
km from Nowy Targ straight to the west. The Odrowaz parish is 4 km east.
The village borders on the east with Morawczyna, on the south with Dlugopole,
on the west with Czarny Dunajec and from the northwest with Pieniazkowice.
The stream Piekielnik cuts through the south section of the territory
flowing from the hill Zadkowka 658 m in elevation. There is no large portion
of land and the smaller land sections total 540 Austrian morg of farm
land, 146 morg of fields and gardens, 156 morg of pastures, 11 morg of
forests.
There were 97 houses, and 432 people.
According to Tarnow Archdiocese in 1880, there were 620 Roman Catholic
Souls. In 1777 there were 53 houses and 259 people; in 1797; 71 houses
and 381 people; in 1824, 76 houses and 368 people. Documents from 1636
state there were 8 woodcutters, 1 hut owner and 8 were landless.
There also was a local administrator
(soltys). In 1628 the soltys was Krzysztof Dzielski. According to a 1765
document, there were 8 portions of farms; all taxes were 781 zloty 21
groszy. At that time the local administrators were Maciej and Andrzej
Dzielski, who were in favor with August III from 3 February 1749.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted and Translated by: Rose Szczech
(Apr 1998)

Dzial~dowo
Dzialdowo, German Soldau, a town in Niborsk powiat [now
called "Nidzica, " in German "Kreis Neidenburg"], East Prussia, in a marshy
area which took its name from the town, on the highway to Lidzbark, Nibork
and DabrÑwno. It is a little more than 3 1/2 km. from the [border of the]
Congress Kingdom, 15 km. from Nibork. It has a fortified castle that was
established in 1306 by the Teutonic Knights. The town was built in 1349,
and at the time of its establishment possessed an area of 30 wlokas, in
addition to other, smaller properties.
Dzialdowo, along with the entire region, has been populated
since time immemorial. One still comes across numerous pagan burial sites.
Until quite recently one could see burial mounds in almost every village;
called Capornen (?) in German, they reached a height of four meters. In
the nearby village of Koszelewki (in German Klein Koschlau) 15 stone circles
(Steinrundberge) were found, within which there were numerous burial urns.
The Teutonic Knights' wojts (German Vogte) who administered the area had
their seats at the the castle. In addition to Dzialdowo and the castle
and folwark, their jurisdiction included: 111 feudal estates, 66 of them
established on terms of Chelmno law (Kùlmische Dienste) and 34 Old Prussian;
11 German villages with 690 rental wlokas, no Prussian villages; two mills
paying a rent of 210 bushels of rye; and 11 rural parsonages.
Dzialdowo suffered a great deal during the wars, first
during that of the Teutonic Knights and Lithuanians in 1377. In 1409 it
was burned down by the Lithuanians. A year later, after the victory at
GrÙnwald, it was given by Wladyslaw Jagiello to the Mazovian prince Ziemowit;
soon after it was won back by the Knights. In 1454 when all of Prussia
joined with Poland as its fatherland, the local inhabitants expelled the
Knights manning the castle and surrendered to Poland. In 1455 the Teutonic
Knights regained the castle. Then Jan Koldaczek of Jagiello's army, having
invented for himself the title of Elblag Commander of the Knights, entered
Dzialdowo, took the castle, and burned down the city. The Swedish King
Karl Gustav had his headquarters in Dzialdowo in 1656. In 1737 and 1748
Dzialdowo again experienced heavy damage due to fires.
At present Dzialdowo has about 3,000 inhabitants, and
has a Lutheran church taken from the Catholics during the Reformation,
as well as, a post office, and a telegraph station. The Knights' castle
is still fairly well preserved. In 1701 King Friedrich gave the castle
chapel to the local Protestant congregation for their use. From the very
beginning of the Reformation, Catholics were deprived of services. It
was not until 1858 that a mission station was founded there, which by
20 January 1860 had already been named as a separate parish. The newly-built
church was consecrated by the Chelmno bishop at the time, Jan Nepomucen
Marwicz, on 17 August 1862; he gave it the name of St. Wojciech [in German
or English "Albert" or "Adalbert"]. The Dzialdowo parish has 1,730 souls,
450 of them in the town; 40 villages belong to it, and it is in the newly
created deanery of Pomezania (in the ancient territory of that name),
of Chelmno diocese, under the auspices of the bishop. In addition to the
Lutheran schools in the town there is also a private Catholic school,
supported by contributions from the Diocesan Society of St. Wojciech and
St. Boniface, which also support the pastor.
Local industry and trades are fairly healthy; there is
a woolen cloth factory, workshops for cloth, hides, and so on. Near the
town there are springs of iron mineral water and iron ore mines. There
are numerous fairs: four a year for cattle, two for sheep, two for cloth,
and four with stalls. Rev. Frydrychowitcz
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego
- Warsaw [1881, vol. 2, pp. 262-263].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Spring 1998 Bulletin.

Dziedno
A village. Also a colony with 40 dwelling houses, 366 inhabitants
of whom 150 are Lutheran, 216 Catholic. 93 are illiterate.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted & translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh,
PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Feb
2001)

Dziewa
A village and district, Inowroclaw county;
3 localities: 1) Dziewa a village; 2) Dziewa, an estate, 1,143 morgs in
size; 3) Czajka, an inn, 8 houses, 115 inhabitants, 11 Protestant, 104
Catholic, 55 illiterate. The postal station is at Papros, on the
border of the Kingdom of Poland, 5 km. away, and the railway station is
at Inowroclaw, 14 km. away. Formerly the property of J. Sobeski.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw
Submitted by: This translation, by William
F. Hoffman, first appeared in the November 1998 issue of "Bulletin
of the PGSA". (Nov 1998)

Dziewierzewo
(1) ... A village in the powiat of Wagrowiecki containing 11 homes, 115 inhabiants, 105 Catholics, 10 Protestants, 49 illeiterates. A Catholic Church is located here and belongs to the dekanet of Lekinskiego. (Kalisz gubernia)
(2) ... A Dominion ( Manor Lindenbruck) 5669 morgs ( abt. 7900 acres) of cultivated lands and gardens, 10 homes 338 inhabiants, 20 Protestants, 318 Catholics 157 illerates.
There is a Post Office at Kcynia (Exin) about 5 klm distant, a railroad station at Osiek about 25 klm distant. Together with Graboszewem the property of the Moszczenski family.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw
Translated by Jim Piechorowski, PGSA Member #6005/6151, July 2005; families: Piechorowski / Piechurowski

Dzwierszno
(Dzwierzchno) - County of Wyrzysk
Dzwierzchno
Wielkie
- also known as Zwierzchno Wielkie or
by the German name of Dreidorf Gross.
A village by the lake consisting of 29
homes, 267 inhabitants, 134 Evangelists, 133 Catholics, and 36 illiterates.
The parish church belongs to the Deanery of Bydgoszcz. The post office
is in the village; the railroad station in Nakqlo is 25 Km away; from
the town of Lobqzencia it is 10 Km to the east.
Dzwierzchno Male
- also known as Zwierzchno Male or by
the German name of Dreidorf Klein.
A village consisting of 60 homes, 447
inhabitants, 389 Evangelists, 58 Catholics, and 52 illiterates. Both villages
are joined to each other. Almost all around the vicinity are found Swedish
trenches from the time of King Jan Kazimierz. Different iron and silver
ornaments were dug up in the vicinity.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1881
Submitted by: Stan Schmidt, 106 S. Hill
St., Roselle, IL 60172 (Dec 1996)
Families of members doing research in
Dzwierszno. Click on researcher name to send E-mail.

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