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Wabrzezno
- in German, Briesen in WestPrussen.
- in documents Wambrez, Wambrzessno, Fredeke,Wambresin,
Fredeck,Vridecke, or Frydek.
The city, once the residence of bishops of Chelmo, now
a county seat, in the periphery of the regency of Kwidzyn. It is situated
by the eastern railroad (in the Torun-Wystruc area), between two lakes:
Zamkowe (Schloss-See) and Wabrzeskie (Friedeck-See). Sandy soil, mixed
with clay, and medium fertility. Three beaten roads separate here to
Chelmo, Radzyn and Brodnica. Personal mail reaches Kornatow (20 kms
away). In the city there is an enlistment office, circuit court, and
a post office class II; the train station is 3 kms away from the city.
Further, there is a Roman Catholic church, Evangelical church, a synagogue,
and a new city hall (1892). It also has a beautiful market place, savings
institution, and loan office, in which there were 1,777,552 marks in
liuid ../assets (1884).
In 1885 there were 437 homes, 1008 chimneyless huts,
2159 Catholics, 1893 Evangelicals, 13 Baptists, and 589 Jews; altogether
4654 inhabitants, of which 46 inhabitants and 3 homes belong to the
Presbytery. Their main occupation is farming, raising cattle, trading
in grain, selling pigs, and industry; the Poles have 6 colonial businesses
and 1 clothing store. At the cattle count in 1892 there were 358 horses,
698 horned cattle, 80 sheep, 863 pigs, 169 chickens, and 131 beehives.
Every year there are four fairs here and a marketplace sale every week.
The city area with the Presbytery has 3887 acres (3188 tilled soil,
380 in meadows). The city budget for 1893 amounts of 51,231 marks.
Of which 18,468 marks were set aside for schools, 4125 marks for the
poor. In 1893, the city school had 421 Catholic children, 392 Evangelical,
and 55 Jewish. In 1888 the city council was made up of 9 Catholic,
7 Jews and 2 Protestants.
Wabrzezno lies in a section that was populated a long
time ago. From time to time various artifacts were found in the lake
between the city and today's city cemetery. A clay vessel of original
spherical form and a bronze fish-hook are in the possession of the
Historical Society in Kwidzyn, and a stone hammer and a tool of deer-horn
exists in the museum of the Society of Science Friends in Poznan. Furthermore,
skeleton heads from graves in, together with beads, bronze, and fibula
were found here. At the site of today's city cemetery, there was once
a trench, whose original shape has already disappeared. On the southern
side of this trench, almost at its base, was found a skeleton besides
which was a flint knife. This is the only sample in West Prussia having
the semblance of a paleolithic artaicle (see explanations to the map
of Ossowski, p. 30).
Wabrzezno obtained first city rights in 1246, when the
Grand Master of the Crusaders Henry von Hohenlohe assigned to the Bishop
of Chelmo Heidenreich, 25,000 acres of the Chelmo lands near Loza,
i.e., near Chelmza, Wabrzezno (Wambrez) and Bobrow, which were already
promised to his predecessor Bishop Chrystyan (see "U.B. des Bist.
Culm.", p.6, no.14). When Wabrzezno received its first city privileges
it is not known, new privileges were given in 1534 by the Bishop Jan
von Hoefen Dantiscus, giving the poor inhabitannts 1660 acres which
was set aside for them at the first settlement and another 830 acres
belonging to the empty village Podmiejska on the Chelmo rights. For
this they had to give every year on St. Martin's half a tax on each
40 acres in Prussian coin, counting the tax at 20 groszy, 1 bushel
of oats, 2 chickens and do customary farm work. Besides this they were
given 85 acres of farm land, formerly belonging to the bishop?s castle,for
which they had to pay 10 skojcy per each 1.5 acre. And in acknowledgment
of the jurisdiction, all inhabitants who brew beer have to pay on St.
Martin's 5 groszy from each household, the others 2 groszy from each
house or locale. Transferred also were the city houses built around
the city hall, brewery, bath house and 5 lots with all accessories.
From the butcher's booths they have to give half a stone of lard from
each, from baker's booths and others one-half of this levy has to flow
into our coffers and half to the city's. Finally the bishop gave the
city a coat of arms or a seal: one wing of an eagle of black color
and on the reverse of that wing a shepherd's staff or a pastoral seal,
dated in the city Fredeck (see Woelky, Urkb. d. Bist. Culm., no. 894,p.
751).
About the city?s further events we have very little
information. The Crusaders books of losses from the beginning of the
15th century relate that the city and surrounding villages were burned
to the ground in the recent wars. In the 13 year war (1454-66), the
city inhabitants sided with Poland and paid homage to the king in Torun
at the end of May 1454. Around 1466 the Crusaders occupied the castle
and burned it down (see Scrpt. rer Pr., V, p. 193). In 1499 the mayor
here was Jan Noborkowski, the court bench was occupied by Jan Palcer,
Stanislaw Odoj, Matyasz Mazgaj, Jan Bialy and others; it is evident
here that thePolish element was not in the minority. In 1569 the mayor
was Jan Zegwirtski (see Ketrz., About the Polish People, p. 175). In
the inventory of the bishopric of Chelmo from 1731 we read: the city
of Wabrzezno has 2491 acres; exists on rights given it for all times,
they pay yearly a canon the amount of 100 zloty from these 2491 acres.
They yield 30 bushels of wheat, 30 bushels of rye, from these 2491
acres.
At harvest time for thrashing they would send 60 people
with sickles, 60 for raking, 60 wagons for hauling hay. From the brewing
of beer they gave one-fourth of each container of the malt to the castle.
They have 5 fairs, where one-half of the fair tax goes to the city
(p.29). In 1709 the city had 665 inhabitants, 84 homes, and 19 empty
lots (see Topografia Goldbecka, p.36). In 1858 there were 331 homes,
10 windmills, 3030 inhabitants, namely 1320 Evangelists and 1304 Catholics.
The city lies on an elevated side of a lake (eastern
side) and is quite well developed around a spacious market place. It
has no buildings of archeological importance. Old entrenchments disappeared
completely. The bishops' castle stood a little beyond the city on a
hill, on the northwest side, in the bend of the castle's lake. It is
composed of a castle proper and the castle foreground surrounded by
a wall. Both sections were connected with each other by a drawbridge.
Its interior installation is unknown; in a document from 1403 there
is mention of a winter refectory. A visit by Strzesz mentions the castle's
chapel called St. Mark's. It was comparable even to the most beautiful
chapel of the Crusaders.
From the castle's hill there is a wide view; about 8
churches, a multitude of villages and strewn little settlements appear
on the horizon. Today, from the castle remains only the moat, a section
of the wall and rubble. The erection of the castle is attributed to
Bishop Herman (1301-11). In documents it appears for the first time
in 1321 in the charter of Bishop Mikolaj. In the 13 year war (1454-66)
it was hard hit, the solicitous bishops fixed it anew. In 1599 Bishop
Tylicki permitted that the whole convent of Benedictine sisters from
Torun have refuge in it from a pestilence. The Wabrzezno castle was
the residence of bishops as far back as the middle of the 17th century.
Alas, different wars, especially Swedish, destoryed
everything. In 1670 the castle and chapel were already an empty ruin.
After the secularization, King Frederick II permitted the use of materials
from the empty castle in the partial rebuilding of the torched city.
The Catholic church of St. Simon and St. Jude, under the patronage
of the bishop, stands on a hill in the southwest section of the city.
In the eastern part, the presbytery and the sacristy are built of stone
and brick, it originates from the beginning of the 14th century. The
western part, which was burned down, was probably rebuilt about 1700
from the rubble of the old castle. A strong but somewhat short tower
was built first in 1779. On the cemetery, surrounded by a wall, stands
a mighty cross of hewn rock. In 1881 the local church was rebuilt and
enlarged.
Of the relics in the church, a silver ostensorium with
a pointed arch deserves attention, as well as a silver chalice and
a large bell, that is inscribed with the following words: "Michael
Wittwerck Gedani made me in 1705". After the burning of the city
of Fredeck and the church and its bell-tower, the most illustrious
and reverend Theodore Potocki, Bishop of Chelmo and Pomerania had this
bell constructed in honor of St. Theodore, martyr, in 1705. Finally,
a miraculous painting deserves special mention, bedecked with votive
offerings, designated for carrying in processions, painted on canvas.
The whole figure was clothed with a silver, gilt-edged dress and bedecked
with a crown, around the head could be seen rays and 12 gold stars.
On the reverse side is a picture of Lord Jesus, very old but not as
beautiful. The painting of the Blessed Virgin originates from the 18th
century. From time immormial this painting was located in Kowalewo
and was venerated by the populace as miraculous. Finally in 1685, by
permission of Bishop Opalinski, it was transported to Wabrzezno (see "Miraculous
Paintings" of Count Fankidejski, p. 122).
In 1667 the pastor in Wabrzezno used to receive fodder
of 1 bushel of rye and the same amount of oats from each plow. From
the village, from each farm of 83 acres, he would recieve 1 bushel
of rye and the same amount of oats (see Visit of Strzesz, p.400). By
the church there is a hospital for 6 poor parishoners and a sorority
of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, founded in 1667,
which Pope Innocent XI approved in 1680. Formerly there was also here
a literary society, founded in 1593 by Bishop Piotr Kostka. In 1599
Magdalena Dzialynska-Galczewska funded a chaplain for the society with
a sizeable sum at the altar of the Blessed Virgin. In Wabrzezno in
1575 was born Fr. Bernard, a religious from the Benedictine Convent
in Lubien near Poznan, died there in 1603 in fame of holiness (see
Poland Mother of Saints, II, p. 284 etc., and Life and Miracles of
Fr. Bernard of Wabrzezno by Chawiszewski, Poznan 1881). The parish
in Wabrzezno of the same deaconate had 4117 souls in1892. It includes:
Wabrzezno, Rozgard, Mysliwiec, Cymbark, Prusy, Plebanka, Wronie, Walyczyk,
Sitno, Trzcianek, Nielub, Czystochleb, Labedz, Michalki, Stanislawki,
Katarzynki and Sicinek. Besides this there has been added to the parish,
the church in Lopatki and the adjoining settlements of Lopatki Polskie
and Buczek, Lopatki Niemieckie, Zaskocz and Zalesie, Wielkie and Male
Ksiazki, Jarentowice and Friedrichsdorf.To the deacanate of Wabrzezno
belong the parishes: Niedzwiedz, Bledowo, Wabrzezno and Lopatki, Nowa
Wies, Orzechowo, Pluznica and Rynsk.
The Evangelical church stands in the southeastern corner
of the market place; built in 1835; a rather prominent tower was built
in 1864. As regards art, a mention should be made of the altar, representing
Jesus Christ on Mount Olive, the work of Italian artist Daniel Crespi
of Milan (1592-1630; see Building andArt Monuements of\ West Prussia,
V. p. 20 and 93).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego,
Warsaw 1893
Submitted by:Stan Schmidt, 106 S. Hill St., Roselle,
IL 60172 (Dec 1996)
Families of members being researched in the Wabrzezno
area. Click on researcher name to send E-mail.

Waldowko
Also called Waldowek. The village contained 174 hectares
(about 430 acres), of which 149 (about 368 acres) are in plowed fields,
6 (15 acres)an, Gross Zirkwitz. A peasant village. Up until the partition
(1772) it was a table estate of the archbishops of Gniezno. There is
a mill in the village, on the Kamionka stream. In area it contains
5624 morgs. There are 74 dwelling houses. Catholics number 624; Lutherans
24. Nothing is mentioned about a manor/estate. Parish of Kamien krajenski.
Waldowko. A knightly estate. It contains 477 hectares
(about 1179 acres), of which 390 (964 acres) is in ploughed fields,
22 (about 54 acres) in meadow, and 44 (about 109 acres) in forest.
Parish of Waldowo.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1880
Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Feb
2003)

Wałdowo
Waldowo in Ziotow County. At the end of the 13th century
Waldowo was already seen to be in the possession of the Waldowski family.
This family was supposed to have German origins and to be descended
from a count Falo, burgrave of Czarnikau. In 1288 prince Mestwin II
of Pomerelia was attending the marriage of the duke of Pomerania in
Slupsk. Falo delivered to him there the message that his adoptive son
Przemyslaw of Wielka Poiska was being freed from the prison of the
duke of Wroclaw. For this joyous news Mestwin gifted burgrave Falo
the village Drozdzienica and a few adjoining estates. To these belonged
Resmin (Roszcziminy) and Pantau (Pamietowo), which it can be proved
were in possession of the family Waklowski in the 14th and 15th centuries.
One may assume that the village Pamietowo (from pamietac: to recall)
bears its name to recall the gifting of Mestwin to Falo. "The
grod-books confirm this supposition insofar as they demonstrate that
the estates Drozdzienica, Resmin and Pamietowo almost always lie in
one control, thus obviously have formed one complex. Also the Waldowskis
not seldom call themselves Walko a diminutive for Walo, i.e., Falo,
the named burgrave. So a Walko (Waldko), hereditary lord of Waldowo,
appears in the document of March 27, 1362 held in the Overpresidial
Archive in Poznania. Probably Pamietowo is the same place that is named
Wyssoka Sedliczhe in the document of 1288, and in documents of the
Teutonic Order is called Czedelitz: it has given up its name to honor
the gifting."
Many writers of history and books of heraldry report that the Waldowski's
are descended from Bavaria. They had also the surname Kramptenherr (Kramptenherz).
In olden days the family was supposed to have called itself Wensing (Wensyng,
Wendzing, Wendzyng); hence a branch called itself Wensing-Waklowski.
Other branches of this family were the Wlosciborski's of Wadowo and the
Czodlinski's of Waldowo. All Waklowski's belong to the house Topor.
In the 14th century the Waldowski's owned not only Drozdzienica, Resmin
and Pamietowo, but also Waldowo and Wielki Wlosciborz, and later still,
Tonin and Waldowek (Waldowko). Also the villages Lipinni, Dzidno, Luczmin
and Makowarsko, all lying along the lower course of the Sepóona
brook, belonged to them; nevertheless they ceded these villages to the
cloister at Byszewo in 1345 "for the good of their salvation".
At that time Joannes Waklowski was lord of these estates". Soon
thereupon (1358) a Peczo de Waldowo was named. In 1362 Walko (Waldko)
of Waldowo was mentioned. Quite frequently the name Arnold Waldowski
comes up in documents. He was between 1376-1394 hereditary lord of Waldowo
estate. A faulty identification of him with the Paluka's of the Znin
area is reported. In 1388 Ekhard of Waltiowo is mentioned, who received
from king W1adyslaw II Jagiello (1386-1434) many estates in Wielka Polska
in Poznan county thru documents of September 9, 1388. In 1405 lived Pietrasz
Waidowski..
From this family came forth Joannes Waldowski, bishop
of Libau, mentioned in 1424. In 1546 Laurentius WaI'dowski divided
the estates Waldowo, Waldowko, WIosciborz and Adamkowo with his brothers.
In 1597 Peter Waldowski was hereditary lord of Waldowo and Adamkowo.
In the feuds which the Polish knights carried on around the year 1600,
Watdowo must have suffered very much. On one map from the year 1596 Waldowo
is designated as "desertum". At the beginning of the 17th century
the place was again rebuilt, and in 1621 Anna Waldowska nee Zakrzewska
funded the church there. In 1644 Michael Waldowski died. In 1672 Ignacy
Franciszek Waldowski, who at that time was renowned for his legal training,
was born. In 1697 the Kaptur judge in Naklo, Adalbert Waldowski, married
Barbara Obrebska from Inowroclaw. In 1735 Joseph Waldowski died; he was
married to Theodora Jaworska from the house Sas; the marriage produced
3 daughters and one son. The oldest daughter, Anna, married Kazimierz
Korytowski of the coat-of-arms Mora; the second married a Gonszczynski,
the third married Andreas Krzywosondzki. The son Adam was married to
Anna Wojanowska. Probably Adam Waldowski sold the inherited estates,
because in 1767 the estate Waldowo was found in possession of Melchior
Kalkstein-Stolinski, who took over the estate for the appraised value
of 12,000 talers. In 1772 the Polish chamberlain Stanislaus Grabowski
was the owner of Waldowo. In 1788 Paul Augustyn Ignacy Gostómski
took over the estate for 150,000 talers. In 1791 Felix Zabinski temporarily
possessed it and in 1800 a Kalkstein-Oslowski had it. In order to divide
it for inheritance the estate was auctioned off in 1827. This Stanislaus
Kalkstein-Ostowski inheritance liquidation sale consisted of the estate
Waldowo (n. 314), the foiwark Adamkowo and a forest and was valued at
56,145 talers, 2 Sgr., 8 Pfennigs. The possession went to Aloysius Pradzynski,
who as county deputy made the well-being of the county his business.
He died in 1834 and left Waldowo to his widow. Thru inheritance then
Aloysius Pradzinski jr. became owner of Waldowo; from him Abraham Michelsohn
of Berlin bought it in 1875. Abraham sold it in 1879 to the non-noble
of private means, Felix Laudon. Bankruptcy proceedings over his fortune
had to be introduced in 1885, On May 29, 1886 the knightly estate Waldowo
was put up for compulsory sale. Its size at that time was 1351 hectares,
60 ares, .06 square meters (about 3339 acres), and was bought by the
non-noble of private means, Raphael Cohn from Poczdam, for 556,000 marks.
In the very next year Cohn became a fugitive because of serious document
falsification, and a warrant for his arrest and apprehension was issued.
In 1887 the knightly estate owner Anton Edler von Graeve of Borek, county
of Koschmin bought the estate Waldowo. In 1893 the knightly estate Waldowo
was bought from Edler von Graeve, by the Royal Colonization Commission,
for the purpose of parcelization and homesteading Germans. So then the
transformation of the estate district into Nowe Waldowo was approved
by means of the highest decree of February 3, 1902.
In the north of Nowe Waldowo were not inconsiderable forest-plains. The
Settlement Commission sold this standing timber to the merchant Grunbaum
in Poznaii. In 1903 the forest was entirely cut down and cleared. The
wood was for the most part used for railroad ties and to a lesser extent
for pit-props. One part of the forest area was again reforested; the
better part was made over into tillable land and given to German homesteaders.
The forester's house, in which 12 people lived in 1895, has decayed.
The former estate distillery was converted in 1900 into an independent
distillery with limited liability. The Warriors Union Nowe -WaIdowo was
founded on April 5, 1908.
Municipality of Waldowo
Waldowo lies in the eastern part of the county, 2.2 km (about 1 1/3 American
mile) from the border, on the highway connecting Sepolno, Trzciany, Wlosciborz,
and Waldowo.
Earlier there existed an estate and village Waldowo. The estate is now
transformed into a country community with the name Nowe Waldowo.
In the northeast of Waldowo is found the Swiadowo (Schwadowoer) lake,
which less frequently is called the Wilkowo lake. It is 4 hectares (almost
10 acres) in size and 2 meters (about 6 1/2 feet) deep and contains Karausche.
The history of the country community Waltiowo is that of the former estate
Waldowo.
In Waltiowo stands a Catholic church; already in 1358 there was such,
because in this year a pastor of Waldowo is mentioned. The church bears
the title St. Matthaeus (Matthai). In 1652 the church in Waldowo was
massive, with a massive tower; to the church belonged 2 hides, which
were bestowed on the pastor himself, as well as meadow in the so-called
goat-islands (ostrowy baranie). Between Waldowo and Waldowko existed
at that time a glebe of such size that one would have been able to sow
it with 6 Bydgoszcz bushels of grain seed. This glebe, however, lay fallow.
The church was built in 1621 by the wife of the then-owner of Waldowo,
Anna Waldowska, nee Zakrzewska furthermore she richly fitted out the
church. On a frieze still stands the year 1621. On one wall is written
in small letters: "Sebastian Lakner R.W.A.D. 1663." Since the
church already in 1653 was in need of repair in various places and since
the portal on the main entrance appears to have been added only later,
the church in 1663 was permitted to receive a thoro renovation.
The church shows the usual ground plan for small village churches: a
single-naved long hall, a vestibule as wide as the nave in the west,
surmounted by a tower topped by an eight-sided cupola. Of ancillary rooms
the church possesses only one: a sacristy. The stairs to the organ loft
and to the tower, accessible from outside, are located in one corner
of the vestibule. Of art objects one chalice, a few pictures and the
bells are noteworthy. "The chalice (a similar one is located in
Wiecbork. Both are no doubt from the same hand) is of interest in that
into it, certain parts of older altar utensils were incorporated ".
The chalice exhibits many low-reliefs. Also two pictures are worth mentioning.
One was rescued from the filial church in Wielka Klonia, county of Tuchola,
demolished in 1870. It portrays a well-executed Madonna with Child. "St.
1648" on the backside of the picture identifies the painter Bartholomew
Strobel, who in 1640 furnished pictures for the convent in Pelplin. The
second picture, a half length portrait of the Madonna, notably smaller
than the previous, is by Joseph Laurenz Klein, painted in 1689. Of the
three bells the smallest is from recent times, the middle bears the inscription: "Sit
nomen Domini benedictum. Anno 1646", and the largest one, of bad
casting, summons: "Laudate Dominum in cimbalis bene sonantibus" and
exhibits the name of the church's foundress (Anna Waldowska) and the
year 1618.
Legend has it that Evangelical services were held here in the 16th century.
In any case it is certain that the lords of the manor of Wa1dowo, the
Watdowskis, for a time were Evangelical and that in 1744 there were more
Evangelicals than Catholics in Wakiowo; in 1766 the number of Catholics
in Waldowo was 153, the number of Evangelicals was 246. In 1624 Albertus
Cantius worked here as a minister; in 1653 Joannes Wyrzykowski. At the
beginning of the 19th century the Catholic pastor in Waldowo was Cajetan
Kalkstein-Oslowski. He was often sick and resigned suddenly in 1833 and
died on April 22, 1849. His successor was Fr. Ceynow (died 1840), then
Fr. Malinowski from Czarcze, then Fr. Krolikowski (died 1887), then Poczwiardowski.
In 1912 Fr. Paszotta served as administrator. Now the pastor is Fr. Brettschneider.
Starting about 1820 yearly fairs were held in Waldowo. At first there
were four, each one of which was a combined cattle- and horse-fair: the
Three Kings' Fair (January 6), the Assumption Fair (August 15), the St.
Pantaleon Fair (July 27th) and the Rosary Fair at the beginning of October.
Since 1840 only two yearly fairs are held, both being combining cattle-and
horse-fairs and flea-markets.
A teacher has been in Waldowo since 1653. Today's school is paritatisch
(meaning unknown) and has two rooms.
Manor and Municipality of Waldowko
In 1484 it was called Minus Watdowo. It lies near the border with the
county of Tuchola, between Waldowo and Obodowo.
Waldowko was first mentioned in 1484. At that time the manor was owned
by Elizabeth and Swantochna of the house Waldowski. In 1765 Stanislaus
Slupi-Waldowski owned Waldowko, in addition to Wawelno (Lindenwald),
Toninek, and Zempelkowo ( Przepalkowo?). In 1767 Franciszek Waldowski,
burgrave of Naklo. After the Waldowski's, for a short time the owner
was a certain Zychlinski. Already in 1776 Watdowko and Zempelkowo were
owned by the chamberlain Stanislaus Grabowski, who was married to Dorothy
of Osten-Sacken, who derived from Radawnica. Stanislaus sold it to Major
von Luttichau in 1783 and withdrew to Grylewo. In 1787 WaIdowko was auctioned
off. The highest bidder was a lord of the Osten-Sackens. Around 1800
Pani Lipiniska owned Waldowko. The assessed value of the estate was 12,000
talers. At the beginning of the 19th century until the 1830's WaIdowko
was in the possession of Leopold Julius von Sydow. He died in 1836 and
left the estate to his widow Auguste Friederike nee Lawrentz. She married
her relative Gotthilf (Leopold) Krieger, who died June 11, 1860 in Waldowko.
Auguste died July 1, 1871. According to the will left by Auguste and
Gotthilf Krieger (established January 7, 1855) the brother of Gotthilf,
the knightly estate owner and cavalry-Captain Heinrich Krieger of Jablowka,
received WaIdowko with the restriction that he only enjoy the usufruct
therefrom and would be obliged to leave the estate debt-free to one of
his sons. After Heinrich's death his son Captain Egon Krieger took over
the estate. Knightly estate owner Captain Egon Krieger held the most
various posts of honor in the county administration, and in the county-
and the provincial- synods. He died January 5, 1910 at Meran.
On June 1, 1856 a great fire raged in the manor-house at Waldowko. (See
the Kreisblatt [county newspaper] on 1856, p. 164.) In 1653 there were
in Waldowko two rent-farmers. The Catholic children go to school in Wakiowo;
the Evangelical children in Zempelkowo.
Source: Der
Kreis Flatow -1918
Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Jul
2003)

Walente
Or Walencie, also known as Niekrzyce or Niekryzysze.
A small village in the parish and rural district of Kopciowo, Sejny
county which is located 28 versts from the town of Sejny. There are
11 houses and 106 inhabitants. In 1827, it was the government village
Niekszyse in the parish of Sereje with 6 houses and 43 inhabitants.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 12, p. 906].
Translated by Dorothy Leivers, Hadlow, Kent, England, Dorfleiv@aol.com (May
2004)

Wasosz
Wasosz was also known as Wasosze, at times Wasorz (Ger.: Wonsosz, Wansosche). In the year 1404 Wanschosche, 1410 Wassose, 1413 Watnshosse, Waszosze. In the year 1421 a village in the powiat [=county] of Szubin/Schubin, about 7 klm north of [Szubin] ( A Protestant Parish and Post Office are located at [Szubin]), along the shore of the lake called Wasoskim [Wasoskie], near and north of Lake Zedowskiego [Zedowskie]. A Catholic Parish located at Slupy , [School is at the place, = at Wasosz] Railroad Station is located at Znin about 11 klm distant; including the rural village of Babia Gacia , 50 homes [=farmsteads], 384 inhabitants (279 Catholic and 105 Protestants) on 747 Hectares (about 10,500 acres), 390 hectares are cultivated fields and gardens, 78 meadow, 131 forest. Wasosz is bordered on the west by Zedowem, Dabrowa (Eichenbein) and Slupy to the north. [Kowalewo] (Gruenhagen) to the east aand the settlement of Seedorf. Wasosz is located along the road from Znin to Szubin, near [obejmuje = the lakes are included in the territory of Wasosz] lake Skrzynke [Skrzynka] and Wasosze; The lake shore stretches along to the west to lake [Zedowskie] and north ending at lake [Sobiejusze]. The area is 81.3 to 88.5 meters above sea level. Peasant homes are scattered about , there is windmill and brickyard, and meadows especially along the Gasawka, which separates the village of [Dabrowa], there to be found layers of peat (peat bog).
Wasosz undoubtedly was the location of noble [country seat before it was included into Szubin estate] . Ztad (Editors Note 1) Dzietrzyk (Teodoryk) Wanszewski was surely from Wasosz , and fought for the area about the year 1390 with [Wojtek of Trlag] later known as the Chamberlain [of] the city of Kalisz.
[Owner of that Wasosz was] Maciej ( [Paluka, it is Toporczyk]), Judge of Kalisz. in the years 1401 and 1404 [nephew] of [Sedziwoj of Szubin] the [Palatine] of the province of Kalisz (Kod. Dypl. Pol. I , 272, II, 365), after who$)A!/s death assumed the administration of the palatinate of Kalisz and [Prefect of Naklo]. [In 1410, leading the nobles from the territory between Welna river and the border of Pomerania (territ. of Paluki) he invaded Pomerania] and suffered an ignominious defeat ([Dlugosz], History; IV, 35);
Maciej of Labiszyn the palatine of Kalisz signed the treaty document in the year 1416 (Kod, Dypl, Pol, I, 243, and Akta gr. Ziem. V, 40) He was governor of Brzesko-Kujawskie province.
About 1520 the rector / parish priest of Slupy collected a tithes / part of the reaping of the fields from [estate fields and] each peasant in Wasosze; the peasant$)A!/s paid besides this field tax another flax processing tax of 2 gr. and [kolenda was a habitual gift to the local priest at Christmas; from Latin word $)A!0calendae$)A!1; kolenda today means Christmas carol] ?? kolende // Collected ?? from them a field tax ; Innkeepers were also accessed a tax of one grosz [grosz=penny].
Wasosze in the year 1577 was a settlement of about one and one half sladu (about 200 morgs) and 4 zagroda, croft, a small farmstead with a courtyard, buildings, and garden; two years later about half a sladu (about 100 morg) and 2 zagroda, croft, a small farmstead with a courtyard, buildings, and garden ;. , In the year 1620 one slad (about 150 morgs) and a fisherman.
In its declining years [of last century; for him $)A!0last$)A!1 was 18-th century] , Wasosz was owned by [Stanislaw Mycielski] the landlord from [Szubin].
Editors Note 1
That's an archaic spelling; in modern Polish it's spelled with an S instead of a Z, _stad_, with nasal A. It means "from here" or "from there." So "Ztad pochodzil zapewne" means "Surely he came from there."
Thanks to: Fred Hoffman
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1893, vol. 12, p. 906].
Translated by Jim Piechorowski, PGSA Member #6005/6151, July 2005; families: Piechorowski / Piechurowski

Wenecja
(1) Officially known as Venetia, Wenacia; In the year 1390 Venecia, Wanaczia; In the year 1400 Weneczya; In the year 1408 Venecia, the property of the Catholic Church of Powiat Szubinski (Znin), about 4 km to the north of Gasawa; 1 km from the road to Znin on the shores of Lake Weneckim and Skrzynka; There is a Catholic Church (Sw. Nicholas) and Post Office at Gasawa, a Protestant Church and Railroad Station at Znin a distance of 6 km.
Located there are the Folwarks: Karolewo and Mosciszewo, 16 homes/farmsteads, 209 inhabitants (164 Catholic and 45 Protestant) comprised of 932 hectares, 512 of tillable fields and gardens, 52 meadow, 57 pasture; 311.75 of Water/Lakes); a mill, reeds, peat and clay; the owner is v. / Von Davier. Wenecja is 82 meters above sea //level and about 24 meters above the Lakes.
Wenecja lies along the shore of an isthmus which divides these two large lakes: the banks of lakes Biskupiego and Weneckiego are low and marshy, in some places, covered with reeds; it is the same for most of the western shore of Lake Skrzynki, creating two inlets/isthmus’s the northern not 200 paces and the southern scarcely 100 paces wide. A third isthmus between lakes Biskupiem and Weneckiem where the River Gasawaka easily flows, is not more than 200 paces wide, where it approaches the shore of the lake. The northern and southern shore of Lake Wenecja comes as close as 100 paces in the straights which separate it from Lake Bialem and the ruins of a castle in days gone by.
The Zamek Venetia/Wenecja accounts for a third of the isthmus, 800 paces to the west of the eastern edge of the Manor orchard, pressed against the shore of Lake Skrzynski, about 300 paces to the east of the River Gasawka and 100 paces from Lake Weneckiego, on the right side of the road from Biskupin to Wenecja. This Zamek has fallen down over time; It is considered a rubble pile; Count Racynski is remembered as a ‘Friend of the Common People’ and ‘New Lord of the Estate’, he began to demolish it for a final time.
The territory of the Great lakes includes: the lake’s Skrzynke, Weneckie, Mosine and Dominikanski. The surface elevation varies from 82 to 104 meters above sea level, and as must as 110.9 meters to the north east.
The Catholic Church of ‘p.w. Narodz. N. M. Panny’ (Mary the Mother of God) stands on north east shore of Lake Weneckiego, about 500 paces west of the Manor House.
The present name presumably evolved in early times sounding like Wanacyz (Wanacia). There appears in documents about the year 1390 the name, Mikolaj (Nicholas) of Wenecja, the Judge from Kalisz, Janko from Czarnkowa (in the year 1383) is mentioned in a document from the monastery Trzemeszenski as Chomiazy and having the right of inheritance. On the 12th day of January 1390 he inherits Wenecja. From this we may deduce that Wenecja was a part of Mikolaj Chomiazy holdings. The triangular area between the lakes and Noltec can be called the headquarters/seat of the Chomiazy family. As time went by there began to develop three settlements with identical names, less than a mile apart they were distinguished with one new name for all of them. This same Judge of Kalisz is without fail Mikolaj son of Chwala who appears on July 8, 1381 in Poznan in the entourage and representative of King Ludwig of Wielkpolski to measure out Justice (Kod. Wiek). It is written in the year 1390 that Mikolaj is from Wenecja, and is now known as Mikolajem Chwalowiczem. Wenecja, during the Civil War participated on the side of Nale~cz and took part in the capture of Pyzdry which was taken on 18 Jan 1383 by the Confederation loyal to Mary, the elder daughter of Ludwig. (Editors Note .. 1) They served with Janko from Czarnkowa. On March 10 of that year, Grzymlczycy led a sortie from Neckla that was said to have devastated the six manors of Mikolaj Chomiazy, Judge of Kalisz around Znina. We know it to be these Manors: Chomiaze, Wenecye, Mosciszewo, Grzmiaca, Mokre and Gasawce ( Pomn. Dziej. Pol., 11, 728).
We find a second mention in the Szamotuly supplement to the Trzaska yearbook, but one so different from the note of Janko -- who often stayed in Znin, the property of the Archbishop of Gniezno, and must have known personally the lord of nearby Wenecya -- that we cannot give it credence. This supplement evidently confused persons and occasions, talking about the war of Archbishop Bodzanta [in modern Polish usually spelled Bodzeta with nasal E] with Mikolaj, the lord of Wenecya, chief justice of Great Poland (Ibid., Vol. II, p. 861). (Editors Note .. 2)
Mikolaja was commonly referred to as “The Bloody Devil”; there are varying stories in the “History/Annals” of Dlugosz of the outstanding personage of Jan Nalecza from Czarnkowa, the chief Justice of Poznan, in particular one story relates their inability to make peace with one another. (History, III, 464)
Professor Przyborowski in ‘History and Knowledge of the Bloody Devil’ (Wilenskie collection of letters from the year 1859) corrected misconception about the legend. But even now common people in the vicinity relate incredible stories about the lawless ‘Bloody Devil, Lord of Wenecja’ (ob.E. Calliera Powiat Zinski, 69-79). In the year 1390 there exists in damaged notes / writings of acts of injury/damage to the lands of Gniezno by Mikolaja the Lord of Wenecja. There was a dispute between Ostrowem Mscigniew, the castellan of Zabszyn and Sedziwojem from Marcinkowo over the movement / transport of goods between these localities. (Akta gr. Wielk., II, n. 994).
About June 25, in the year 1392 Judge/Lord Mikolaja granted an endowment to the local Catholic Church in his town of Wenecja, this included four lans of cultivated fields near Moscizewo, a tithe of every tenth sheaf of cereals to be collected on the hereditary fields at Mokre (located: pow. Mogilenski, gmina Dabrowa), the whole small lake Mosina, two fishermen, who may fish not only with drag-net, but also various small nets on the lake called Skrzynka (meaning "little chest"), also on the lake near the outlet of the Mosina, the meadow at Zimnej Wody (Cold Waters), apart from the meadow a serf at Mosciszewie and eight parcels of garden plots within the town of Wenecja for different tradesmen, who settled there; finally, they are permitted to gather wood, either dry or green anywhere it may be found for the Zamek’s purposes.
The rural parish celebrates two weekly funeral masses for all. On the 8th Day of May in the year 1395 Archbishop Dobrogost of Znin approved the (churches) charter in writing, besides determining the the income from fishing with small nets on the large Lake Bialem, across from the Zamek at Wenecja, and the gathering and husbandry of tree’s in the forest at Ochodze. (Kod. Wielkop., n. 1926 and 1959)
The church at Wenecja was supposedly founded by Archbishop Dobrogost. Judge / Lord Mikolaja erected the church in Wenecja, as Altarya (Editors Note ..3) He endowed the Parish of Sw. Mikolaja with a tithe of the fields of the peasants at Jadowniki, in the area about the Parish at Gora; a tithe of the peasants wages besides a tax of 2 gosz per lan on the harvest of flax. Three masses a week were celebrated for the soul of the founding Altarya. In the year 1419 an agreement between Maciej the burger of Znin with Jacob the Altarya which would pay him yearly at Christmas and on Sw. Wojciech day a sum of 3 grzywny (an old silver monetary unit, worth several denarii) as a tithe of the oats harvested at Jadowniki.
Liber Beneficiorum Laskiego, contains lists for the years 1392 and again validated in 1395, which disclose the levies for the collection of timber and in addition the following levies: The kmiecie / commoners from Wenecja, Biskupin and Godawy paid a Kolende (Christmas gift to the priest) of a grosz per each field, while the Zagrodnicy (landed farmers) and Innkeepers paid a half grosz. The parish priest collects in the village of Suchym Dole near Triagiem and in Konary near Margonin a sheaf thithe from the peasants fields, which they bring in on their own carts, the peasants also pays a 2 grosz thithe on each flax field.
The Parish at Wenecja is made up of: Biskupin, Godawy, Mosciszewo, and Wenecja; later came Annowo, Folusz, Karolewo, Nowy Folwark, Ostrowce, Pniewy, Rozalinowo and Wiktorowo. In the year 1759 Wojciech Miaskowski, the district govenor of Zinnski, lord of an estate in Wenecja, erected a new wooden church upon the reccomendation and orders of Archbishop Lubienski, which was consecrated the 18th day of October 1765 by ks. Krzysztof Dobinski, Sufragan / Bishop of Gniezno. (Editors Note ..4 ) After 100 years the church in Wenecja fell into ruin. And indeed the local government together with the parishioners in the years 1869 to 1872 erected a new church made of brick, with a steeple, in the Gothic style, placed picturesquely between the lakes on the peninsula. The parish (dek. / deanery Zninski) in the year 1888, accounted for 767 souls; there is a parish school; in Biskupin, Godawy and Ostrowce. After the death of Judge / Lord Mikolaja, Wenecja came into the hands of Mikolaja Pomianowi from Warzymowa, who in the year 1420 sold it to Archbishop Trabie in exchange for Biskupin near Radziejowo, in Kujawa. Mikolaja from Warzymowa is the Castellan of Kruszwicki in the year 1433; he died after the year 1441, in the Castle at Bresko-Kujawskiem.
Wenecja in the year 1577 is comprised of 2 Slady of land, field serfs and 1 zagroda or small farmsteads with courtyard and outbulidings; after two years the fields of the peasants lay empty, about the year 1620 they dissappear completely; in the year 1579 2 zagroda (small farmsteads) and 3 komornik, (tenant farmers ) lived there. About the year 1620 there are 3 zagroda (small farmsteads). After the annexation by the Prussian authorities the Archbishop sold the estate. Wenecja, Karolewo and Mosciszewo were privately purchased. Finally, the property came into the hands of the Ilowieccy family, who sold it to the Germans.
(2) Wenecja, known as Venetia a settlement in powiat of Odolanowskim (ostrow) near the town of Ostrow ( Catholic parish, Post Office and Railroad Station). There are 4 houses/farmsteads, 68 inhabitiants; it is in the district / county of Krepa. The village and surrounding are of 103 hectares is the property of Natalia Siedel.
(3) Wenecja, also known as Nowa Wenecja. In bygone days called Kobylin, a part of the adminstrative district of powiat Krotoszynskim.
EDITORS NOTES
(Editors Note .. 1) This battle featured the first use of a cannon in war, in Poland and we are talking about Ludwig of Hungary whose picture is featured at http://www.econ.ucdavis.edu/graduate/rsszulga/1370-1434.htm )
(Editors Note .. 2) This difficult paragraph was translated by Mr. Fred Hoffman 11/11/2005
(Editors Note .. 3) Altaries (pol. altaria/altarie). These institutions were thought of as simple benefices without duty of granting priestly functions. As each benefice altaries had owned founders: gentry, townsmens, companies ... etc. Altarzysta (altairman?). a locally important title of honor bestowed by the church. Popularly the term benefice is often understood to denote either certain property destined for the support of ministers of religion, or a spiritual office or function, such as the care of souls, but in the strict sense it signifies a right, i. e. the right given permanently by the Church to a cleric or noble to receive ecclesiastical revenues on account of the performance of some spiritual service.
(Editors Note .. 4) Suffragan … abbr. Suff. or Suffr. 1. A bishop elected or appointed as an assistant to the bishop or ordinary of a diocese, having administrative and episcopal responsibilities but no jurisdictional functions. 2. A bishop regarded in position as subordinate to an archbishop or a metropolitan.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1893, p. 209-211].
Translated by Jim Piechorowski, PGSA Member #6005/6151, August-December 2005. Families: Piechorowski/Piechurowski.

Wetfie
Link to Suchomski Ancestry Website.
Translation by James D. Summers.

Widełka
- in the County of Kolbuszowa
A village in a sandy plain covered with pine forests,
at the springs of the Zyzoga, a tributary of the river qLqeg. Through
the village is a road from Glogow (8.5 Km) to Ranizow. To the community
belong the subdivisions Dworzysko, Majdan, and Zembraza. It borders
on the north with Sudoly and Klapowka, on the east with Przewrotne,
on the south with Porebt, and on the west with Kupno. The whole community
with the areas of the larger estates has 398 homes and 2617 inhabitants,
2123 Roman Catholics, 7 Protestants, and 487 Jews. A public school.
A Roman Catholic parish in Przewrotne. Formerly a possession of Count
Rey, it now belongs to several Jews. The smaller estate has 320 acres
of farms, 39 acres of meadows, 5 acres of gardens, 115 acres of pastures,
57 acres of forests, and 3 acres 8628 feet long of building lots; the
larger estate has 4236 acres of farms, 938 acres of meadows and gardens,
50 acres of pastures, and 688 acres of forests. On the grounds of the
larger estate is a distillery. The settlement was established in the
17th century; it is mentioned in the recruiting lists of 1674 (Pawinski,
Maqlopolska, 57a).
Families of members doing research in Widelka. Click
on researcher name to send E-mail.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego,
Warsaw 1893
Submitted by: Joan Schmidt, 106 S. Hill St., Roselle,
IL 60172 (Jan 1993)

Wielka
Cerkwica
In i"Obodowo. A noble village. Its size is 951.14 morgs.
There are 52 buildings, 17 dwelling houses, and 131 inhabitants, of
whom 97 are Lutheran, and 34 Catholic. In the 15th century the village
belonged to the Komierowski s, later to the owner of Sosno. parish
of Waldowo.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1893
Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com (Feb
2003)

Wiejsieje
- in the County of Sejnen
At one time the village was also called "Wysocki
Dwor", manor farm and estate, along Lake Hanzca, community and
parish of Wiejsieje. It lies about 20 versts east of Sejnen amid rises
of lakeland at the northrn periphery of the lake. Located on the property
are two water mills, distillery, and a pitch factory. As of 1800, the
village was a small town with a marketplace. In 1827, Wiejsieje was
classified as a village. At present, there is a parish church of brick,
an elementary school, community court of District IV, community office,
146 houses, 2,273 inhabitants (majority are Jews). In 1827, there were
63 houses, 737 inhabitants. The nearest postal station is in Kopciowo.
Wiejsieje is an old Lithuanian village granted with
adjoining property to Prince Andrzej Siemienowicz of Sluck by Zygmunt
August. Andrzej, or perhaps Jerzy, Prince of Sluck, is supposed to
have established a parish and built a church in 1526 or 1562. Subsequently,
these lands were transferred to the Princes. Bishop Missalski of Wilno
began the construction of a large church. After 20 years, around 1800,
the unfinished walls were in danger of collapse. The Massalski?s must
have built the fortified castle as their residence.
The Bishop presented the Wiejsieje properties during
his lifetime to the widow Wiktoria Oginska whom he gave in marriage
to his plenipotentiary, Mateusz Zyniewa, who under Prussian rule acquired
the title of County. Supposedly, the Bishop had made Oginska responsible
for the completion of the church and its maintenance, which she failed
to do, having merely partially reconstructed a badly ruined building
in 1817. After the death of Zyniewa, the land passed into the hands
of the Oginskis' as the wife's inheritance. They then passed to Amelia
nee Oginska Wolowicz. The brick church, without a dome, is 43 ells
high, 70 ells long in the nave, and 50 ells wide; the presbytery is
14 ells long and 22 ells wide. Three altars are inside. A vaulted underground
below the church. There are no monuments. The roof is covered with
tile. Around 1850, the settlement had an iron forge (smithy). In 1863,
the Wiejsieje lands consisted of: Wiejsieje, Wielka, Wysokie, Podwiejsiejki,
Mlynek, and Pozopsie, and Ogrodniki. The area measured 8,093 morgs.;
the estate and gardens, 80 morgs.; meadows, 139 morgs.; uncultivated,
7 morgs.; 4 building of brick and 2 of wood. The Wysokie estate, 586
morgs; meadows, 265 morgs; pastures, 5 morgs; water 7 morgs; uncultivated,
11 morgs; 1 building of brick and 15 of wood. The Podwiejsiejki estate,
559 morgs; meadows, 192 morgs; pastures, 12 morgs; water 2 morgs; uncultivated,
16 morgs; 1 brick building and 10 of wood. The settlement Mlynek, 31
morgs; meadows, 12 morgs; uncultivated, 2 morgs; 3 buildings of wood.
Posopsie, 106 morgs; meadows, 44 morgs; water 11morgs; uncultivated,
2morgs; 6 buildings of wood. There are 14 lakes, 2,517 morgs.; forest,
3,485 morgs.
Formerly the lands were comprised of the following villages:
Wiejsieje, 91 settlements, 1136 morgs; Kajliny, 6 settlements, 256
morgs; Bryniszki, 7 settlements, 319 morgs; Bobry, 23 settlements,
715 morgs; Radziwilance, 13 settlements, 646 morgs; Sapiezyszki, 9
settlements, 459 morgs; Pozopsie, 18 settlements, 840 morgs; Potery,
11 settelements, 569 morgs; Kowalki, 21 settlements, 791 morgs.: Ruda,
6 settlements, 321 morgs; Jakielance, 4 settlements, 246 morgs; Powiesniki,
12 settlements, 490 morgs; Ogrodniki, 6 settlements, 226 morgs; Gierwiele,
3 settlements, 192, morgs; Pietraszki, 19 settlements 699 morgs; Koledziszki,
1 settlement, 183 morgs; Saranciszki, 1 settlement, 5 morgs.
Wiejsieje, parish, Sejnen Deanery (at one time Lozdziej),
4,123 souls.
The community of Wiejsieje, belongs to community court
district IV in Wiejsieje settlement, area 29,250 morgs and 6.074 inhabitants.
Among permanent residents, there are 32 protestants and 2,069 Jews.
The community is composed of: Bobry, Bryniaki, Czuwance-Losiewickie,
Cz.-Mereckie, Gausty, Gierwele, Gudele, Jakielance, Kajliny, Klepacze,
Kowalki, Koledziszki, Lajbogole, Losiewicze, Mlynek, Ogrodniki, Potery,
Pietreszki, Podwiejsiejki, Polunce, Powieniki, Pozopsie, Purwiszki,
Radziwilance, Ruda, Sapienyszki, Saranciszki, Smorluny, Stankuny, Wiejsieje,
and Wysokie.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1893
Submitted by: Joseph Dressel, 5641 N. Kenmore Ave.,
Chicago, IL (Nov 1997)

Wiel~bark
- in the County of Szczycian
Wielbark or Wielbork, in German: Willenburg or Wielburg,
a town in East Prussia, Szczycian County, 2 1/2 miles from Chorzele,
connected by highway with Nibor and Szczycien. It has a Catholic parish
church, newly raised (in 1880), the Protestant parish church, post
office, and 2,641 inhabitants.
Wielbark is an old settlement, established in what was
known as the Patrak Forest ("Polnisch Oberland", so called).
The Knights of the Cross put up a castle here around which a marketplace
formed for the local beekeepers of Mazury who inhabited the forest.
Situated along the route leading from Warsaw to Krolewice, it was also
a roadside station/stop. Duke Albrecht attempted to establish a town
here but in 1637 Wielbark is merely a settlement along the tract. According
to the inspection of 1637, there were 11 tenants leasing 25 "wloks" and
paying 1 1/2 marks, 30 groszy for rent. After verification, it was
discovered that they occupied another 25 wloks. The tenants were then
ordered to pay 50 marks for each additional wlok and thereafter were
subject to the Law of Chelm. They were free to fish in the Omulwa,
but not under the ice. This privilege was granted by the head of the
village Nibor, Wolf Schenk, Freiherr zu Tautenberg, in 1643 and confirmed
in 1648.
At the end of November 1656, the Tartars devasted the
settlement, burned down the church and killed the rector, George Otter.
It seems that in 1721, the settlement received the rights of a town.
The church was rebuilt. In 1745, the neighboring beekeepers, on lands
under the Duke's jurisdiction, were given the right of a town, parts
of the land were incorporated into the town as a suburb of Warsaw.
Finally, in 1747, Fryderyk II issued a confirmation
of the former grants, set up 3 markets, and presented the town seal.
In 1782, the population numbered 1,100 souls, and in 1818 grew to 1,644.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw 1893
Submitted by: Joseph Dressel, 5641 N. Kenmore Ave.,
Chicago, IL(Nov 1997)

Wierzbinek
A village, manorial farmstead, and estate in Nieszawa
county, Boguszyce gmina, Sadlno parish, 49 versts [about 52 km.] from
Nieszawa, with 341 inhabitants. In 1827 it had 18 houses with 120 inhabitants.
In 1866 the estate of Wierzbinek consisted of the manorial farmstead
of Wierzbinek and of Chlebowo, with 1,287 mórgs of land: 537
of farmland and gardens, 127 of meadows, 30 of barren land, 548 of
forests, and 45 unused; there were 19 buildings of stone and 12 of
wood; the forest was unadministered, and there was a windmill.
Previously the estate consisted of: the village of Wierzbinek, with 33
settlements and 64 mórgs; the village of Zakrzewek, 13 settlements,
318 mórgs; the village of Rybno, 11 settlements, 214 mórgs;
the village of Chlebowo, 14 settlements, 17 mórgs; the village
of Teresowo, 24 settlements, 105 mórgs; the village of Teodorowo,
24 settlements, 241 mórgs; the village of Zalesie, 10 settlements,
18 mórgs; the village of Tyle, 3 settlements, 23 mórgs;
the village of Nied_wiady, 2 settlements, 48 mórgs; and the village
of Sosnówka, 10 settlements, 29 mórgs.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 13, p. 397].
Translated, by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Fall 2003 Rodziny.

Wiele
Wiele, German Wielle, an ecclesiastical village in Chojnice
powiat, on lake Wielewskie; to its north are elevations rising 640
feet above sea level, called "Chelmice," which the author of the Epos
on Pan Czorlinski said "can be seen for seven miles in the whole area" (Torun,
p. 40). The village has a postal station and a three-class Catholic
school; it covers 2,495 hectares (1,061 of farmland, 136 of meadows,
11 of woods); in 1885 there were 910 Catholics, 4 Protestants, and
40 Jews living there, for a total of 954 residents, of whom 5 houses
and 47 residents were at Biala Gora, I house and 5 residents at Wielewski
Mlyn ["Wiele Mill"], and 5 houses and 63 residents at Piatkowo. The
Catholic church, St. Nicholas's, under government patronage, is made
of wood and has a shingle roof. It has had the Brotherhood of St. Anne
since 1803, of St. Anthony since 1803, of Sobriety since 1852, and
of the Solace of The Blessed Mother since 1852. One of its bells dates
from 1686. Belonging to the parish (of Tuchola deanery) are: Wiele,
Karszyn, Popia Gora,?Gorki, Przytarnia, Kliczkowy, Zamosc, Czyste,
Barlogi, Wdzydze Tucholskie, Miedzno, Odry, Wojtal, Dabrowa, Lipa,
Rudziny, Cisewie, Osowo, Bak, Borsk, Broda, Huta Brodzka, Piechowice,
Kruszyna, Zabrody, Wdydze Kiszewskie, Kozlowiec, Ostrow, Jastrzebie,
Czarne, Kloc, Huta Przerebelska, Plesy, R?w and Pustki; as of 1867
it numbered 5,268 souls, and 7,890 as of 1892.
Formerly the parish had two more chapels, one in Wiele,
the other in Odry. By the parish church stood a spacious hospital for
the needy, with the chapel of St. Anne. The chapel and hospital's endowment
consisted of the nearby village of Przytarnia. During the Reformation
all that was lost. The report of Bishop Rozdrazewski's inspection in
1583 tells that when the hospital and the chapel burned down, the Tuchola
starosta at the time, Koscielecki, took the village of Przytarnia away
from the needy and incorporated it into the estates of his starostwo.
The bishop decreed that the pastor was to take this village from the
starosta's by legal methods, but it was to be used to endow, not the
needy, but a new seminary. This all proved in vain, however, and Przytarnia
remained in the possession of the Tuchola starosta's (see Utrac. kosc.
p. Fankidejskiego, p. 316).
In 1382 the Tuchola Commander of the Teutonic Knights,
Henryk Bollendorf, granted German law to the inhabitants of the village
called "Wiele" (Velym)-which previously was incorporated under Polish
law-along with 551?2 wloka's within set boundaries. "The pastor will
have 5 wloka's, and to the office of soltys, which we have sold to
Nikosz, will belong 6 wloka's. Besides this the inhabitants of the
village will have 35 wl?ka's subject to rent under the terms of Chelmno
law. The rest of the wl?ka's we give them, to aid them in paying rent
and serving us the better. The soltys will have every third penny from
court fines, and we the other two pennies; further we grant him the
right to free pasturage in our forests and all wood lying free for
firewood, and to catch fish for his table from the small area set aside
in the lake alongside the village... As for the villagers, they are
to render us every year on the Feast of Candlemas a rent per wloka
of 14 skojec's of standard Prussian coinage, one bushel (Chelmno measure)
of oats, and one bushel of "chicken oats" [? kurowy owies], also they
are to be sent out for two days on our hunts. It is also our will that
for every 1 1/2wloka's they are to gather a m?rg of hay and convey
it to Kosobuda or wherever we order ... Issued in Tuchola" (see Kodeks
Belnensis, manuscript in Pelplin, page 51, and Odpisy Dregera in Pelplin,
p. 122).
During Bishop Rozdrazewski's inspection in 1583 the
plague raged so fiercely that the inspection of the churches in Brusy,
Lesno and Wiele was not completed. Wiele parish then belonged to the
Zaborski or Starogard deanery. A later inspection by this same bishop
reports that there was then a wooden church here under the patronage
of St. Nicholas. Four wl?ka's belonged to the pastor. There were so
many empty wl?ka's in the village that the Mass-tithe from the whole
village only amounted to 13 bushels of rye and the same of oats. The
pastor was Jan Lubichowski (p. 203).
During the days of the Commonwealth Wiele belonged to
the Tuchola starosta's. An inspection report from 1570 states that "Wiele,
property of Jerzy Zalinski, has 60 wloka's, of which 4 belong to the
pastor, 35 are empty, 21 are settled, further there is 1 inn inherited
and 1 rented, and 1 gardener." A 1664 report lists here only 45 wloka's,
6 belonging to the soltys, 4 to the priest, a fifth held by the deacon
of Mirachowo, 1 belonging to the peasants. The church was collationis
regiae [government-supported]. The Wiele beehives, lying in the Zaborska
forest, which was part of the famed Tuchola Forest, were tended in
turn by the inhabitants of the neighboring villages (see Sl. G., XII,
p. 595)....
In 1686 Wiele parish belonged to the Mirachowo deanery
and numbered some 600 souls. Its pastor was Stan. Jacek Zeromski, who
rebuilt the rectory. His predecessor was Rev. Piechowski (p. 9). Szaniawski's
inspection in 1710 reports that the church bore the title of St. Anne's;
the Brotherhoods of St. Anne and St. Joseph existed there. Five wl?ka's
belonged to the pastor, in addition to which he held one free from
the Tuchola citadel. He collected a Mass-tithe from the ecclesiastical
village of 14 bushels of rye and the same of oats. The organist was
also the teacher (see p. 14). Finally, from Rybinski's inspection in
1780 we learn that in 1728 the church was built from parishioners'
contributions and consecrated on 24 June 1769 by suffragan Bishop Wolicki.
[Translator's note: this seems unlikely, perhaps the church was built
in 1728 and consecrated in 1729, or built in 1768 and consecrated in
1769]. Wiele then (in 1780) had only 218 Catholic inhabitants, the
whole parish numbered 2,035 souls, there were 70 Protestants, and no
Jews. The pastor was Jan Netzel (p. 66).
According to Goldbeck's topography, in 1789 the village
had 33 hearths (p. 251). In 1812 the French passed through the parish,
namely through Wiele-Kliczkowy and Borsk, fleeing from Cossacks who
were chasing them. They encamped in Borsk, and the inhabitants sheltered
themselves and their cattle in the nearby woods. In 1892 in a field
belong to Kiedrowski several urns were found, among them a very small
one which held bones and a gold ring. Not far away there is another
gravesite which has not yet been excavated. Ks. Fr. (Rev. Frydrychowicz).
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 13].
Translated, by William F. Hoffman, PGSA Winter 2000
Bulletin.

Więcbork
- In German - Vandsburg
A small town in West Prussia, in the so-called Krajna
region, on the border of the Grand Duchy of Poznan, in Zlotow county,
on the lake of the same name, 109 meters above sea level, about 44
km. from Bydgoszcz, 33 km. from Chojnice, 15 km. from Lobzenica, 11
km. from Sepolno. It has a Catholic church and chapel, a Protestant
church dating from 1840, a synagogue, a 4-class-room non-denominational
school (in 1887 with 4 teachers and 293 pupils) and a private school
for girls, with a post office, a 3rd-class telegraph office, and a
district court. Highways from there lead to Sepolno, to Kamien, and
on to Chojnice; to Mroczno [sic; probably should be "Mrocza"] and on
to Naklo; and to Sypniewo and from there to Zlotow. In 1893 construction
began of a railway from Naklo to Mrocza and Wiecbork and from Kamien
to Chojnice. In addition, the government intends to build a railroad
from Fordon, where the new iron bridge stood, to Koronowo, Wiecbork,
and Walcz, and then on to Starogard in Pom-erania.
The town?s area covers 1,065 hectares (677 of farmland,
172 of meadows, 37 of forests). In 1885 there were 1,668 inhabi-tants
(538 Catholic, 928 Protestant, and 202 Jewish), 189 houses, and 356
hearths. It is rolling countryside, with sandy, clayish soil; the population
is employed mainly in retail trade and crafts, especially as tailors,
cattle-raisers, and farmers. There are 4 fairs here each year.
Wiecbork appears in documents for the first time in
1348 under the name of "Wansowno" as the property of the Counts Peperzynski
Lodzia (see Schmitt, Der Kreis Flatow, p. 46). In the 16th century
the family split into two branches, the Peperzyn and the Wiecbork;
both died out, however, toward the end of that century. Wiecbork then
passed as a dowry to the Zebrzydowskis; after them it belonged to the
Garczynskis, and then to the Smoczewskis. Toward the end of the 17th
century the Potulickis acquired the estates of Wiecbork and Zlotow.
Records name the following Potulickis as lords of the estate: Jan Jakub,
Borzechowo starosta (1701); Jozef, Czernihow starosta (? 1734); Aleksander
Hilary, also Borzechowo starosta (? 1780); Micha_ (? 1806). In 1821
Kacper Potulicki sold the estate to the main bank of Berlin, from which
he received it in 1834 as an estate of the royal treasury.
Until 1772 Wiecbork belonged to Kalisz province and
Naklo county; then it belonged to Prussia till 1807, in which year
it was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Warsaw. In 1815 it was
incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Poznan, and in 1819 into West
Prussia, county of Zlotow.
The town lies on a narrow islet; to the east Lake Wiecborskie
extends 3 1/2 km., and to the west is the large swamp called Lopiennik,
which was surely a lake at one time. In the center of the city is a
sizable marketplace. To the north rises gora Sw. Katarzyny [Mt. St.
Catherine], with a chapel dedicated to that saint; in addition there
is a Catholic and Protestant cemetery. This mountain, covered for the
most part with a birch forest, contributes to the town?s beauty. Its
houses are small and modest, because they date from a period of rebuilding
after great fires that struck the town in 1785, 1823, and 1830. The
last one destroyed more than two-thirds of the town.
The oldest known town charter was drawn up in 1767 by
Count Potulicki. In 1783 the town had 86 hearths, 2 of which were vacant,
and 489 inhabitants (half Catholic, half Protestant). In 1804 there
were 640 inhabitants; in 1826 there were 836 inhabitants and 112 houses;
in 1853 there were 1,586 inhabitants (351 Catholic, 981 Protestant,
and 254 Jewish); in 1861 there were 1,597 (348 Catholic, 939 Protestant,
and 310 Jewish); in 1865 there were 1,627 (378 Catholic, 933 Protestant,
and 312 Jewish); in 1880 there were 1,603 inhabitants.
The old Wiecbork castle, of which no traces remain,
stood on the islet above the lake, on a site formerly called Zamczysko.
The mention in the 1546 Naklo grod records of "Viazowno desertum" [abandoned
Viazowno] may have referred to it. A new castle was built in 1556 rather
far from the old site, on the east side of the town. It was a magnificent
building, fortified with an embankment, moat, and drawbridge. It still
existed during the Prussian occupation, but its lord, Count Potulicki,
lived on the manorial farmstead of Ostrowek, where he established his
manor. The new castle no longer exists either.
The Catholic church of the Apostles Simon and Jude,
of government patronage, dates from the end of the last century. It
was paid for by Aleksander Potulicki and his son Michal. It is made
of stone with a single nave. An oval sacristy touches against its east
gable. Among its artistic monuments are a baptismal font of black marble
and the headstone of Count Michal Potulicki in the form of an obelisk,
as well as a silver censer and two chalices, of which one dates from
1623. Of the three bells, the middle one was forged in 1715. The Chapel
of St. Catherine was built in 1787 by Count Michal Potulicki. At one
time a small wooden church by the same name stood there, with two altars,
and bells that hung in a small tower on the church. By 1653 it was
in such bad shape that services were seldom held there. "Debet ex fundamento
erigi" ["It should be raised from its foundation"], wrote Trebnic in
his inspection report, and this was done later (page 121). In addition
the Potulickis had a private chapel in the castle ("capella in arce").
But in 1766 Mass was not being held in it, according to the inspection
report of Mathy, because a new indult had not been applied for (see
Utrac. kos., Rev. Fankidejski, p. 303). A shelter for four poor parishioners
has long stood alongside the church. A sobriety society has existed
since 1858, and a Society of St. Anne since 1851.
The parish of Wiecbork, of Kamien deanery, had 1,509
souls as of 1893. The parish?s villages are Wiecbork, Witunia, the
village and colony of Zakrzewko, Tobolka, Nowy Dwor, Klocbudy, Peperzyn,
Suchorask, Smilowo, and the branch church in Wielowicz with its villages.
Among the parish?s benefactors is listed Sedziwoj, who in 1405 designated
lands and rights he had previously retained to improve the income of
the parish and rectory. According to Trebnic?s inspection in 1653 the
rectory had 4 gardens and 7 wlokas of land, as well as the right to
free fishing in the lakes with small implements [i. e., not using the
kind of large nets and gear a professional fisherman might use]; and
every time nets were cast, the rectory collected its part from the
catch. The rectory collected from the town a Mass tithe of 2 baskets
of rye and oats, from each of 27 wlokas.
The church also owned sizable tracts of land. [Produce
or income from] two wlokas and two gardens, as well as from an empty
plot of land outside the town where a granary had once stood, went
toward the upkeep of a shelter in which 9 paupers were housed. A separate
small house was located on the church grounds for the curate; another
was for the teacher. The pastor was Samuel Stimaens (see pp. 119-122),
and in 1695 Lukasz Markiewicz, a canon of the college in Kamien (see
Jezierski's inspection report, p. 92).
At one time a separate Wiecbork deanery existed, belonging
to Gniezno diocese. The following parishes, branch churches, and chapels
comprised that deanery: Wiecbork, Sepolno, Wielewicz, Zabartowo, Orle,
Runowo, Mrocza, Werza, Sasieczno, Dziewianowo, Wierzchucin, Wawelno,
Lacko Wielkie, Makowarsk, Pruszcz, Klonia, Waldowo, Komierowo, Zalesie,
Lutowo and Slesin. Not until the publication of the bull De salute
animarum in 1821 was this deanery abolished and Wiecbork attached to
Chelm diocese [Note: presumably this is a reference to Chlelmno diocese;
Chelm is in southeastern Poland].
The present Protestant church was built in 1858. At
first the Lutherans brought here by the Zebrzydowskis did not have
any local house of prayer, but used the church in Peperzyn. From 1772
to 1884 they held services in the castle, part of which Count Potulicki
ceded to them. In 1784 they built themselves a small church without
tower or bells, and it existed until 1858, when services were transferred
to the new church, the current one. The first permanent pastor was
Jan Holzheimer, from 1791 to 1799. The Jews have had their synagogue
only since 1840. See Schmitt?s Der Kreis Flatow, pp. 254-257, and Bau-
und Kunstdenkm?ler der Provinz Westpressen, pp. 424-426.
The Wiecbork royal forestry preserve is now called Lutowo
(Lutau); it has an area of 5,166 hectares (61 of farmland, 476 of meadows,
3,941 of forest); in 1885 it had 7 houses, 7 hearths, and 69 inhabitants
(13 Catholic and 56 Protestant). It is comprised of the forest regions
of Lutowko, Kottashain, Neuhof, Schwiede, Wiecbork, and Wilhelmsbruch.
During the Napoleonic age the lord of these extensive forests was the
French marshal Mortier. [Rev. Fr{ydrychowitcz} ? Vol. 13, pp. 435-436].
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw 1893
Translated by William F. Hoffman, first appeared in
the Winter 2002 issue of "Rodziny", the Journal of the Polish
Genealogical Society of America".

Windorp
From 1686 till 1780 called Winkidorp, since then Windorp.
A village in Chojnice county. Post office and parish in Lesno. 412
hectares (1018 acres) of which 118 (about 292 acres) are in plowed
fields, 14 (35 acres) are in meadow, and 20 (50 acres) are in forest.
In 1885 there were 8 dwellings housing 12 families, of whom 77 were
Catholic. In Goldbeck s topography around 4 homes of the village is
recorded as wilderness.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa
Polskiego - Warsaw 1893
Translated by Gerald R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, PA, gshmit@PeoplePC.com(Feb
2003)

Wiz~ajny
In documents Wizejny, a settlement, formerly a small
town, on the southern shore of the lake of the same name, in Suwalki
county, Wizajny gmina and parish, 34 versts north of Suwalki and 11
versts from Kalwarya [Editor's note: 1 verst (wiorsta) is a little
more than a kilometer]. it has a brick parish church, a brick
church for the Protestant congregation, an elementary school, gmina
offices, a pharmacy, 175 houses and 2,276 inhabitants. In 1827 it had
163 houses and 1,342 inhabitants. Six fairs are held each year in the
settlement. The vicinity of W., once covered with marshes, comprised
part of the primeval forest extending to Lake Wisztyniec [now Vis'tytis,
in Lithuania], which belonged to the Duchy of Prussia. The W.
starostwo did not have a fortified castle; the Cossack regiment of
Lord Lipnicki and the Wizajny and Lejwany [?] starosta took part in
the battle of Diwina (13 November 1661) against the forces of Chowan'ski
(Poczobut-Odlanicki's Journal, page 54). According to treasury
reports, in 1766 Wizajny was owned by Strutyfiska, who paid 2,508 zl.
in kwarta [an ancient tax for the maintenance of the Polish regular
army]. At the Warsaw Sejm of 1773-1775 the government placed this estate
under the emphyteutic ownership of Roza nee Plater Strutyn'ska, along
with Sejwy starosta, the village of Bolcie in Grodno powiat,
and the village of Zyrwiny and the Gieluzanski [?] lands in Troki district.
To put an end to disputes over this starostwo's borders, a commission
was established at that same Sejm to define them (Volumina legum,
VIII, 750-1). In this century [i. e., the 19th] Wizajny became part
of the Kadaryszki ekonomia [administrative division for
estates owned by the government]. It is not known when the settlement
was incorporated as a town. It received very rich benefices in land.
Jan Kazimierz paid for the founding of the Roman Catholic parish in
1659. The Strutynskis erected a new church on the site of the old one.
In 1814 it burned down. In 1825 St. Teresa's church was built of brick,
paid for partly from collection of arrears to cover the debt of the
former Fire Society (Report of the state council) and partly
from the parishioners' offerings.
According to an 1885 list the parish numbered 3,709
souls of German ethnicity. Wizajny gmina covers 16,623 morgs and has
4,393 inhabitants (6 Orthodox, 2,437 Protestants, 490 Jews). The number
of those absent from the resident population (due to emigration caused
by its location on the border) amounts to 24%. The gmina belongs to
district court IV in Stara Hancza, with a post office in Szypliszki
(21 versts away).
The gmina includes:
Antosin, Bolcie, Burnyszki, Dziad?wek, Dzierwany, Gromadczyna,
Grzybina, Jaczno, Jacznowek, Jegliniszki, Klajpeda, Klajpedka, Kojle,
Kramnik, Laskowskie, Leszkiemie, Lugiele, Mauda, Mierkinie Nowe, Mierkinie
Stare, Miciszki, Okliny, Olszanka-Huk, Poddebszczyzna, Podgorzatek,
Polulkiemie, Rakowek, Rogotajny Prywatne, Rogotajny Male, Rogotajny
Wielkie, Rozgulina, Skombobole, Stankuny, Stanuliszki, Stara Hancza,
Stolupianka, Sudawskie, Utmanda, Wilkupie, Wizgory, Wizajny, Wysokie
i Zelazkowizna.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw
Submitted by: This translation, by William F. Hoffman,
first appeared in the Spring 1996 issue of "Bulletin of the Polish
Genealogical Society of America". (Nov 1997)

Władysławów
Now Kudirkos Naumiestis, Lithuania], under Prussian
rule called Neustadt, a county seat in Suwalki [Suvalkai] gubernia,
in the area between the junction of the river Szeszupa [Sesupe] and
its tributary on the left bank, Szyrwinta Sirvinta]. Wladyslawów
lies on the border with Prussia, opposite the town of Szyrwinty [Sirvintos,
German name Schirwindt, now {Kutuzovo}, Russia] (in Pilkaly county)
[German name Pikallen, East Prussia, now {Dobrovolsk}, Russia], at
54? 45'7" north latitude, 22?53' east longitude, 388 km. from
Warsaw, 102 from Suwalki, 18 from Wylkowyszki [Vilkaviskis]. It has
a stone Catholic church, a branch of the Protestant church in Wierzbolowo
[Virbalis], a synagogue, an elementary school, a justice of the peace
court, the county administrative office, a town hall, a customs office,
postal and telegraph stations, 332 houses, and 4,500 inhabitants (79%
Jewish, 6.6% Protestant, 0.9% Orthodox). There are 6,189 persons registered
as permanent residents, but 1,962 of them live in other parts of the
country or abroad. In 1827 there were 229 houses and 3,213 inhabitants;
in 1857 there were 366 houses (86 of stone) and 5,516 inhabitants (4,434
Jews, 450 Germans). That last figure undoubtedly includes the entire
population entered in the register, as well as those who were staying
elsewhere. The following factory works exist there: a cotton mill and
a cotton cloth-printer.
The land on which Wladyslawów stands belonged at one time to the
jurisdiction of the starosta of Jurborg [Jurbarkas]. Queen Cecylia Renata
owned this land as part of her dowry and founded the town there, naming
it after her husband, Wladyslaw IV. On 26 March 1643 she issued a charter
in Warsaw that made it a town under terms of Magdeburg law. A wójt
had jurisdiction over the townsmen; the queen was supposed to appoint
him from among the ranks of the nobility. The mayor, however, was supposed
to be a townsman residing on this site, and the starosta was supposed
to name him from candidates submitted by the townsmen. Appeals were to
go first from the town council to the starosta, then to the queen. As
a coat of arms the town received a stag’s head with three stars
between its antlers (see above). The town’s endowment consisted
of 32 wlókas of land. Permission was given to build a town hall
with a clock, and a mill on one of the two rivers, as well as to organize
guilds. In addition to weekly markets, three annual fairs were established.
Jews were not allowed to settle there.
A parish church made of wood was built there by the queen in 1647. A
monastery of Carmelites was subsequently established next to the church,
and it existed until 1805. In 1788 the Carmelites built a church of stone
on the site of the previous wooden church. It’s a sizable building
and rather imposing, with three naves supported by six pillars and with
two towers at the front. The bells were cast in Torun.
Despite the ban on their settling in Wladyslawów, Jews were attracted
by the town’s advantageous location for trade on the border of
Prussia. They began to settle there in large numbers, developing a trade
in linseed and the products of Zmudz [Lithuanian name Zemaiciai, Latin
name Samogitia—the lowlands of Lithuania]: corn, wool, honey, lumber,
and skins. In 1800, of 2,320 inhabitants, two thirds were Jewish, and
of the 230 houses, they owned more than half. Holsche says that they
had attained such wealth that for some it was reckoned in the range of
10 to 50 thousand talars. Production of beer and vodka also developed
there. The Jews collected revenue of 1,200 ducats from the town in leases;
the excise tax came to 3,000 talars, and the town’s yearly income
came to 7,000 talars.
The settlement, formerly impoverished, began to be built up quite nicely,
and the streets were paved. A squadron of Hussars was stationed there.
The inhabitants of Szyrwinty, on the other side [of the Szyrwinta river],
wanted to share in its success, and around 1800 made efforts to combine
both towns into a single one; but this was never accomplished.
In 1842 the resettlement here of a larger and larger number of German
Protestants led to the founding of a branch church of the Protestant
congregation in Wierzbolowo [Virbalis]. The number of fairs, which had
increased from the original 3 to 12, has recently been reduced to 6.
In 1881 a large fire destroyed a significant part of the town.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw
[1895, vol. 14 pp. 692-693].
Translated by Fred Hoffman, PGSA Winter 2004 Rodziny

Włostowo/Lostau
A farmers' village and colony at the lake Goplo, from
1878 renamed to Lostau; county Inowroclaw (then Hohensalza) then county
Strzelno. Village is situated at the mouth of the Rechta stream to the
lake, south of Kruszwica and southeast of Strzelno. Lutheran parish,
district office and local court office in Strzelno, railway stations
in Kruszwica and in Strzelno. Post office in the village (Lostau), Catholic
school in Chrosno, Lutheran school in Lostau, Catholic parish in Koscieszki.
In the village 3 farmsteads, territ.of 66 hectar, 54 residents, betw.them
45 Catholic faith, in the colony 9 farmsteads, territ. of 93 hectar,
93 residents, between them 38 Catholic. In the year 1145 this was a property
of then Benedictine monastery in Trzemeszno/Tremessen, donated by earl
(comes) Wlost together with a big part of the lake and then approved
and accepted by prince Mieszko. In 1293 Wladyslaw, prince of Cuiavia
(the province - today Kujawy) detached the village from the jurisdiction
of the castle in Kruszwica. In 1318 the Regular Canons of Trzemeszno
[they were the owners of the monastery after Benedictines], sold the
village to the bishopric of Kujawy (in Wloclawek). In 1560 village belonged
again to the starostei in Kruszwica (i.e. it was a Crown property). In
that time there was only one farmstead and two fishermen. In 1793, after
the partitions of Polish Republic the village was taken by Prussian government,
and included into the State Domain in Strzelno. In later times it was
divided into two parts, of which one has got a new name Lostau, the other
still have an old name.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego - Warsaw [1893 Vol. 13.]
Submitted by Diana Grzelak Needham (Jun 2004). Translation
by Robert Kunkle.

Wojko~wka
Wojkowka, a village in Krosno powiat, on the right bank
of the Wislok, on the highway from Korczyna to Frysztak (10.5 km. away).
The village is built on the river basin, but to the east has wooded
hills reaching a height of 334 meters. It has 76 houses and 400 Roman
Catholic inhabitants. It is served by the parish church in Laczki.
The landed property (of Joz. Wiktor) has 186 morgs of farmland, 19
of meadows, 3 of gardens, 9 of pastures, and 142 of forests; the minor
estate has 331 morgs of farmland, 33 of meadows and gardens, 57 of
pastures, and 5 of forests. In 1536 Wojkowka belonged to the parish
in Szebnie and was owned by Marcin Kamieniecki, voivode of Podolia,
as a property of Kamieniec (of Odrzykon castle). Baltazar Dabrowski,
the heir to neighboring Moderowka, leased it. It has 13 peasants paying
6 grzywnas and 14 groszy and giving, in addition, 38 1/2bushels of
oats, chickens, eggs, and cheese. They also worked off a labor obligation
to the lord in Laczki. The soltys had a lan of farmland, the inn, and
every sixth denarius from the lord's rent (Pawinski, Malopolska, 523,
525). In 1571 there were only 9 peasants on 6 lans, 4 crofts, 2 tenants
with livestock and 2 without. Wojkowka borders to the north on Laczki,
to the east on Weglowka, and to the south on Bratkowka. - Mac.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 13, pg. 750].
Translated by Fred Hoffman, PGSA Winter 1999 Bulletin

Wojniunce
A village on the lake of the same name in the parish
and rural district of Kopciowo, Sejny county. It is 29 versts from
the town of Sejny and has 20 houses and 151 inhabitants. In 1827, there
were 6 houses and 55 inhabitants. The lake Wojniunce flows to the lake
Bagarys.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 13, pg. 756].
Translated by Dorothy Leivers, Hadlow, Kent, England, Dorfleiv@aol.com (May
2004)

Wojsznary
A settlement in the parish and rural district of Kopciowo,
Sejny county. It is 34 versts from the town of Sejny and consists of
1 house and 8 inhabitants
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1893, vol. 13, pg. 763].
Translated by Dorothy Leivers, Hadlow, Kent, England, Dorfleiv@aol.com (May
2004)

Wola Łużańska
A village in Gorlice powiat, with the manorial estate
it has 88 houses and 483 inhabitants, 478 Roman Catholic and 5 Jewish.
It lies on on a tributary of the Biesnik, which empties into the Biala
from the right bank; it has a railway station (10 km. east of Strozo w
and 17 km. west of Biecz) and belongs to the parish in Luzna. The mortgaged
[? -- tabularna] estate, belonging to Dr. Elfred Kalina, has 540 morgs,
a second part has 4 m? rgs.
In 1581 (according to Pawinski in "Malopolska," III), as
an appurtenance [or contiguity] of Luzna, it belonged to Zofia Branska,
and had 3 peasant lans, an enclosed farm with field, 2 tenants with
cattle and 2 without, and an inn. It borders on Mszanka to the east,
Szalowa to the west, Luzna to the north, to the south is a wooded elevation
called Bies~nik, 695 meters above sea level.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego,
vol. 13, p. 811, Warsaw 1893
Submitted by: Fred Hoffman (Nov 1997)

Wowcza
A place on the ground belonging to Malin, in the district
of Radomsyl, with a wood distiller's work belonging to Josko Narodycki.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Warsaw
Submitted by: Mieczyslaw A. Klopotek (Sep 1997)

Wowcze
A colony in the district of Radomsyl, in the 3rd Polish
precinct, township of Potyjowka, about 18 versts from Radom, 12 inhabitants.
Source: Slownik Geograficzny
Krolestwa Polskiego, Warsaw
Submitted by: Mieczyslaw A. Klopotek (Sep 1997)

Wrocanka
Wrocanka 1) a village in Jaslo county, on a small tributary
of the Jasiolka from the left bank, 3.5 km. south of Tarnowiec (parish
and railroad station between Jaslo and Krosno). With the landed estate
(of Konst. Pilin~ski) it has 104 houses and 574 Roman Catholic inhabitants.
The landed estate has an area of 494 m?rgs, half farmland and half
forest, and the minor estate has 708 morgs of land. In 1581 (Pawinski,
Malopolska, p. 120) it was the property of Salowski and had 4 peasant
lans, a zagroda with land, 3 zagrodas without land, 2 tenants with
cattle, the same number with no cattle, and 2 craftsmen. Glinik Polski
borders on it to the south, Umieszcz to the west, Polak?wka to the
east, and Tarnowiec to the north.
2) W., a village in Krosno county, on the right bank
of the Jasiel, elevation 312 meters above sea level, 4.3 km. west of
Miejsce and 8.3 km. southeast of Krosno. Near Wrocanka the roads to
Ryman?w and Dukla cross. With the landed estate it has 153 houses and
833 Roman Catholic inhabitants (409 men, 424 women). The landed estate
is mostly parceled out among 60 peasants; 59 morgs remained with the
major estate, and the peasants possessed 193 m?rgs; the minor estate
comes to 586 m?rgs.
Wrocanka was once a village owned by the king, settled
on the basis of German law, and it was originally settled by Germans.
In the 1665 Sanok district inspection report (Rekp. Os., Nr. 2834,
p. 58) we read: "The owner of this village is His Excellency Stanislaw
Zawisza, jointly with Her Excellency Konstancya of Kozieglowa, his
spouse, with a decree of consent received of King Jan Kazimierz and
dated Warsaw on 14 January 1651, with a cession by Her Excellency Katarzyna
Dunkowska, surviving spouse of the late noble Zygmut Dunkowski, Sanok
district scribe, in her own person. In this village there are 7 peasants
settled, of whom 3 pay a rent of 24 grosz each, which comes to 2 zl.
[zlotys], 12 grosz, and 3 pay 16 grosz each, which comes to 1 zl.,
18 grosz. Each gives a bushel of oats by Krosno measure, which totals
7 bushels at 2 zl. each for a total of 14 zl. Each gives 4 capons,
in all 28, at 6 grosz apiece, which comes to 5 zl., 18 grosz. They
are to do half-lan work service three days a week, from morning to
evening, with livestock. In summer they are to send two each to harvest
and gather hay and see to the breeding. They are each to spin two pieces
of the lord's material. When they provide a cart in place of labor
service, they are to deduct as many days as they will be on the road.
There are two zagrodniks. They are to do work one day a week. The manorial
farmstead's yield: 40 kopas [ 1 kopa = 60 sheaves] of rye, 10 kopas
of wheat, 16 of barley, 40 of oats, 20 of buckwheat. The total of all
produce and income, of the wojt's revenue as well, comes to 111 zl.,
18 grosz. Deducting 16 zl., 18 grosz from that sum that is paid to
the official, the sum on which the kwarta is to be paid to the Crown
treasury, under the debts described in the common law on inspections
and on the kwarta, comes to 95 zl."
The parish was already in existence by 1490; there is
no document of its founding because in 1566 hooligans robbed the church
and tortured Rev. Sokolowski, the pastor, to reveal where the money
was concealed. The wooden church existing today was built in 1770.
The village of Szczepancowa belongs to the parish (in the diocese of
Przemysl, deanery of Krosno). It borders on the south with Rowne, on
the east with Rogi and Miejsce, on the north with Glowienka, and on
the west with Nizna Laka. [Mac. Lu.-Dz.]
Source: Slownik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14]
Translated by Michael Gansecki and William F. Hoffman,
PGSA May 2000 Rodziny.

Wyrzysk
Wyrzysk 1) (also known as Wyrzysko, Werzysko, Wyritz,
German Wirsitz): a town on the Lobzonka, south of Lobzenica, northwest
of Naklo, the center of Wyrzysk county lies between Miasteczko, Szamocin,
Kcynia, Naklo, Mrocza, Lobzenica, and Wysoka? There is a civil registry
office in the town, a railway station in Osiek (German name Netzthal)
on the Bydgoszcz-Krzyz line, a school and parish in the town, courts
in the town and Pila.? It covers an area of 508 hectares, has 129 homesteads,
1,428 souls (590 Catholic and 142 Jews).? In 1326 Warcislaw, Prince
of Pomerania, and Fryderyk Wildenberg, Master of the Teutonic Knights,
made an alliance with Bishop Konrad of Kamien against Poland. In this
treaty the Teutonic Kinghts undertook the obligation of chasing the
Polish invaders back as far as Wyrzysk. Today the town does not possess
old documents.
In 1578 it had 25 personal farms, 11 zagrodas and 5
trades. When it came under Prussian rule in 1773, it was the property
of Count Wrbno Rydzynski, who sold it to Frederick the Great. The King
ordered a Protestant church built there. In 1788 Wyrzysk had 31 houses
and 180 souls. At the beginning of the 19th century it numbered 550
souls. In 1816 there were 43 homesteads and 435 souls, of whom 173
were Catholic and 48 Jews. In 1837 there were 70 houses, 808 souls;
892 souls in 1843; 999 souls in 1858; and 1,049 in 1861. The Catholic
church is dedicated to St. Martin. Its beginnings are unknown. The
1766 inspection says that in place of the wooden church Mikolaj z Wrbna
Rydzynski built a new one, at his own expense, in brick nogged timber
wall [w pruski mur]. It was consecrated on 31 May 1744 by Jozef Tadeusz
z Kiekrza Kierski, Poznan suffragan. After 120 years this church gave
way to a new one, made of brick in Gothic style, paid for by the parishioners
with government help. Jozef Kuczynski, Naklo dean, consecrated it on
4 November 1860. In 1821 the Wyrzysk church received the bell from
the former Dominican church in Gniezno, which was being torn down.
In 1813 a prehistoric burial-ground was excavated in Wyrzysk. 2) Wyrzysk,
a royal demesne, 1,238 hectares in area, 25 homesteads, 367 souls,
of whom 158 were Catholic. In 1793 Grabowo, Osiek,
Pruszcz, and Wysoczka also belonged to the Wyrzysk demesne.
Families of members being researched in Wyrzyk. Click
on researcher name to send E-mail.
Source: Slowik Geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego -
Warsaw [1895, vol. 14].
Translated by William F. Hoffman, PGSA
Fall 1995 Bulletin.

Wysoka
Early information on Wies Wysoka: Evidence the community
was formed before 1200. At one time, it was called Wissel, and was
a settlement of primarily people of German descent.
Some surnames of early settlers were: Rufer, Reizer,
Bartman, Uchman, Kochman, Tejchman, Szmuz, Flejscher.
Towns of Albigowa, Kraczkowa and Krzeminica were started
about 1340. Were mixed with Russians. Markowa, Hushow, and Kosina later
used the German language.
In 1538 a priest named Walerjan brought a German bible.
In 1558, first church records are in Polish, after that no German records,
only Polish and Latin. The year 1550 shows the oldest church record
(in Latin). In 1385 St. Margorzati was the first church started. First
baptismal records were in 1649. Priest named Tomasz had first record.
Priest named Kwolk was there to year 1591. In 1588, priest was Jerzy
Krauzer. One of the first families listed in records was Szlacheckie.
In 1640, one kloda wheat and one kloda oats was given to the church
by each family.
In June of 1624, the Tatars came from south and burned
the church and parsonage and murdered people and then retumed south.
Some people ran away. In 1626 a new church was built on the old spot.
Karol Franciszek Korniatkta once owned most of the land in Wysoka.
A Jan Labanski was killed in 1663. A priest by the name of Szaturski
kept records to year 1875. Later records were kept by Albert Krupski.
His rich relatives came and ran the area farms. In 1638 there were
400 persons in Wysoka. In 1705, the parish had an epidemic and many
families died. In 1785, there were 965 people in Wysoka (and in parish).
In 1831, cholera hit the area, and 30 people died. The parish had 1,040
people that year.
In 1835 a priest named Kajetan Kochanski started a new
cemetery by the church. The old wood church was taken apart in 1911
and a new church was built in the same place. In 1877 the priest was
Wojciech Brygilewicz. In 1812 the Austrian government took the churches'
gold and silver. St. Walenty's "obras" was bought in 1682.
The oldest school records are from the year 1577. From
1836 to 1838 Franciszek Alenberg built the first school by the church.
In 1835 the school head was Ludwig Slustowski. Then there was a period
of no written records. In 1869 a new school was built, and teachers
were paid 170 zloty per year. The teacher was a man named Kukorevicz
(an intelligent but a drinking man). Later Bronislaw Wolski was teacher.
No one remembers who the third teacher was, but the priest was Kochman.
From 1877 - 1916 Jan Antosz was teacher. School was across the road
from the church. In 1902 Wysoka was called "gmena" instead
of "wies". In 1913 the school was built where it is now.
It had four halls and living quarters for teachers. In 1927 five classes
were started. From 1929-30 there were 301 children in school. In 1925,
one class was being taught at home. In 1926 the old priest Edmund MIadynski
died. In 1916-1917 priest was Stanislaw Sabat. He died in 1955. From
1919-1927 Piotr Pasieka was director of the school. From 1928-1936
Tomasz Klus was director of the school. From 1936-1941 Piotr Wolosyn
was director of the school. In 1958 a hall was built for dances and
public events.
In 1959 church was painted. Ks. Michalski was the priest
for two years, then Jan Bazan. In 1957 the priest was Andrzej Czys.
A new organ was purchased for 500,000 zloty. In 1960 a tornado passed
through the area for eight minutes. In Rzeszow the storm broke the
church steeple with the bells. In 1966, 26 April, the river flooded
and damaged the water mill. In 1969, a new organ was purchased. In
1970 Stanislaw BMalczere was the teacher and priest. In 1974, a fence
was built around the church. In 1977 Andrzej Czys left there, and the
new priest was Edward Sniezek. He is still priest there now.
Source: unknown
Submitted by: Helen Steffanus

Wysoka
4) Wysoka, near Jordanow, a village in Myslenice county, the Roman Catholic parish is in Jordanow, in the same place as the post office, (of 5.3 kilometers away). The village has 753 residents, the area of the major landed estate has 32 inhabitants. In the year 1581 the village Wysoka, in Łetownia parish (just north of Jordanow), in the district of Szczyrzyc, the property of the Kalisz viovode, had 1Ľ peasant lans, 4 zagrodas (peasant farm house with yard, garden) without land and 3 tenant farmers with cattle.
Source: Słownik Geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego,
vol. 14, p. 124, Warsaw 1895
Translation by John Rys, Woodbury MN. Edited by Fred Hoffman in PGSA Rodziny, Summer 2005.
Family surnames of interest: Maciaszek, Macosek.
Wysoka in
Tuchola
Link to Suchomski Ancestry Website.
Translation by James D. Summers.
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