world.wikisort.org - Poland Biały Bór (Polish: [ˈbjawɨ ˈbur] (listen ) ; formerly German : Baldenburg ) is a town in Szczecinek County , West Pomeranian Voivodeship , Poland, with 2,226 inhabitants as of December 2021.[3]
For other places with the same name, see Biały Bór (disambiguation).
Place in West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland
Biały Bór
Lake Ławiczka in Biały Bór
Coat of arms
Show map of West Pomeranian Voivodeship Coordinates: 53°53′55″N 16°50′16″E Country PolandVoivodeship West Pomeranian County Szczecinek Gmina Biały Bór Established 13th century Town rights 1382 • MayorPaweł Stanisław Mikołajewski • Total12.82 km2 (4.95 sq mi) • Total2,226 • Density174/km2 (450/sq mi) Time zone UTC+1 (CET) • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST) Postal code 78-425
Area code +48 94 Car plates ZSZ National roads Website http://bialybor.com.pl/
History
Saint Michael Archangel church in Biały Bór
The settlement was founded in the 13th century.[5] It was part of Poland, until the Teutonic invasion in the early 14th century. Located at a formerly important crossroad, the Teutonic Knights built a fortification here, and in 1382[5] the settlement received Kulm law town rights. The town's development was stopped by a large fire in 1408.[6] No traces remain of the castle, but remnants of the medieval city wall have been incorporated in some later houses.
During the Thirteen Years' War it was recaptured by the Poles in 1461, and it was confirmed as part of Poland in 1466. Since then it was part of the Pomeranian Voivodeship until the First Partition of Poland in 1772, when it was annexed by Prussia,[6] and subsequently from 1871 it was part of Germany.
Up until the 20th century, the town economy consisted mostly of fishing, agriculture, crafts and local trade. It was the centre of a cloth manufacturing industry from the 16th century until the 19th century, when it had to close due to competition from more modern industries. A railway connection to the town was established in 1878. While most of Gdańsk Pomerania was reintegrated with Poland after the country regained independence in 1918, the town was one of the few which remained within Germany and was included in the newly established province, provocatively named towards Poles the Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia.[6] In 1939, the town had 2,292 inhabitants.[7] The town had a Jewish community and a small synagogue prior to World War II and the Holocaust.[8] The town was reintegrated with Poland in 1945.[6]
From 1950 to 1998, the town belonged to the Koszalin Voivodeship.
Transport
There is a railway station in Biały Bór.
Notable residents
Georg Ludwig Rudolf Maercker (1865-1924), World War I general
Karl Ruß (1833-1899), ornithologist[9]
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Biały Bór .
Geography of Pomerania
Regions
Current
Western Pomerania
Farther Pomerania
Pomerelia
Former
Circipania
Lauenburg and Bütow Land
Lands of Schlawe and Stolp
Administration Cities and towns Inhabited islands Peninsulae and headlands Rivers Lakes Bays, lagoons National parks
Western Pomerania Lagoon Area
Jasmund
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History of Pomerania
10,000 BC – 600 AD
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1806– 1933
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Pomerania-Stettin
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Szczecin Voivodeship 1946–1975
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Contemporary
Farther Pomerania
Duchy of Pomerania
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Cammin
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Pomerania-Stolp
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Contemporary
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Contemporary
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Szczecin Voivodeship 1946–1975
Koszalin Voivodeship 1950–1975
Gdańsk Voivodeship 1975–1998
Koszalin Voivodeship 1975–1998
Słupsk Voivodeship 1975–1998
Bydgoszcz Voivodeship 1975–1998
Toruń Voivodeship 1975–1998
Contemporary
Ecclesiastical
Roman Catholic
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Christianization of Pomerania
Diocese of Wollin/Cammin
Diocese of Kolberg
Diocese of Chełmno
Diocese of Roskilde
Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Germany
Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania
Apostolic Administration of the Free City of Danzig
Apostolic Administration of Tütz
Prelature of Schneidemühl
Apostolic Administration of Kamień (Cammin), Lubusz (Lebus) and the Prelature of Piła (Schneidemühl) with see in Gorzów Wielkopolski 1945–1972
Extant
Archdiocese of Berlin
Diocese of Bydgoszcz
Archdiocese of Gdańsk
Diocese of Koszalin-Kołobrzeg
Diocese of Pelplin
Archdiocese of Szczecin-Kamień
Diocese of Toruń
Diocese of Włocławek
Protestant
Historical
Evangelical State Church in Prussia
Pomeranian Evangelical Church
Extant
Evangelical Church in Germany
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany
Lutheran Diocese of Mecklenburg and Pomerania
Evangelical Reformed Church in Germany
Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland
Lutheran Diocese of Pomerania-Greater Poland
Lutheran Diocese of Wrocław
Pentecostal Church in Poland
Demography and anthropology
Archaeological cultures
Hamburg
Maglemosian
Ertebølle-Ellerbek
Linear Pottery
Funnelbeaker
Havelland
Corded Ware
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Nordic Bronze Age
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Major demographic events
Migration Period
Ostsiedlung
WWII flight and expulsion of Germans
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Languages and dialects
Treaties
1200– 1500
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Thorn, First (1411)
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Melno (1422)
Perleberg (1427)
Eberswalde, Second (1427)
Łęczyca (1433)
Brześć Kujawski (1435)
Soldin (1466)
Thorn, Second (1466)
Prenzlau (1448/1468/1472/1479)
Pyritz (1493)
1500– 1700
Thorn (1521)
Kraków (1525)
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Augsburg (1555)
Lublin (1569)
Stettin (1570)
Franzburg (1627)
Stettin (1630)
Westphalia (1648)
Stettin (1653)
Labiau (1656)
Wehlau and Bromberg (1657)
Oliva (1660)
Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1679)
Lund (1679)
1700– present
Stockholm (1719 / 1720)
Frederiksborg (1720)
Polish Partitions Treaties (1772/1773, 1793, 1795)
Tilsit (1807)
Kiel (1814)
Vienna (1815)
North German Confederation Treaty (1866)
Peace of Prague (1866)
Versailles (1919)
Polish Concordat (1925)
Prussian Concordat (1929)
Reichskonkordat (1933)
Molotov–Ribbentrop (1939)
Potsdam (1945)
Zgorzelec (1951)
Moscow (1970)
Warsaw (1970)
Helsinki Accords (1975)
Polish-East German Maritime Border Agreement (1989)
Two Plus Four (1990)
German Reunification Treaty (1990)
German–Polish Border Treaty (1991)
Treaty of Good Neighbourship (1991)
Polish Concordat (1993)
Convention on the International Commission on the Protection of the Oder against Pollution (1996)
Treaty of Accession 2003
Authority control
General National libraries
На других языках [de] Biały Bór Biały Bór [ˈbʲawɨ bur]?/i (deutsch Baldenburg) ist eine Stadt mit Sitz einer Stadt- und Landgemeinde im Powiat Szczecinecki (Neustettin) in der polnischen Woiwodschaft Westpommern. - [en] Biały Bór [ru] Бялы-Бур Бялы-Бур (польск. Biały Bór), Бальденберг (нем. Baldenburg) — город в Польше, входит в Западно-Поморское воеводство, Щецинецкий повят. Имеет статус городско-сельской гмины. Занимает площадь 12,76 км². Население — 2166 человек (на 2008 год)[1].
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