[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] FW: Maliszewo and other Rumunki
Michael & Maureen McHenry
maurmike at bellatlantic.net
Mon Jul 4 09:15:26 PDT 2005
The town size is on the legend of the 1:300000 scale map downloaded from the
1919-1939 map site. The date in the margin is 1934. It is difficult to
compare without actually printing the map. The image size is 20"X20". It is
a least as large as adjacent Brzezno which has no prefix. I also have the
1:100000 and Juergen's 1:25000 of 1940. A pretty significant area is cleared
of forest. I don't want to beat this to death but so many of these towns
have the prefix around Lipno. I wanted to know if Rumunki was any further
significance beyond clearing in the woods. Anything that can point us more
directly to our German roots is worth pursuing. In any event once again I
have gotten good history lesson from the list. Thank you all
Mike
-----Original Message-----
From: ger-poland-volhynia-bounces at eclipse.sggee.org
[mailto:ger-poland-volhynia-bounces at eclipse.sggee.org] On Behalf Of Jerry
Frank
Sent: Monday, July 04, 2005 8:26 AM
To: Jutta Dennerlein; Michael & Maureen McHenry
Cc: GerPolandVolhynia
Subject: Re: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Maliszewo and other Rumunki
At 12:56 AM 04/07/2005, Jutta Dennerlein wrote:
><SNIP>
>If we assume 1760 as a possible founding date of the Rumunki Maliszewo
>(just an assumption based on the general history of the Dobriner
>Land), this would mean that then there were probably 6-12 additional
>isolated houses build in the woods near the Polish estate and village
>of Maliszewo. These 6-12 farmers in 1760 were very likely ethnic
>Germans. Probably descendants of farmers from the earlier German
>settlements in that area.
>
>The map you are referring to was probably created around 1920.
>Between 1760 and 1920 many things could have happened in Maliszewo!
>You say, the map indicates that there was a population of 1000 to 2000
>(in 1920). <SNIP>
My 1805 Gilley map shows two villages here, Maliszewo and
Maliszewko. There are NO villages in this time frame that carry the
Rumunki adjective so it must be a term applied later than that
(keeping in mind that this region was under Prussian rule in 1805,
not Russian).
Maliszewo is shown on the south side of the little river with the
symbol "Dorf ohne Kirche", village without a church, and no houses
are shown immediately adjacent to the place name. Perhaps this was
the location of the estate??? Maliszewko is shown on the north
side, and a short distance west, but includes about 3
houses. Scattered throughout the forest to the southwest of
Maliszewo are groups of "Buden", huts - about 9 of them extending all
the way to Lipowiec.
My modern map shows significant clearing of the forest here but I
don't think there could have ever been a population into the
thousands at any time. It is still very much a rural area, not an urban
town.
Jerry Frank - Calgary, Alberta
FranklySpeaking at shaw.ca
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