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Dutch villages --> Żuławy
NOWA KOŚCIELNA (NOWA KOŚCIELNICA)
Następna miejscowość Next village
Explanations
Map of district

gm. Ostaszewo, pow. nowodworski, woj. pomorskie

Until 1945 N.Monsterberg (Gotha) Neu Münsterberg (Endersch, Schrötter)

The village was established in 1352 under the Chełmno law by the Grand Master, Winrich on 50 włókas of land. The sources from 1776 mentioned Brecht, Dick, Ens, Epp, Fehr, Harder, Isaac, Claassen, Matis, Penner, Peters, Regehr, Thiesen, Welcke, Wiens, and Willmp. In 1820, the village had 560 residents, including 106 Mennonites. The petition from 1868 was signed by Bergman, 4 landowners with the surname Ens, Johann Enz, Epp, Joann Harder, Joann Classen, Aron Penner, Aron Peter, Abraham van Riesen, and J. Wins.

Village layout - linear village.

The cultural landscape has been relatively well preserved with a detectable spatial layout, wooden buildings from the 19th century, including 4 arcaded houses and a wooden granary, as well as brick buildings from the beginning of the 20th century.

No. 32 (former 61) is a house from a longitudinal Dutch homestead (a cowshed and a barn has been taken down) situated in the southern section of the village on the eastern side, facing a road with its ridge. The house dates from the mid 1800s. It has a horizontally boarded log structure, a vertically boarded gable, a brick underpinning, and asbestos tile roofing. The western elevation has 3 axes and a two-level gable (4 axes in the bottom) with a pair of windows enclosed by two smaller windows and a small, square-like window above. The southern elevation has 5 axes with an entrance in the 2nd axis from the east.
No. 52 is a house from a Dutch homestead (a cowshed has been converted into an apartment, a barn - demolished) situated in the southern section of the village, on a western side of a road, facing it with its ridge. The house was erected in the mid 1800s and rebuilt in 1910. It has a plastered wooden structure, pantile roofing, and a stone/brick underpinning, a half-timbered, brick-filled extension with a bricked-in arcade. The eastern elevation currently has 7 axes with a 3-axial extension.
No. 60 (former 57.58) is an arcaded house from the mid 18th century. It belonged to the Wiebe family. It is a 2-storey building with a gable extension, a log structure in the ground floor, and a half-timbered structure filled with bricks in the 2nd floor and the extension. The building has 3 rooms by the eastern wall, a wide hallway along the entire building, and a perpendicular wing with a large room, a bedroom, and a black kitchen on the western side.
No. 51 is an arcaded house erected in 1840 for Wilhelm Classen and subsequently owned by the Dyck family. The building has a stone underpinning, a log structure with quoins covered by boards imitating Tuscan pilaster, and a half-timbered extension (western side) supported by 6 frontal and 2 side  stylized, composite columns and half-timbered walls. The interior has 3 crosswise bays with the large room in the southwestern corner, a bipartite, rectangular hallway, and an angular hallway, which separates two kitchens in the middle. There are 2 rooms in the northern section separated by a staircase.
No. 23 is a house erected in 1801 for Erman Zoelsz. The building has a stone foundation, a log structure with quoins covered by boards imitating Tuscan pilaster. The interior has a 2-bay layout with a wider eastern bay, the large room in the southeastern corner, a centrally located black kitchen, and a bipartite, L-shaped hallway. The building includes a cowshed in the northeastern corner adjacent to a utility hallway, but not connected to it. There is a summer room, which functions as an additional hallway with an entrance to the cowshed and a staircase to an attic.
No. 52 was a house from 1748. It had a log structure with quoins covered by boards imitating Tuscan pilaster, a half-timbered arcade supported by 6 posts and a half-timbered wall with braces carved into the form of a reverse ogee arch. The building had a 2-bay layout with bays of a similar width, a centrally located black kitchen, a bipartite, L-shaped hallway, a 3-axial gable wall, a 6-axial frontal wall, an arcade (east side) in the axes 2-4, and an entrance in the 3rd axis between narrow windows. The house has been taken down in 1978.

    
Schmid, s.207 - 208, ML t.; AG IV, Stankiewicz,s535; Lipińska , t. III, poz. 209.


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