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Olenders

Olenders (Polish: Olędrzy Polish: [ɔˈlɛ̃dʐɨ] or Olendrzy, singular form: Olęder, Olender; German: Holländer, Hauländer) were people, often of Dutch, Frisian or German ancestry, who lived in settlements in Poland organized under a particular type of law.

Olenders
A timberframed house in the village of Stalewo, Poland
Regions with significant populations
Poland, especially Pomerania, Greater Poland, Kuyavia, Mazovia, Powiśle
Related ethnic groups
Dutch people, Frisians, Germans
A historical Mennonite cemetery in Stogi, Poland
An 18th-century Mennonite house in Żuławki, Poland

The term Olender has been used to describe two related, but slightly different, groups of settlers. First, it describes settlers in Poland from Friesland and the rest of the Netherlands,[1] most often of the Mennonite faith, who in the 16th and 17th centuries founded villages in Royal Prussia, along the Vistula River and its tributaries, in Kuyavia, Mazovia and Greater Poland. They possessed knowledge of flood control, and a well-developed agrarian culture. At that time, they were the wealthiest group of peasants. They maintained personal freedom, and their own religion and beliefs. After the First Partition of Poland, some of them emigrated to southern Ukraine.

Second, in a later period (up to the middle of the 19th century), the term Olędrzy (German: Hauländer) was used to describe settlers of different ethnicities (principally Germans and Poles, at times Scots, Czechs, and Hungarians), who benefited from certain privileges resulting from the law established by the Frisian and Dutch peasants (such as personal freedom,[Note 1] long-term or perpetual use of land, and the possibility of transmitting land to heirs). The most important characteristic, however, was collective responsibility of the entire Olęder community for its obligations toward the land owner and the specific character of the community's self-government.[3] Thus, the distinguishing characteristics of an Olęder settlement are legal, and not ethnic, religious or economic. Consequently, the word Olęder is not synonymous with "Dutch settler."

According to studies conducted so far, from 1527/1547 to 1864 on the terrain of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, later divided into three parts in the Partitions of Poland, at least 1700 Olęder settlements were established. Of those, in at least 300 settlements, the settlers were ethnic Dutch.[4] Traces of these settlements are still visible in village architecture, the physical layout of villages, and in the names of villages (Holendry, Olędry, Olendry, etc.)

Terminology edit

 
Part of a 1905 map of Poznan province, showing the village of Konkolewo Hauland (today Kąkolewo), founded in 1720, located between Nowy Tomyśl (Neutomischel) and Grodzisk Wielkopolski (Grätz).

Polish sources use a variety of terms for olęder settlers: Hollendrzy, Holędrzy, Holendrzy, Olędrzy, and Olendrzy. These are interchangeable, and derive from the first settlers from the Netherlands, who moved into Ducal Prussia and Royal Prussia beginning in the 16th century. It is important, however, to recognize that over time the term lost its ethnic meaning, and therefore Olendrzy refers to all settlers living under the legal regime introduced by the Dutch colonists, including most notably the Vistula Germans and Vistula delta Mennonites.

It is also important to underline, that not all settlements carrying the name Olędry (or similar) were in fact settled by Olęders. Rusiński[5] gives examples of such instances in Greater Poland: Wymysłowo (known in some sources as Czarkowskie Olędry) or Burzykowo in the parish of Oborniki (on some German maps called Burzykower Holl.). Rusiński argues that although though those villages had the name Olędry, that is not a basis for calling them genuine olędry settlements, because in their cases one does not find the legal arrangements typical of such colonization (collective responsibility to the land owner and characteristic olęder self-government).

A separate problem is the question of the German words that function as two alternatives: Holländer and Hauländer. According to earlier German historical writings,[6][7] they had two distinct meanings, reflecting a difference in the type of settlement. After all, Olędry were settled chiefly on difficult terrain, which required proper preparation to plant or raise livestock. The referenced historians argued that on low, wet terrain subject to flooding, settlers were called Holländer (in reference to the settlers from the Netherlands who were specialists in flood control and drainage), while those colonists who settled in thick forests requiring clearing were called Hauländer (from the German hauen – to hew, to chop). However, that viewpoint has been recognized as inaccurate (both in German history writing as well as Polish),[8][9][10] as evidenced by those settlements on flood plains called Hauland and villages that appeared on the road to clearings in the forest called Holland. Most likely, the word Hauländer started as a variant of Holländer, and appeared through blending the names of settlements with the name for woodcutters.[11]

Reasons for colonization edit

The beginnings of Olęder colonization must be sought in the Middle Ages in the area where Germans lived. The first records come from the area of Bremen in the year 1106.[12] At that time, settlement was closely linked to the territorial expansion of the German rulers into Slavic territory. Southern Holstein was colonized by Duke Adolf II of Holstein, while Albert "the Bear" and Henry "the Lion" installed settlers from the Netherlands in Brandenburg and Mecklenburg. (Indeed, Albert "the Bear" was an especially active coloniser.[13])

The beginning of the second wave of settlement from the Netherlands, this time directly to Polish soil, occurred in the 16th century. Three chief causes of that colonization can be distinguished:

  • Religious persecution in the Netherlands
The Reformation found fertile ground there. Anabaptism, from which later arose the Mennonites, became widely accepted. At the same time, the Habsburg rulers of Spain, who also ruled the Netherlands -- Emperor Charles V and King Philip II – as devoted Catholics zealously sought to eradicate heresy in their territories. This led to Protestant emigration in search of a more tolerant environment.[14][15][16]
  • The Economic situation in the Netherlands
Unrest in the Netherlands, the struggle for independence during the Dutch Revolt, and the presence in the Netherlands of the Spanish army and the forces of William I of Orange led to collapse in the rural economy. The devastation of war led to common hunger, an epidemic of bubonic plague and frequent suffering.[17] For many enterprising farmers this was an additional stimulus to emigrate.
As a final result of the Polish-Teutonic War, many villages on the borders of Prussia were devastated, and were deserted by their inhabitants. At the same time, the landowners endeavored to increase their incomes, by, among other things, cultivating new lands, especially by clearing forests and draining swamps.[18] Immigrants from the Netherlands had centuries of experience with that latter task.

Course of colonization edit

 
A windmill in Palczewo – one of the remnants of Olęder settlements in Żuławy
 
A skansen in Dziekanowice near Poznań. The open-air museum contains many relics of wooden Olęder architecture

Before Olęder settlers arrived on the soil of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Dutch were already present in Ducal Prussia, a vassal duchy of Poland. The first settlement in that region appeared in the area of modern-day Pasłęk.[Note 2] There is a claim that they were participants in the killing of Floris V, Count of Holland in 1296, who then fled east, which is alluded to by Dutch poet Joost van den Vondel in his work Gijsbrechcie van Aemstel (1637).[19] However, conflicts frequently arose between the Dutch and Germans regarding property, religion and customary law. Before long, those first settlers began looking for a new home. The first Polish terrain colonized by newcomers from the Netherlands was in the province of Royal Prussia. In the middle of the 16th century, the government of Gdańsk, led by Mayor Ferber, decided to populate Żuławy Gdańskie, which had been given the city by King Casimir IV Jagiellon in 1454.[14] The effort to settle locals there failed, because the peasants could not cope with flooding. Consequently, the people of Gdańsk agreed to an attempt to settle Netherlanders in the deserted village of Laudan.[20][Note 3] The newcomers from the Netherlands easily mastered the unfavorable conditions, and soon thereafter additional Olęder settlements appeared in Pomerania. Among others, these included Nowy Dwór (called Tiegenhof in 1562), Orłowo, Żelichowo, Markusy and Jurandowo. Soon colonization spread to the Starostwo of Puck (such as Karwieńskie Błoto and Reda[21]), and – even more importantly – began to progress up the Vistula River.

Settlements appeared in the starostwas of Gniew and Sztum (including Szkaradowo, Benowo, Pułkowice, Szropy and Nowa Wieś). Olęder settlements were also located in the Osiek and Międzyłęż starostwas. The area around Nowe, Grudziądz and Świecie were also thickly settled.[22] In 1597, Olęder settlement reached Greater Poland. A settlement appeared in Ługi Ujskie, near Ujście. Four years later another appeared in Nowe Dwory, on the Wieleński family's estate. In that instance, the colonization was directly linked to Pomerania, since the Wieleński lord's wife was the widow of the Starosta of Świecie.[23] In 1624 the Dutch reached as far as Warsaw, where they settled, among other places, on Saska Kępa. Earlier (in the second half of the 16th century), they were already in the area of Lublin (18 settlements appeared in the area of Sławatycze, on the Bug River.[24]). Olęder settlement continued to spread up to the times of the Partitions of Poland, and even reached Volhynia in present-day Ukraine.

With the passage of time the national character of the settlers changed. While at the beginning they were almost entirely of Dutch origin (sometimes arriving directly from the Netherlands, sometimes moving on after an initial stop in Ducal Prussia), later, with increasing frequency, they were descendants of the original Dutch, born on Polish soil, and subsequently from a completely different ethnic group—most often German, sometimes Polish, and occasionally representatives of other groups. For example, in reference to Greater Poland, Rusiński wrote "of the Dutch nation ... it is generally difficult to speak."[25] Chodyła gives a precise figure: descendants of the Dutch in Pomerania accounted for 0.8% of settlers; Evangelical (Lutheran) Germans, for 54%; and Polish Catholics, 38%. A further 7.2% were of mixed ethnicity and faith.[4]

Most studies agree that the Partitions of Poland and subsequent period (up to the mid-19th century) was a turning point signalling the end of Olęder settlement. For example, many Mennonites abandoned the lands they had occupied in Prussia, because their religious beliefs did not allow them to perform military service, which conflicted with the ethos of such a heavily militaristic state. In addition, administrative reforms carried out by the partitioning powers eliminated the legal arrangements that constituted the distinguishing characteristic of Olęder settlements.[Note 4]

Settlement characteristics edit

 
Mid 19th-century timberframe house in Boruja
 
Former Protestant Olęder church in Boruja Kościelna

Types edit

Considering the large differences in Olęder colonization in different regions and at different times, it is hard to speak of a single type of village or economic activity. Everything depended on local conditions (the requirements of the terrain and the character of land cleared for sowing or pasture), and the background of the settlers.

In the case of villages on terrain that had been drained, most often one finds buildings constructed in a straight line, with farms located between the river and a road running parallel. Each settler received a thin strip of land located at a right angle to the river or other body of water. If the chief task of the colonists was clearing forest lands, the land owner would designate a specified area, and the settler would choose himself the best place to make a clearing and would situate his farmstead there. This led to the appearance of so-called "zabudowa kolonijna", and in effect the village had a dispersed character.[27]

In the earliest period of settlement, on the fertile soil of Prussia, large and wealthy farms prevailed. In a later period, especially in the valley of the Vistula River, there appeared ever more frequently small, poor and more dispersed farms. As regards the type of buildings, that depended strongly on the ethnicity of the colonists. Szałygin distinguished three types:[27]

  • Frisian – farm buildings located under a shared roof, with the residential part set at an angle (for example, in the shape of a cross or of the letter "L")
  • German – similar to the case of Frisian farms, the residence and the farm buildings were located under one roof, but in a straight line (one long building, the so-called Langhof)
  • Polish – separated residence and farm buildings, scattered around the farm, most often in a quadrilateral.

Górak points out the pros and cons of the Frisian and German types of farm.[24] On the one hand, such placement of the buildings facilitated work and communication, especially in the rainy season or winter, when it was possible to maintain the farm without going outdoors (except to draw water). On the other hand, there is no way to ignore the terrible sanitary conditions and discomfort (especially the stench) resulting from having livestock living so close by.

If the settlers came from the Netherlands, and their task was flood control and draining flooded terrain, they applied certain typical methods of protecting their farms against high water. Buildings were located on an elevated platform, raised using dirt from excavating canals and drainage ponds. In the vicinity, they planted poplars and willows, whose purpose was to stop ice floes in the river during melts. The residential portion of the building was always close to the river, or pointed upstream, so that in case of flood the water would flow first through the residential portion, then through the rest of the farm buildings, and finally spill out onto the fields, which helped to keep the building clean.[27]

In discussing characteristic buildings of the Olęder settlement, one must also mention houses with open passageways on the groundfloor, and windmills (often based on Dutch designs) – the distinguishing contribution of the Dutch and Frisian immigrants to the Polish rural landscape (especially in Żuławy).

Legal regulation and village organization edit

Because the Olęder settlement was not monolithic, either with regard to ethnicity, religion or economics, the basic distinguishing characteristic of that type of colonization was the legal conditions regulating both the relationships of the settlement to the broader world and its internal affairs.

Legal relations edit

Settlement contracts and leases edit

The legal foundation and mark of the beginning of settlement was the settlement "privilege" (also called the "contract" (kontract) or "law" (prawo), which was rendered in Latin as the privilegium or ius, and in German as the Gerichtigkeit), which was issued in the case of a significant majority of settlements.[Note 5] It usually took a ceremonial and ornamental form, being drawn up on parchment and appropriately stamped with official seals, either placed directly on the document or on cords attached to the document. From a formal legal point of view, this document was not a binding contract, but rather a unilateral declaration expressing the will of the land owner. De facto, however, its contents reflected the agreement of both sides. In this regard, the most important distinguishing factor of olęder settlement is the fact that the second party was not a zasadźca (that is, a figure in medieval Poland who acted as a sort of headman of a village, and intermediary between the land owner and his peasants), but rather the community of settlers acting collectively, or their representative acting on their behalf. The original document remained in the hands of the land owner, although it was often recopied into the appropriate "land book," since the land owner was obligated to produce a duplicate in case the original was lost or destroyed.

Contracts were drawn up in German, Polish or Latin. German or Latin appear most often in Royal Prussia (although contracts in Polish were also found there). The Polish language dominated elsewhere in the Kingdom of Poland.[29] In Greater Poland, around 22% of contracts were written in German, and one can even find contracts written both in German and Polish.[28] Most often contracts were written only at the outset of settlement, although situations did occur—especially in later periods—where a contract's purpose was to recognize legally an already existing situation, such as the rights and relations of settlers already living on the land owner's lands. It also happened that a land owner would extend the new Olęder law to peasants who had been living on given lands for some time.[30]

The contract precisely regulated relations of the Olęder community with the land owner and with other persons and institutions. One basic issue was the conditions on which the settlers were given tenure of lands (dzierżawa). At the beginning of the period of Olęder settlement, land was delivered to the settlers for a specified period, usually from a few dozen to 60 years (although it also occurred that Olęder settlers were given the land only for a few years—as a test period—and if the settlement was successful, the tenure was extended. In later periods, often tenure was turned into emphyteusis, often in perpetuity. (In Roman and civil law, an emphyteusis was a contract by which a landed estate was leased to a tenant, either in perpetuity or for a long term of years, upon the reservation of an annual rent, and upon condition that the lessee should improve the property; the real right by which a person is entitled to enjoy another's estate as if it were his own, and to dispose of its substance, as far as can be done without deteriorating it.[31] This occurred both in cases of extended contracts of tenure, as well as in the founding of new Olęder settlements. (Rusiński gives as an example Olędry Róża, in Greater Poland, settled before 1624).[32] Such tenure was not only perpetual, but also heritable and alienable, although nothing could be done that would harm the interests of the land owner.)

In return for tenure of the land, the settler paid the land owner the so-called wkupne (also called the gottespfenik)[Note 6] While in Royal Prussia and Kuyavia the wkupne had to be paid before the first assumption of tenure, and also at each subsequent extension, in Greater Poland Olęder settlers paid the land owner the so-called Gruntgeld only upon converting tenure for a term of years into tenure in perpetuity.[34]

For the use of the land, the community had to pay the land owner an annual rent (czynsz), specified in the settlement contract. (Rent usually were paid only in money; rents in kind were rare outside of Greater Poland). Frequently, at the founding of a settlement, the land owner gave the settlers a few years to get established, foregoing collection of rents during that period (the so-called wolnizna).[35] In only a few cases were Olęder settlers also obligated to provide labor, and even then to a limited degree.[Note 7]

Personal and legal relationships edit

The Olęder settlers were free persons. They were not dependent upon the land owner, as underscored in the majority of contracts for settling new villages. They could, at any time of their choice, sell their farm and depart the property. The situation is not entirely clear regarding existing inhabitants of a village to which the Olęder law was subsequently extended. For example, the inhabitants of Olędrów Chorzępowa, on the Sieraków estate, theoretically could sell their farms (and perhaps depart the property), but the settlement contract did not clearly describe them as free people, and an inventory of the estate made a few years later counts some of the farmers as serfs.[37]

Minor judicial matters generally were tried before the local government of the Olęder community. However, the land owner reserved the right to hear the matter himself in the case of serious crimes (robbery, arson, murder, assault causing bodily harm, etc.)[38] The land owner's court was also the court of review for appeals from the decision of the community. That legal arrangement placed the Olęder settler on a somewhat higher level than an enserfed peasant, who did not have access to community justice.[39] Only rarely were Olędrzy without the right to settle any legal questions. Such was the case on Saska Kępa, where only the mayor and the land owner's clerk were entitled to judge disputes.[40]

On royal estates, in case of a conflict with the starosta in charge of administering the estate for the king, the Olędrzy could appeal to the royal referendary court (sąd referendarski), a right which they invoked frequently.[41] In the case of noble estates, nothing is known regarding the regulatory conditions allowing appeal from decisions of the land owner. However, almost certainly the Olędrzy had the capacity on their own initiative to file a complaint in the civic and land courts (urzęd grodzki i ziemski), in contrast to serfs who could file such a complaint only in the presence of the land owner himself.[42]

Faith, public and religious obligations edit

Olęder settlers identified with different Christian sects. This is the case both with the first colonists, from the Netherlands and Frisia (most often Anabaptists and Mennonites), and with the later, ethnically different peasants (Lutherans and Roman Catholics). In general, they enjoyed freedom of religion, which after all was one of the reasons for the original Dutch colonization. The great majority of settlement contracts contained the limitation that the settlers were not allowed to prevent Catholic laborers they employed from participating in Holy Mass or other church visits. Only rarely did a founder interfere with the colonists' freedom to carry out their own religious observances (for example, the Warsaw authorities not only prohibited the Olędrzy from building a Protestant church, but also from holding services, either privately or publicly. They were required to participate in Catholic services.).[43]

Even if an Olęder settlement was populated by non-Catholic peasants, most often the settlement was within the jurisdiction of Catholic Church administration. Consequently, both Catholics and Lutherans were required to make certain payments (in return for which, Lutherans were, in certain situations, authorized to use the services of Catholic priests). Olędrzy paid tithes or meszne, a payment for saying Mass, often made in kind but sometimes in money, and paid by all inhabitants in a parish (it was rare for both tithes and meszne to have to be paid), as well as payments for specific services (performing baptisms, marriages, burials, etc.) These were paid to the Roman Catholic Church by Lutherans even if the service was performed by a Protestant chaplain, and was treated as compensation for the reduction in Church finances.[33] Payments for these things to the Roman Catholic Church were only abolished in 1768, when the Cardinal Laws equalized the legal rights of Catholics and dissenters.

Like other peasants, Olędrzy were also required to pay certain taxes to the state (and only rarely did the land owner take that responsibility upon himself, and in those cases he may have compensated himself through higher rents). These included taxes levied per capita or per hearth, having to provide winter quarters for soldiers, and other taxes (such as those on hides or the subsidium charitativum).[44]

Organization edit

Local self-government edit

Strong self-government was one of the most fundamental distinguishing characteristics of Olęder settlement, even though there were cases where the land owner attempted to limit it (by trying to appoint a hereditary sołtys, who was a dependant of the manor), in which case the community's system of local government was closer to that of villages founded under the German Law. Most often, however, the manor respected the rights of the community granted in the settlement contract.

The local government of the community consisted of the sołtys and his councillors, each called a ławnik. Most often there were two of these,[41] rarely three and extremely seldom four.[45]). They were not appointed by the land owner, but chosen by all the inhabitants of the settlement (although women did not have the right to vote). Local government elections were usually held annually. At times the term of office lasted two or three years.[46] Election to an office for life was truly exceptional.[Note 8]

On the one hand, local officials served as intermediaries between the settlement and the manor. They were directly responsible for ensuring complete and punctual fulfillment of the obligations owed to the manor, such as collecting a delivering payments and rents to the land owner. On the other hand, the sołtys and councillors managed the administration of the community and its judicial system. This was most often regulated by administrative ordinances (wilkierz), which frequently were also spelled out in the settlement contract. The legal content of these had the objective of regulating relations among the peasants, which was especially important in the context of the shared responsibility of the community to fulfill the obligations toward the land owner contained in the contract. For example, the officials of the local government were even required to remove an Olęder who neglected his land and settle somebody else there. The local government was also responsible for the care of minor orphans, with security (especially against fires) and cleanliness of the settlement.[47]

At the same time, the sołtys and councillors acted as the court of first instance for minor infractions and arguments. For all of these actions, local officials received payment from the community. Income from payments was placed in the community chest, kept by the sołtys (and keys to which were held by the councillors). Funds from the community chest were used, among other things, to cover the travel costs of jury members, as well, perhaps, as payment to a community shepherd, a night watchman, a teacher or the cost of insuring against fire.[48]

Schools edit

An important distinguishing characteristic of non-Catholic Olęder settlements was the existence on their terrains of schools. Above all, these fulfilled a religious function, preparing youth to join the community of faith. Rusiński even doubts whether anything other than the catechism was taught in some schools.[49]

The school generally was located in its own building, to the construction of which the land owner agreed in the settlement contract. He also facilitated upkeep of the school by designating for it a specified area of land free of rents. For example, in Chmielinko the settlers received one-half of a huba for the school.[36] The teacher cultivated that land, although he often also received additional contributions from the community. His duties included providing instruction in religion, and how to participate in the religion's rituals, and teaching reading, writing and arithmetic. The community sometimes took advantage of the teacher's knowledge of how to write to perform certain tasks associated with administration of the settlement: maintaining the community's records and the local government's correspondence. Surely, the teacher also sometimes acted as scribe for the personal correspondence of the peasants.

It is difficult to assess the quality of instruction in the Olęder schools. In Rusiński's opinion, the manner of recruiting teachers in Olęder settlements in Greater Poland—from among weavers, innkeepers, shoekeepers or tailors in small towns who could not find work—is proof that the quality cannot have been very high.[50] At the same time, he recognized that the fact of these schools' existence was an undeniable benefit to the community. In turn, Szałygin indicated that, for the settlers from the Netherlands the schools were a safeguard for their language, culture, traditions and Mennonite faith, which allowed them to keep their own identity and resist Polonization. However, after the partitions of Poland, Prussian policy led to their Germanization.[50]

Impact edit

Studies thoroughly analyzing the effects of the Olęder settlement on the Polish economy are lacking. Researchers have treated the topic summarily. For example, Rusiński limits himself to the claim that, "as an economic phenomenon, the settlement must undoubtedly be assessed positively."[51] In turn, Szałygin points out that "their farms were characterized by a significantly higher efficiency, modernization and better organization of work than the farms of enserfed peasants.[51] Precisely defining the effects of this type of colonisation is even more difficult because so far no studies have appeared that encompass the entire territory of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, from Ducal Prussia, through Kuyavia, Mazovia and Greater Poland to the area around Lublin. The fullest and richest work remains that of Rusiński, published in 1947, and which deals only with Greater Poland.

However, there is no doubt—as proved by the willingness of land owners to grant settlement contracts to additional villages—that the Olęder settlement phenomenon had positive effects on the Polish rural economy, in two ways. First, the arrival of the colonists from the Netherlands and Friesland, with their centuries of experience in cultivating difficult floodplains, gave a push to development of Polish agriculture and livestock breeding. Second, land owners received higher incomes thanks to the higher efficiency and economic skill of free persons.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This was not the exclusive domain of the Olędrzy. The privilege of personal freedom was enjoyed by almost all village settlers from the 16th to the 18th century, such as, for example, settlers under the Kulm Law.[2]
  2. ^ This town was founded by the Teutonic Knights in 1297; Rusiński gives the year 1527 as the date when an Olęnder settlement was founded in the area of Pasłęk.[14] This was a settlement near a town that had been depopulated by war and the unusually cold winter of 1520.
  3. ^ This may be a reference to Lędowo.
  4. ^ In the case of Greater Poland, Rusiński presents 1823 as the end of the phenomenon of Olęder settlement, because that year a law establishing uniform local government and regulation of villages was introduced throughout the Kingdom of Prussia.[26]
  5. ^ At times, although rarely, the privilege was substituted with a preliminary agreement, or the parties would decide simply to copy the privilege of another town.[28] Obviously, not all contracts have been preserved to the present.
  6. ^ Note that this term had this meaning only in Kuyavia and Royal Prussia; in Greater Poland (Niwka) Gottespfennig at times referred to an obligation to the church.[33]
  7. ^ For example, Wąsicki stated that Olęder settlers from Chmielinko every year had to provide two days of labor using horses and oxen, and three days of manual labor.[36]
  8. ^ Rusiński gives the example of Radoszkowo Olędrów and Uścikowiec Olędrów; in the first, the sołtys was named for life; in the second, the entire community leadership was named for life.[45]

References edit

  1. ^ "A Significant Present: Dutch Mennonites in Poland", Radio Netherlancs Archives, October 16, 2002
  2. ^ See Rusiński (1947), p. 9
  3. ^ Rusiński (1947), pp. 37–54
  4. ^ a b Chodyła (2005), p. 4
  5. ^ Rusiński (1947), pp. 16–17
  6. ^ Guradze (1898)
  7. ^ Stenger (1798)
  8. ^ Beheim-Schwarzbach (1874)
  9. ^ Maas (1935)
  10. ^ Rusiński (1947), pp. 7–8
  11. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 8
  12. ^ Inglot (1929), p. 482
  13. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 3
  14. ^ a b c Rusiński (1947), p. 4
  15. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 219
  16. ^ Baranowski (1915), p. 65
  17. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 220
  18. ^ Ciesielska (1958), pp. 220–221
  19. ^ Morciniec, Norbert (2019). Historia literatury niderlandzkiej do końca 19. wieku (in Polish). Wrocław: Oficyna Wydawnicza ATUT. p. 106. ISBN 978-83-7977-424-1.
  20. ^ Baranowski (1915), p. 66
  21. ^ Ciesielska (1958), pp. 221–222
  22. ^ Ciesielska (1958), pp. 222–223
  23. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 12
  24. ^ a b Górak (1971)
  25. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 9
  26. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 11
  27. ^ a b c Szałygin (2002)
  28. ^ a b Rusiński (1947), p. 40
  29. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 230
  30. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 20
  31. ^ Black (1990), p. 524
  32. ^ Rusiński (1947), pp. 43–44
  33. ^ a b Rusiński (1947), p. 105
  34. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 233
  35. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 84
  36. ^ a b Wąsicki (1958), p. 74
  37. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 41
  38. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 43
  39. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 232
  40. ^ Baranowski (1915), p. 74
  41. ^ a b Baranowski (1915), p. 75
  42. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 38
  43. ^ Baranowski (1915), p. 78
  44. ^ Rusiński (1947), pp. 107–109
  45. ^ a b Rusiński (1947), p. 50
  46. ^ Ciesielska (1958), p. 240
  47. ^ Baranowski (1915), pp. 74–75
  48. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 54
  49. ^ Rusiński (1947), p. 113
  50. ^ a b Rusiński (1947), pp. 114–115
  51. ^ a b Rusiński (1947), p. 121

Bibliography edit

  • Baranowski, J. T. (1915). "Wsie holenderskie na ziemiach polskich". Przegląd Historyczny. 19. Warsaw: 65–82.
  • Beheim-Schwarzbach, Max (1874). Hohenzollernsche Colonisationen. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Colonisation des östlichen Deutschlands. Lipsk.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Black, Henry Campbell (1990). Black's Law Dictionary (6th ed.). St. Paul, MN: West Publishing. ISBN 0-314-76271-X.
  • Chodyła, Zbigniew (2005). Najstarsze dzieje osad olęderskich w okolicach Nekli w latach 1749-1793. Nekla. (local publication).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Ciesielska, Karola (1958). "Osadnictwo "olęderskie" w Prusach Królewskich i na Kujawach w świetle kontraktów osadniczych". Studia i materiały do dziejów Wielkopolski i Pomorza. 4 (2): 217–256.
  • Górak, Jan (1971). "Holenderskie domy nad Bugiem". Polska Sztuka Ludowa. year 25, number 1.
  • Guradze, Franz (1898). "Der Bauer in Posen". Zeitschrift der Historischen Gesellschaft für die Provinz Posen. XIII.
  • Inglot, Stefan (1929). "Problem kolonizacji flamandzko-holenderskiej w Niemczech i w Polsce". Kwartalnik Historyczny (r. 43). Lwów: 475–514.
  • Maas, Walter (1935). "Hauländereien, Holländereien". Deutsche Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift für Polen (29).
  • Rusiński, Władysław (1947). Osady tzw. "Olędrów" w dawnym województwie poznańskim. Kraków: Polska Akademia Umiejętności.
  • Stenger (1798). "Von den Hauländern in Südpreussen". Jahrbücher der Preussische Monarchie. II.
  • Szałygin, Jerzy (2002). "Kolonizacja "olęderska" w Polsce - niedoceniany fenomen". Opcja Na Prawo (7–8).
  • Wąsicki, Jan (1958). "Przyczynek do dziejów walki klasowej "olędrów" wsi Chmielinka w latach 1793-1806". Studia i materiały do dziejów Wielkopolski i Pomorza. IV (2): 73–83.

External links edit

  • Catalogue of Monuments of Dutch Colonization in Poland

olenders, polish, olędrzy, polish, ɔˈlɛ, dʐɨ, olendrzy, singular, form, olęder, olender, german, holländer, hauländer, were, people, often, dutch, frisian, german, ancestry, lived, settlements, poland, organized, under, particular, type, timberframed, house, v. Olenders Polish Oledrzy Polish ɔˈlɛ dʐɨ or Olendrzy singular form Oleder Olender German Hollander Haulander were people often of Dutch Frisian or German ancestry who lived in settlements in Poland organized under a particular type of law OlendersA timberframed house in the village of Stalewo PolandRegions with significant populationsPoland especially Pomerania Greater Poland Kuyavia Mazovia PowisleRelated ethnic groupsDutch people Frisians GermansA historical Mennonite cemetery in Stogi PolandAn 18th century Mennonite house in Zulawki PolandThe term Olender has been used to describe two related but slightly different groups of settlers First it describes settlers in Poland from Friesland and the rest of the Netherlands 1 most often of the Mennonite faith who in the 16th and 17th centuries founded villages in Royal Prussia along the Vistula River and its tributaries in Kuyavia Mazovia and Greater Poland They possessed knowledge of flood control and a well developed agrarian culture At that time they were the wealthiest group of peasants They maintained personal freedom and their own religion and beliefs After the First Partition of Poland some of them emigrated to southern Ukraine Second in a later period up to the middle of the 19th century the term Oledrzy German Haulander was used to describe settlers of different ethnicities principally Germans and Poles at times Scots Czechs and Hungarians who benefited from certain privileges resulting from the law established by the Frisian and Dutch peasants such as personal freedom Note 1 long term or perpetual use of land and the possibility of transmitting land to heirs The most important characteristic however was collective responsibility of the entire Oleder community for its obligations toward the land owner and the specific character of the community s self government 3 Thus the distinguishing characteristics of an Oleder settlement are legal and not ethnic religious or economic Consequently the word Oleder is not synonymous with Dutch settler According to studies conducted so far from 1527 1547 to 1864 on the terrain of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth later divided into three parts in the Partitions of Poland at least 1700 Oleder settlements were established Of those in at least 300 settlements the settlers were ethnic Dutch 4 Traces of these settlements are still visible in village architecture the physical layout of villages and in the names of villages Holendry Oledry Olendry etc Contents 1 Terminology 2 Reasons for colonization 3 Course of colonization 4 Settlement characteristics 4 1 Types 4 2 Legal regulation and village organization 4 2 1 Legal relations 4 2 1 1 Settlement contracts and leases 4 2 1 2 Personal and legal relationships 4 2 1 3 Faith public and religious obligations 4 2 2 Organization 4 2 2 1 Local self government 4 2 2 2 Schools 5 Impact 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksTerminology edit nbsp Part of a 1905 map of Poznan province showing the village of Konkolewo Hauland today Kakolewo founded in 1720 located between Nowy Tomysl Neutomischel and Grodzisk Wielkopolski Gratz Polish sources use a variety of terms for oleder settlers Hollendrzy Holedrzy Holendrzy Oledrzy and Olendrzy These are interchangeable and derive from the first settlers from the Netherlands who moved into Ducal Prussia and Royal Prussia beginning in the 16th century It is important however to recognize that over time the term lost its ethnic meaning and therefore Olendrzy refers to all settlers living under the legal regime introduced by the Dutch colonists including most notably the Vistula Germans and Vistula delta Mennonites It is also important to underline that not all settlements carrying the name Oledry or similar were in fact settled by Oleders Rusinski 5 gives examples of such instances in Greater Poland Wymyslowo known in some sources as Czarkowskie Oledry or Burzykowo in the parish of Oborniki on some German maps called Burzykower Holl Rusinski argues that although though those villages had the name Oledry that is not a basis for calling them genuine oledry settlements because in their cases one does not find the legal arrangements typical of such colonization collective responsibility to the land owner and characteristic oleder self government A separate problem is the question of the German words that function as two alternatives Hollander and Haulander According to earlier German historical writings 6 7 they had two distinct meanings reflecting a difference in the type of settlement After all Oledry were settled chiefly on difficult terrain which required proper preparation to plant or raise livestock The referenced historians argued that on low wet terrain subject to flooding settlers were called Hollander in reference to the settlers from the Netherlands who were specialists in flood control and drainage while those colonists who settled in thick forests requiring clearing were called Haulander from the German hauen to hew to chop However that viewpoint has been recognized as inaccurate both in German history writing as well as Polish 8 9 10 as evidenced by those settlements on flood plains called Hauland and villages that appeared on the road to clearings in the forest called Holland Most likely the word Haulander started as a variant of Hollander and appeared through blending the names of settlements with the name for woodcutters 11 Reasons for colonization editThe beginnings of Oleder colonization must be sought in the Middle Ages in the area where Germans lived The first records come from the area of Bremen in the year 1106 12 At that time settlement was closely linked to the territorial expansion of the German rulers into Slavic territory Southern Holstein was colonized by Duke Adolf II of Holstein while Albert the Bear and Henry the Lion installed settlers from the Netherlands in Brandenburg and Mecklenburg Indeed Albert the Bear was an especially active coloniser 13 The beginning of the second wave of settlement from the Netherlands this time directly to Polish soil occurred in the 16th century Three chief causes of that colonization can be distinguished Religious persecution in the NetherlandsThe Reformation found fertile ground there Anabaptism from which later arose the Mennonites became widely accepted At the same time the Habsburg rulers of Spain who also ruled the Netherlands Emperor Charles V and King Philip II as devoted Catholics zealously sought to eradicate heresy in their territories This led to Protestant emigration in search of a more tolerant environment 14 15 16 The Economic situation in the NetherlandsUnrest in the Netherlands the struggle for independence during the Dutch Revolt and the presence in the Netherlands of the Spanish army and the forces of William I of Orange led to collapse in the rural economy The devastation of war led to common hunger an epidemic of bubonic plague and frequent suffering 17 For many enterprising farmers this was an additional stimulus to emigrate Depopulation of Prussia after the Polish Teutonic War 1519 1521 and the Desire of Landowners for Greater ProfitsAs a final result of the Polish Teutonic War many villages on the borders of Prussia were devastated and were deserted by their inhabitants At the same time the landowners endeavored to increase their incomes by among other things cultivating new lands especially by clearing forests and draining swamps 18 Immigrants from the Netherlands had centuries of experience with that latter task Course of colonization edit nbsp A windmill in Palczewo one of the remnants of Oleder settlements in Zulawy nbsp A skansen in Dziekanowice near Poznan The open air museum contains many relics of wooden Oleder architectureBefore Oleder settlers arrived on the soil of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth the Dutch were already present in Ducal Prussia a vassal duchy of Poland The first settlement in that region appeared in the area of modern day Paslek Note 2 There is a claim that they were participants in the killing of Floris V Count of Holland in 1296 who then fled east which is alluded to by Dutch poet Joost van den Vondel in his work Gijsbrechcie van Aemstel 1637 19 However conflicts frequently arose between the Dutch and Germans regarding property religion and customary law Before long those first settlers began looking for a new home The first Polish terrain colonized by newcomers from the Netherlands was in the province of Royal Prussia In the middle of the 16th century the government of Gdansk led by Mayor Ferber decided to populate Zulawy Gdanskie which had been given the city by King Casimir IV Jagiellon in 1454 14 The effort to settle locals there failed because the peasants could not cope with flooding Consequently the people of Gdansk agreed to an attempt to settle Netherlanders in the deserted village of Laudan 20 Note 3 The newcomers from the Netherlands easily mastered the unfavorable conditions and soon thereafter additional Oleder settlements appeared in Pomerania Among others these included Nowy Dwor called Tiegenhof in 1562 Orlowo Zelichowo Markusy and Jurandowo Soon colonization spread to the Starostwo of Puck such as Karwienskie Bloto and Reda 21 and even more importantly began to progress up the Vistula River Settlements appeared in the starostwas of Gniew and Sztum including Szkaradowo Benowo Pulkowice Szropy and Nowa Wies Oleder settlements were also located in the Osiek and Miedzylez starostwas The area around Nowe Grudziadz and Swiecie were also thickly settled 22 In 1597 Oleder settlement reached Greater Poland A settlement appeared in Lugi Ujskie near Ujscie Four years later another appeared in Nowe Dwory on the Wielenski family s estate In that instance the colonization was directly linked to Pomerania since the Wielenski lord s wife was the widow of the Starosta of Swiecie 23 In 1624 the Dutch reached as far as Warsaw where they settled among other places on Saska Kepa Earlier in the second half of the 16th century they were already in the area of Lublin 18 settlements appeared in the area of Slawatycze on the Bug River 24 Oleder settlement continued to spread up to the times of the Partitions of Poland and even reached Volhynia in present day Ukraine With the passage of time the national character of the settlers changed While at the beginning they were almost entirely of Dutch origin sometimes arriving directly from the Netherlands sometimes moving on after an initial stop in Ducal Prussia later with increasing frequency they were descendants of the original Dutch born on Polish soil and subsequently from a completely different ethnic group most often German sometimes Polish and occasionally representatives of other groups For example in reference to Greater Poland Rusinski wrote of the Dutch nation it is generally difficult to speak 25 Chodyla gives a precise figure descendants of the Dutch in Pomerania accounted for 0 8 of settlers Evangelical Lutheran Germans for 54 and Polish Catholics 38 A further 7 2 were of mixed ethnicity and faith 4 Most studies agree that the Partitions of Poland and subsequent period up to the mid 19th century was a turning point signalling the end of Oleder settlement For example many Mennonites abandoned the lands they had occupied in Prussia because their religious beliefs did not allow them to perform military service which conflicted with the ethos of such a heavily militaristic state In addition administrative reforms carried out by the partitioning powers eliminated the legal arrangements that constituted the distinguishing characteristic of Oleder settlements Note 4 Settlement characteristics edit nbsp Mid 19th century timberframe house in Boruja nbsp Former Protestant Oleder church in Boruja KoscielnaTypes edit Considering the large differences in Oleder colonization in different regions and at different times it is hard to speak of a single type of village or economic activity Everything depended on local conditions the requirements of the terrain and the character of land cleared for sowing or pasture and the background of the settlers In the case of villages on terrain that had been drained most often one finds buildings constructed in a straight line with farms located between the river and a road running parallel Each settler received a thin strip of land located at a right angle to the river or other body of water If the chief task of the colonists was clearing forest lands the land owner would designate a specified area and the settler would choose himself the best place to make a clearing and would situate his farmstead there This led to the appearance of so called zabudowa kolonijna and in effect the village had a dispersed character 27 In the earliest period of settlement on the fertile soil of Prussia large and wealthy farms prevailed In a later period especially in the valley of the Vistula River there appeared ever more frequently small poor and more dispersed farms As regards the type of buildings that depended strongly on the ethnicity of the colonists Szalygin distinguished three types 27 Frisian farm buildings located under a shared roof with the residential part set at an angle for example in the shape of a cross or of the letter L German similar to the case of Frisian farms the residence and the farm buildings were located under one roof but in a straight line one long building the so called Langhof Polish separated residence and farm buildings scattered around the farm most often in a quadrilateral Gorak points out the pros and cons of the Frisian and German types of farm 24 On the one hand such placement of the buildings facilitated work and communication especially in the rainy season or winter when it was possible to maintain the farm without going outdoors except to draw water On the other hand there is no way to ignore the terrible sanitary conditions and discomfort especially the stench resulting from having livestock living so close by If the settlers came from the Netherlands and their task was flood control and draining flooded terrain they applied certain typical methods of protecting their farms against high water Buildings were located on an elevated platform raised using dirt from excavating canals and drainage ponds In the vicinity they planted poplars and willows whose purpose was to stop ice floes in the river during melts The residential portion of the building was always close to the river or pointed upstream so that in case of flood the water would flow first through the residential portion then through the rest of the farm buildings and finally spill out onto the fields which helped to keep the building clean 27 In discussing characteristic buildings of the Oleder settlement one must also mention houses with open passageways on the groundfloor and windmills often based on Dutch designs the distinguishing contribution of the Dutch and Frisian immigrants to the Polish rural landscape especially in Zulawy Legal regulation and village organization edit Because the Oleder settlement was not monolithic either with regard to ethnicity religion or economics the basic distinguishing characteristic of that type of colonization was the legal conditions regulating both the relationships of the settlement to the broader world and its internal affairs Legal relations edit Settlement contracts and leases edit The legal foundation and mark of the beginning of settlement was the settlement privilege also called the contract kontract or law prawo which was rendered in Latin as the privilegium or ius and in German as the Gerichtigkeit which was issued in the case of a significant majority of settlements Note 5 It usually took a ceremonial and ornamental form being drawn up on parchment and appropriately stamped with official seals either placed directly on the document or on cords attached to the document From a formal legal point of view this document was not a binding contract but rather a unilateral declaration expressing the will of the land owner De facto however its contents reflected the agreement of both sides In this regard the most important distinguishing factor of oleder settlement is the fact that the second party was not a zasadzca that is a figure in medieval Poland who acted as a sort of headman of a village and intermediary between the land owner and his peasants but rather the community of settlers acting collectively or their representative acting on their behalf The original document remained in the hands of the land owner although it was often recopied into the appropriate land book since the land owner was obligated to produce a duplicate in case the original was lost or destroyed Contracts were drawn up in German Polish or Latin German or Latin appear most often in Royal Prussia although contracts in Polish were also found there The Polish language dominated elsewhere in the Kingdom of Poland 29 In Greater Poland around 22 of contracts were written in German and one can even find contracts written both in German and Polish 28 Most often contracts were written only at the outset of settlement although situations did occur especially in later periods where a contract s purpose was to recognize legally an already existing situation such as the rights and relations of settlers already living on the land owner s lands It also happened that a land owner would extend the new Oleder law to peasants who had been living on given lands for some time 30 The contract precisely regulated relations of the Oleder community with the land owner and with other persons and institutions One basic issue was the conditions on which the settlers were given tenure of lands dzierzawa At the beginning of the period of Oleder settlement land was delivered to the settlers for a specified period usually from a few dozen to 60 years although it also occurred that Oleder settlers were given the land only for a few years as a test period and if the settlement was successful the tenure was extended In later periods often tenure was turned into emphyteusis often in perpetuity In Roman and civil law an emphyteusis was a contract by which a landed estate was leased to a tenant either in perpetuity or for a long term of years upon the reservation of an annual rent and upon condition that the lessee should improve the property the real right by which a person is entitled to enjoy another s estate as if it were his own and to dispose of its substance as far as can be done without deteriorating it 31 This occurred both in cases of extended contracts of tenure as well as in the founding of new Oleder settlements Rusinski gives as an example Oledry Roza in Greater Poland settled before 1624 32 Such tenure was not only perpetual but also heritable and alienable although nothing could be done that would harm the interests of the land owner In return for tenure of the land the settler paid the land owner the so called wkupne also called the gottespfenik Note 6 While in Royal Prussia and Kuyavia the wkupne had to be paid before the first assumption of tenure and also at each subsequent extension in Greater Poland Oleder settlers paid the land owner the so called Gruntgeld only upon converting tenure for a term of years into tenure in perpetuity 34 For the use of the land the community had to pay the land owner an annual rent czynsz specified in the settlement contract Rent usually were paid only in money rents in kind were rare outside of Greater Poland Frequently at the founding of a settlement the land owner gave the settlers a few years to get established foregoing collection of rents during that period the so called wolnizna 35 In only a few cases were Oleder settlers also obligated to provide labor and even then to a limited degree Note 7 Personal and legal relationships edit The Oleder settlers were free persons They were not dependent upon the land owner as underscored in the majority of contracts for settling new villages They could at any time of their choice sell their farm and depart the property The situation is not entirely clear regarding existing inhabitants of a village to which the Oleder law was subsequently extended For example the inhabitants of Oledrow Chorzepowa on the Sierakow estate theoretically could sell their farms and perhaps depart the property but the settlement contract did not clearly describe them as free people and an inventory of the estate made a few years later counts some of the farmers as serfs 37 Minor judicial matters generally were tried before the local government of the Oleder community However the land owner reserved the right to hear the matter himself in the case of serious crimes robbery arson murder assault causing bodily harm etc 38 The land owner s court was also the court of review for appeals from the decision of the community That legal arrangement placed the Oleder settler on a somewhat higher level than an enserfed peasant who did not have access to community justice 39 Only rarely were Oledrzy without the right to settle any legal questions Such was the case on Saska Kepa where only the mayor and the land owner s clerk were entitled to judge disputes 40 On royal estates in case of a conflict with the starosta in charge of administering the estate for the king the Oledrzy could appeal to the royal referendary court sad referendarski a right which they invoked frequently 41 In the case of noble estates nothing is known regarding the regulatory conditions allowing appeal from decisions of the land owner However almost certainly the Oledrzy had the capacity on their own initiative to file a complaint in the civic and land courts urzed grodzki i ziemski in contrast to serfs who could file such a complaint only in the presence of the land owner himself 42 Faith public and religious obligations edit Oleder settlers identified with different Christian sects This is the case both with the first colonists from the Netherlands and Frisia most often Anabaptists and Mennonites and with the later ethnically different peasants Lutherans and Roman Catholics In general they enjoyed freedom of religion which after all was one of the reasons for the original Dutch colonization The great majority of settlement contracts contained the limitation that the settlers were not allowed to prevent Catholic laborers they employed from participating in Holy Mass or other church visits Only rarely did a founder interfere with the colonists freedom to carry out their own religious observances for example the Warsaw authorities not only prohibited the Oledrzy from building a Protestant church but also from holding services either privately or publicly They were required to participate in Catholic services 43 Even if an Oleder settlement was populated by non Catholic peasants most often the settlement was within the jurisdiction of Catholic Church administration Consequently both Catholics and Lutherans were required to make certain payments in return for which Lutherans were in certain situations authorized to use the services of Catholic priests Oledrzy paid tithes or meszne a payment for saying Mass often made in kind but sometimes in money and paid by all inhabitants in a parish it was rare for both tithes and meszne to have to be paid as well as payments for specific services performing baptisms marriages burials etc These were paid to the Roman Catholic Church by Lutherans even if the service was performed by a Protestant chaplain and was treated as compensation for the reduction in Church finances 33 Payments for these things to the Roman Catholic Church were only abolished in 1768 when the Cardinal Laws equalized the legal rights of Catholics and dissenters Like other peasants Oledrzy were also required to pay certain taxes to the state and only rarely did the land owner take that responsibility upon himself and in those cases he may have compensated himself through higher rents These included taxes levied per capita or per hearth having to provide winter quarters for soldiers and other taxes such as those on hides or the subsidium charitativum 44 Organization edit Local self government edit Strong self government was one of the most fundamental distinguishing characteristics of Oleder settlement even though there were cases where the land owner attempted to limit it by trying to appoint a hereditary soltys who was a dependant of the manor in which case the community s system of local government was closer to that of villages founded under the German Law Most often however the manor respected the rights of the community granted in the settlement contract The local government of the community consisted of the soltys and his councillors each called a lawnik Most often there were two of these 41 rarely three and extremely seldom four 45 They were not appointed by the land owner but chosen by all the inhabitants of the settlement although women did not have the right to vote Local government elections were usually held annually At times the term of office lasted two or three years 46 Election to an office for life was truly exceptional Note 8 On the one hand local officials served as intermediaries between the settlement and the manor They were directly responsible for ensuring complete and punctual fulfillment of the obligations owed to the manor such as collecting a delivering payments and rents to the land owner On the other hand the soltys and councillors managed the administration of the community and its judicial system This was most often regulated by administrative ordinances wilkierz which frequently were also spelled out in the settlement contract The legal content of these had the objective of regulating relations among the peasants which was especially important in the context of the shared responsibility of the community to fulfill the obligations toward the land owner contained in the contract For example the officials of the local government were even required to remove an Oleder who neglected his land and settle somebody else there The local government was also responsible for the care of minor orphans with security especially against fires and cleanliness of the settlement 47 At the same time the soltys and councillors acted as the court of first instance for minor infractions and arguments For all of these actions local officials received payment from the community Income from payments was placed in the community chest kept by the soltys and keys to which were held by the councillors Funds from the community chest were used among other things to cover the travel costs of jury members as well perhaps as payment to a community shepherd a night watchman a teacher or the cost of insuring against fire 48 Schools edit An important distinguishing characteristic of non Catholic Oleder settlements was the existence on their terrains of schools Above all these fulfilled a religious function preparing youth to join the community of faith Rusinski even doubts whether anything other than the catechism was taught in some schools 49 The school generally was located in its own building to the construction of which the land owner agreed in the settlement contract He also facilitated upkeep of the school by designating for it a specified area of land free of rents For example in Chmielinko the settlers received one half of a huba for the school 36 The teacher cultivated that land although he often also received additional contributions from the community His duties included providing instruction in religion and how to participate in the religion s rituals and teaching reading writing and arithmetic The community sometimes took advantage of the teacher s knowledge of how to write to perform certain tasks associated with administration of the settlement maintaining the community s records and the local government s correspondence Surely the teacher also sometimes acted as scribe for the personal correspondence of the peasants It is difficult to assess the quality of instruction in the Oleder schools In Rusinski s opinion the manner of recruiting teachers in Oleder settlements in Greater Poland from among weavers innkeepers shoekeepers or tailors in small towns who could not find work is proof that the quality cannot have been very high 50 At the same time he recognized that the fact of these schools existence was an undeniable benefit to the community In turn Szalygin indicated that for the settlers from the Netherlands the schools were a safeguard for their language culture traditions and Mennonite faith which allowed them to keep their own identity and resist Polonization However after the partitions of Poland Prussian policy led to their Germanization 50 Impact editStudies thoroughly analyzing the effects of the Oleder settlement on the Polish economy are lacking Researchers have treated the topic summarily For example Rusinski limits himself to the claim that as an economic phenomenon the settlement must undoubtedly be assessed positively 51 In turn Szalygin points out that their farms were characterized by a significantly higher efficiency modernization and better organization of work than the farms of enserfed peasants 51 Precisely defining the effects of this type of colonisation is even more difficult because so far no studies have appeared that encompass the entire territory of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth from Ducal Prussia through Kuyavia Mazovia and Greater Poland to the area around Lublin The fullest and richest work remains that of Rusinski published in 1947 and which deals only with Greater Poland However there is no doubt as proved by the willingness of land owners to grant settlement contracts to additional villages that the Oleder settlement phenomenon had positive effects on the Polish rural economy in two ways First the arrival of the colonists from the Netherlands and Friesland with their centuries of experience in cultivating difficult floodplains gave a push to development of Polish agriculture and livestock breeding Second land owners received higher incomes thanks to the higher efficiency and economic skill of free persons citation needed See also editBambers Dutch people in Poland Evangelical Church Nekielka Poland History of the Germans in Poland Vistula delta Mennonites Vistula Germans WalddeutscheNotes edit This was not the exclusive domain of the Oledrzy The privilege of personal freedom was enjoyed by almost all village settlers from the 16th to the 18th century such as for example settlers under the Kulm Law 2 This town was founded by the Teutonic Knights in 1297 Rusinski gives the year 1527 as the date when an Olender settlement was founded in the area of Paslek 14 This was a settlement near a town that had been depopulated by war and the unusually cold winter of 1520 This may be a reference to Ledowo In the case of Greater Poland Rusinski presents 1823 as the end of the phenomenon of Oleder settlement because that year a law establishing uniform local government and regulation of villages was introduced throughout the Kingdom of Prussia 26 At times although rarely the privilege was substituted with a preliminary agreement or the parties would decide simply to copy the privilege of another town 28 Obviously not all contracts have been preserved to the present Note that this term had this meaning only in Kuyavia and Royal Prussia in Greater Poland Niwka Gottespfennig at times referred to an obligation to the church 33 For example Wasicki stated that Oleder settlers from Chmielinko every year had to provide two days of labor using horses and oxen and three days of manual labor 36 Rusinski gives the example of Radoszkowo Oledrow and Uscikowiec Oledrow in the first the soltys was named for life in the second the entire community leadership was named for life 45 References edit A Significant Present Dutch Mennonites in Poland Radio Netherlancs Archives October 16 2002 See Rusinski 1947 p 9 Rusinski 1947 pp 37 54 a b Chodyla 2005 p 4 Rusinski 1947 pp 16 17 Guradze 1898 Stenger 1798 Beheim Schwarzbach 1874 Maas 1935 Rusinski 1947 pp 7 8 Rusinski 1947 p 8 Inglot 1929 p 482 Rusinski 1947 p 3 a b c Rusinski 1947 p 4 Ciesielska 1958 p 219 Baranowski 1915 p 65 Ciesielska 1958 p 220 Ciesielska 1958 pp 220 221 Morciniec Norbert 2019 Historia literatury niderlandzkiej do konca 19 wieku in Polish Wroclaw Oficyna Wydawnicza ATUT p 106 ISBN 978 83 7977 424 1 Baranowski 1915 p 66 Ciesielska 1958 pp 221 222 Ciesielska 1958 pp 222 223 Rusinski 1947 p 12 a b Gorak 1971 Rusinski 1947 p 9 Rusinski 1947 p 11 a b c Szalygin 2002 a b Rusinski 1947 p 40 Ciesielska 1958 p 230 Rusinski 1947 p 20 Black 1990 p 524 Rusinski 1947 pp 43 44 a b Rusinski 1947 p 105 Ciesielska 1958 p 233 Rusinski 1947 p 84 a b Wasicki 1958 p 74 Rusinski 1947 p 41 Rusinski 1947 p 43 Ciesielska 1958 p 232 Baranowski 1915 p 74 a b Baranowski 1915 p 75 Rusinski 1947 p 38 Baranowski 1915 p 78 Rusinski 1947 pp 107 109 a b Rusinski 1947 p 50 Ciesielska 1958 p 240 Baranowski 1915 pp 74 75 Rusinski 1947 p 54 Rusinski 1947 p 113 a b Rusinski 1947 pp 114 115 a b Rusinski 1947 p 121 Bibliography edit Baranowski J T 1915 Wsie holenderskie na ziemiach polskich Przeglad Historyczny 19 Warsaw 65 82 Beheim Schwarzbach Max 1874 Hohenzollernsche Colonisationen Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Colonisation des ostlichen Deutschlands Lipsk a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Black Henry Campbell 1990 Black s Law Dictionary 6th ed St Paul MN West Publishing ISBN 0 314 76271 X Chodyla Zbigniew 2005 Najstarsze dzieje osad olederskich w okolicach Nekli w latach 1749 1793 Nekla local publication a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ciesielska Karola 1958 Osadnictwo olederskie w Prusach Krolewskich i na Kujawach w swietle kontraktow osadniczych Studia i materialy do dziejow Wielkopolski i Pomorza 4 2 217 256 Gorak Jan 1971 Holenderskie domy nad Bugiem Polska Sztuka Ludowa year 25 number 1 Guradze Franz 1898 Der Bauer in Posen Zeitschrift der Historischen Gesellschaft fur die Provinz Posen XIII Inglot Stefan 1929 Problem kolonizacji flamandzko holenderskiej w Niemczech i w Polsce Kwartalnik Historyczny r 43 Lwow 475 514 Maas Walter 1935 Haulandereien Hollandereien Deutsche Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift fur Polen 29 Rusinski Wladyslaw 1947 Osady tzw Oledrow w dawnym wojewodztwie poznanskim Krakow Polska Akademia Umiejetnosci Stenger 1798 Von den Haulandern in Sudpreussen Jahrbucher der Preussische Monarchie II Szalygin Jerzy 2002 Kolonizacja olederska w Polsce niedoceniany fenomen Opcja Na Prawo 7 8 Wasicki Jan 1958 Przyczynek do dziejow walki klasowej oledrow wsi Chmielinka w latach 1793 1806 Studia i materialy do dziejow Wielkopolski i Pomorza IV 2 73 83 External links editCatalogue of Monuments of Dutch Colonization in Poland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olenders amp 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