Harman Patil (Editor)

Moryń

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Country
  
Poland

Gmina
  
Moryń

Local time
  
Sunday 9:26 AM

County
  
Gryfino

Postal code
  
74-503

Area
  
5.54 km²

Population
  
1,570 (2006)

Moryń httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
3°C, Wind W at 13 km/h, 78% Humidity

Voivodeship
  
West Pomeranian Voivodeship

Moryń [ˈmɔrɨɲ] (German: Mohrin) is a town in Gryfino County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northwestern Poland.

Contents

Map of Mory%C5%84, Poland

Geography

It is located in the north of the historic Neumark (Nowa Marchia) region on the Słubia creek, a right tributary of the Oder River. The town centre is situated on the western shore of Morzycko Lake (Jezioro Morzycko), with a maximum depth of 58.5 m (192 ft) the deepest within the Pomeranian Lakeland.

History

The Moryń peninsula had been the site of a West Slavic fortress, which the Wittelsbach elector Otto V of Brandenburg had rebuilt in 1365. The adjacent settlement was mentioned as a town in 1306. With the Neumark region, it was given in pawn to the Teutonic Knights between 1402 and 1454. Mohrin was devastated during a Hussite campaign in 1433.

In 1892 Mohrin received access to the Wriezen Railway line from Berlin to Königsberg/Neumarkt (presenst-day Chojna).

Notable residents

  • Christian Friedrich Koch (1798-1872), German jurist
  • The English author Christopher Isherwood describes spending several months in the spring and summer of 1932 in Mohrin in chapter five of his biography Christopher & His Kind
  • Twin towns — Sister cities

    Moryń is twinned with:

  • Bronson, Michigan, United States
  • Joachimsthal, Brandenburg, Germany
  • Schwedt, Germany
  • References

    Moryń Wikipedia