Detail InformationEdit
Łeba is a town in the Pomeranian Voivodeship of Poland. It is located in the Middle Pomeranian region (Pomorze Środkowe), near Łebsko Lake and the mouth of the river Łeba on the coast of the Baltic Sea. Before World War II the (then German) inhabitants of the town were predominantly Protestants. Since the end of the war the population is predominantly compoeed of Catholics.
The Pomerelian settlement of Łeba was first mentioned in a 1282 deed. At that time the village was located about two kilometers west from the present mouth of the Łeba River. Łeba received municipal rights by the State of the Teutonic Order in 1357. Located at the Łebsko Lake at the Baltic Sea, it developed to a fishing port and a wood marketplace. With Lauenburg Land it became a Polish fief during the Thirteen Years’ War in 1454, held by the Dukes of Pomerania.
Old Łeba was threatened for many centuries by floods and expanding sand dunes and therefore was rebuilt in a safer location after 1558. The town fell back to the Polish Crown after the death of the last Pomeranian duke Bogislaw XIV until King John II Casimir Vasa enfeoffed Elector Frederick William I of Brandenburg-Prussia with Lauenburg Land by the 1657 Treaty of Bromberg. With the First Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772, Łeba was incorporated into Prussia. Soonafter a large port was built on instruction of the Prussian king, whereby a 34 meter broad channel between the Łebsko lake and the Baltic Sea was dug, which however did not weather the storms on the coast. Due to its picturesque setting, the Łeba seaside after World War I became a popular resort for German bohémiens. The painter Max Pechstein and other expressionists frequented the place.
In the proximity of Łeba there is a large former testing area for long-range rocket weapons operated by the Rheinmetall company. On the Łeba spit the German long-range rocket Rheinbote was tested between 1941 and 1945. Also the V-1 flying bomb was tested here from 1943 to 1945. Between 1963 and 1973 33 Polish sounding rockets of the type Meteor were launched in Łeba. Allegedly, the German general Erwin Rommel practiced desert warfare in the vast dunes of Łeba. In March 1945, short before the end of World War II, the region was occupied by the Red Army. According to an agreement met at the Potsdam Conference, after the end of the war the town was put together with Farther Pomerania under Polish administration.
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