Rosenort Mennonite Church (Rosenort, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland)

From GAMEO
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Rosenort (now Różewo, Poland)
Source: Wikipedia Commons
Detailed map of Rosenort, early 20th century.
Source: Archiwum Map Zachodniej Polski

The Rosenort Mennonite Church in Rosenort, Gross Werder, Prussia, was originally a part of the Gross-Werder congregation. At first the congregation, belonging to the Flemish wing, was served in communion and baptism by the elders of the Danzig church. After 1639 they chose elders of their own. The first elder was Hans Siemens (died 1644), chosen on 22 September 1639.

Until the middle of the 18th century the Dutch language was used in the religious services. Their meetings had to be held in their homes, granaries, barns, and sheds. On anniversaries and festive occasions there were sometimes 1,000 persons at a meeting, as in July 1741, when 51 persons were baptized. Not until 1754 did the congregation receive permission to build a church in Rosenort. The first communion service in the new church, held on 2 March 1755, was observed by 1,566 members. By 1787 the congregation had grown to a membership of 1,836. They were almost exclusively farmers, but in 1774 they together owned only 129 Hufen and twelve Morgen of land, or a little more than two Morgen per person.

In order to improve their condition they sent two members to Berlin in 1787, Cornelius Warkentin and Elder Donner, to negotiate with the government concerning their old charter and also to get permission to acquire more land. During their ten weeks in Berlin they found little understanding. Therefore, many families of the West Prussian Mennonites accepted the invitation of Catherine the Great to settle in Russia. The first train of emigrants, 152 families with 919 persons, including 41 families of the Rosenort congregation, gathered on 28 July 1788, for a great farewell service in the Rosenort church. The Mennonite immigration to Russia continued for 50 years and took all the overflow of the West Prussian congregations to the still uncultivated steppes of South Russia. How difficult it was for the Mennonites to take up the wanderer's staff is made clear in a petition presented by the Rosenort congregation in 1791, which asks: "Do the king's most loyal subjects not need to fear to leave the land into which we did not push ourselves, but into which our forefathers were invited more than two hundred years ago, the land which our forefathers for the most part made arable?" (Regehr, 6). The name Rosenort was repeated in their new homelands, as in the Molotschna, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, in Mexico, and in Paraguay.

On 19 January 1812, the church in Rosenort burned down, but was rebuilt and put into service on 20 November 1814. It seated 600. In the fire the church records kept from 1 November 1772 to 1809 were destroyed. Later the records of 1840-55 was lost in a flood. All that remained were the notes of 1810-40 and the records begun in 1857. After 1754 the cemetery around the Rosenort church belonged to Rosenort and after 1883 another was acquired in Zeyersvorderkampen, both of which had a funeral hall. Several times the Rosenort congregation suffered severe damage by floods, for example, in 1681, 1848, and 1888.

The baptized membership stood at 622 in 1852, 636 in 1882, and 606 in 1887 (plus 335 children); number of souls was 725 in 1928, and about 800 in 1941. The last elders of the congregation were Peter Regier of Rückenau, preacher 1879, elder 1887, Eduard Dyck of Tiegenhof, preacher, 1894, elder 1908, and Ernst Regehr of Rosenort, preacher 1930, elder 1934, who migrated to Uruguay in 1948.

In the last years before the collapse of 1945 the congregation was served by an elder and five preachers, and in 1942 had a membership of 514 besides 291 children, living in 32 villages. The congregation was a member of the Conference of the East German (West Prussian) Mennonite congregations and also of the Vereinigung.

On 24 January 1945, the area between the Vistula and the Nogat was evacuated before the oncoming masses of Russians. Four hundred years of history of the settlement and over three hundred years of congregational history found its close on these days. Of the 800 souls in the Rosenort congregation in 1939 not even 150 announced their arrival in the western zones of Germany and in Denmark in 1947. Many fell in the struggles lasting many years, many froze to death on the flight over snow-covered roads or in the floods of the Baltic Sea, many died of starvation or were killed at home, many lost their lives on the road to Siberia or in hopeless imprisonment.

Bibliography

Ellenberger, J. Bilder aus dem Pilgerleben. III Eichstätt, 1883.

Hege, Christian and Christian Neff. Mennonitisches Lexikon, 4 vols. Frankfurt & Weierhof: Hege; Karlsruhe: Schneider, 1913-1967: v. III, 544-547.

Mannhardt, H. G. "Die Mennoniten unter den preussischen Königen." Mennonitischer Gemeinde-Kalender (1902).

Mannhardt, H. G. Jahrbuch der altevangelischen Taufgesinnten oder Mennoniten (1888): 10.

Mannhardt, H. G. Jahrbuch der Mennoniten-Gemeinden in Ost- und Westpreussen (1883): 17, 19.

Penner, Horst. Die ost- und westpreussischen Mennoniten in ihrem religiösen und sozialen Leben in ihren kulturellen und wirtschaftlichen Leistungen, 2 vols. Weierhof, Germany: Mennonitischer Geschichtsverein, 1978-1987: 250.

Regehr, E. Geschichts- und Predigertabelle der Mennoniten-Gemeinde Rosenort, 2nd ed. Elbing, 1939.

Additional Information

Elders of the Grosses Werder Mennonite Church

Elder Years of Service
Hans Siemens (d. 1644) 22 Sep 1639-Feb 1644
Peter Claassen (d. 1679) 31 Oct 1645–8 Oct 1679
Harm Neufeld, (d. 1695) 1676-1695
Dirk Siemens (d. 1729), Tiegenhagen 6 Sep 1695–24 Nov 1729
Abraham Buhler (d. 1726), Co-Elder Until 1726
Simon von Riesen (d. 1736), Klein Mausdorf 18 Sep 1729–Fall 1736
Cornelius Andres (1680-1741), Tiegerweide 7 Jun 1736–11 Jun 1741
Hans Buhler (d. 1754), Klein Mausddorferfeld 10 Sep 1741–29 Sep 1754
Abraham Penner (d. 1766), Rueckenauerfeld 2 Feb 1755–28 Nov 1766
Dirk Thiessen (1727-1806), Petershagen 1 Feb 1767–11 Jun 1806
Cornelius Warkentin (1740-1809), Rosenort 13 Sep 1795–10 Jan 1809
Peter Regier (1776-1814), Siebenhuben 12 Jul 1808–26 Feb 1814
Abraham Wiebe (1764-1833), Tiegenhagen 4 May 1814–12 Feb 1833
Peter Regier (1798-1856), Tiegenhagen 14 Feb 1835–9 Mar 1856

Elders of the Rosenort Mennonite Church

Elder Years of Service
Nikolaus Fast (1813-1865) 6 Sep 1857–26 Jan 1865
Dietrich Enss (1796-1880) 17 Sep 1865–4 Aug 1880
Claas Friesen (1809-1885) 30 Aug 1874–6 Jun 1885
Peter Regier (1851-1925) 30 Jan 1887–28 May 1893
David Penner (1843-1906) 3 Feb 1895–24 Oct 1906
Eduard Dyck (1856-1933) 26 Jan 1908–8 Feb 1933
Ernst Regehr (1903-1970) 11 Mar 1934-1945

Maps

Map:Suchowo (Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland)


Author(s) Christian Hege
Ernst Regehr
Date Published February 2013

Cite This Article

MLA style

Hege, Christian and Ernst Regehr. "Rosenort Mennonite Church (Rosenort, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. February 2013. Web. 30 Oct 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Rosenort_Mennonite_Church_(Rosenort,_Pomeranian_Voivodeship,_Poland)&oldid=174059.

APA style

Hege, Christian and Ernst Regehr. (February 2013). Rosenort Mennonite Church (Rosenort, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 30 October 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Rosenort_Mennonite_Church_(Rosenort,_Pomeranian_Voivodeship,_Poland)&oldid=174059.




Hpbuttns.png

Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, pp. 360-361. All rights reserved.


©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.