{"id":1908,"date":"2025-09-28T12:02:13","date_gmt":"2025-09-28T12:02:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/studio74.pl\/historiapomorza\/capital-stargard\/"},"modified":"2025-10-23T13:27:04","modified_gmt":"2025-10-23T13:27:04","slug":"capital-stargard","status":"publish","type":"epoka","link":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/epoka\/capital-stargard\/","title":{"rendered":"Capital Stargard"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>After the end of the Thirty Years\u2019 War, Stargard had endured the first of two great cataclysms that marked its history. The events that unfolded over those several years halted the city\u2019s development for more than half a century.&#13;\nThe first blow was an epidemic that took a deadly toll among the townspeople between 1623 and 1625, claiming 3,381 lives. Then, in 1628\u20131629, the commander of the Imperial army garrison imposed a heavy contribution on the city, significantly depleting its treasury.<\/p>\n\n<p>Another lasting scar in the memory of Stargard\u2019s residents was left by the events of October 7, 1635. A great fire consumed almost the entire city as a result of a reckless order issued by the Swedish garrison commander. Only St. John the Baptist Church and eighteen surrounding houses remained untouched.&#13;\n&#13;\nOverall human losses in Stargard amounted to about 50% of the prewar population. Those who survived fled to Szczecin and neighboring towns, leaving around three hundred houses abandoned within the city. The demographic and material situation did not improve even after the end of the Thirty Years\u2019 War. By 1653, only 2,500 people lived in Stargard, compared to nearly 7,000 before the outbreak of the conflict.<\/p>\n\n<p>Between 1641 and 1655, only 114 new citizens were granted municipal rights, and by 1668, another 150 had been admitted. In 1664\u20131665, uninhabited houses, huts, and cellars accounted for about 42.4% of all buildings. As a result, out of 365 brick houses that existed in 1627, only 209 were still standing by 1665.<\/p>\n\n<p>ChatGPT powiedzia\u0142:&#13;\n&#13;\nIn the second half of the 17th century, the part of the former Duchy of Pomerania that included Stargard fell under the rule of the Brandenburg Elector, while the western portion of the duchy, including Szczecin, remained in Swedish hands.&#13;\n&#13;\nElector Frederick William, determined to bring the Pomeranian estates under his control, convened a regional parliament (Landtag) in Stargard on July 19, 1653. The resolution adopted by this assembly on July 11, 1654, defined the political system and organization of Brandenburg Pomerania.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe administration of Pomerania was subordinated to the Privy Council in Berlin. It functioned as a collegial body consisting of a president, a chancellor, the directors of the Court of Appeals and the Economic Chamber, as well as two councillors. Additionally, several autonomous authorities operated under Berlin\u2019s control \u2014 the Court of Appeals, the Consistory, the Economic Chamber, and the War Commissariat.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe first Governor (and later President) at the head of the Pomeranian Administration was Prince Ernest Bogus\u0142aw von Croy, who held this office until 1678.<\/p>\n\n<p>Initially, the capital of Brandenburg Pomerania was Ko\u0142obrzeg. However, in 1668, the seat of the Pomeranian Administration was moved to Stargard, which \u2014 with interruptions in 1674\u20131677 and 1683\u20131685\/1686 \u2014 served as the capital city until 1723.&#13;\n&#13;\nPrince Ernest Bogus\u0142aw von Croy chose as his residence the former home of the deceased Swedish general war commissioner Caspar Kempendorff, located on a property along what was then Pyrzycka Street. According to the Elector\u2019s report, in November 1668, the estate, including a stable for twelve horses, was in good condition.&#13;\n&#13;\nNevertheless, Prince von Croy ordered a reconstruction of the residence, which was still ongoing in May of the following year. For this reason, with the permission of Frederick William, the prince temporarily carried out his administrative duties from S\u0142upsk.<\/p>\n\n<p>The transfer of the government administration to Stargard led to the establishment of a Reformed (Calvinist) congregation. The first service, held on March 14, 1669, provoked strong public outrage due to the hostility of the Lutheran townspeople toward the Calvinists.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe sermon, written by Pastor Franz Siefert, was later published in print, prompting an anonymous author to issue a rebuttal. By order of Elector Frederick William, the polemical pamphlet was publicly burned in the marketplace on February 21, 1670, in front of onlookers.&#13;\n&#13;\nMost members of the Reformed congregation were state officials, who in 1673 petitioned to use part of the former Augustinian church. The proposal met with fierce opposition from both the City Council and the general public. The Elector then planned to build an entirely new church for the Calvinist community, but the war with Sweden (1674\u20131679) thwarted these intentions.&#13;\n&#13;\nEventually, on January 14, 1682, the congregation was granted shared use of the former St. Augustine\u2019s Church with the Lutherans \u2014 under the penalty of a thousand thalers imposed on anyone who resisted this decision. This decree further inflamed religious tensions in the city, culminating in Calvinists being pelted with stones by Lutheran worshippers.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe incident drew attention in Berlin, prompting the Elector to dispatch two squadrons of dragoons to the town on the Ina River, while two Lutheran pastors were accused of instigating unrest. As a result, the former Augustinian church became the burial site for members of the governmental elite and for the French colony that had formed around 1687 \u2014 composed of Huguenot religious refugees of the same faith.<\/p>\n\n<p>At the time Stargard assumed its capital function, it was the second-largest city in Brandenburg Pomerania, with a population of only 2,550 inhabitants. After the transfer of the provincial offices to Stargard, the number of citizens granted municipal rights increased only during the next five years (1669\u20131674). However, the vast majority of these newcomers were non-locals.&#13;\n&#13;\nBetween 1641 and 1674, out of 383 new citizens, only four were children of native Stargard residents. By 1684, the number of houses in the city had risen to 388.<\/p>\n\n<p>On December 26, 1677, after a six-month siege, the Swedish-held city of Szczecin capitulated to the Elector. Frederick William immediately received the oath of allegiance from the citizens of Szczecin, and Georg Caspar von Flemming, the director of the Stargard Court of Appeal, was appointed to head the Brandenburg administration governing the Swedish part of Pomerania.&#13;\n&#13;\nHowever, just two years later, under the terms of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, the Elector was forced to return all the occupied territories, including Szczecin, to Sweden, except for a narrow strip of land along the Oder River and the Szczecin Lagoon.<\/p>\n\n<p>Including Szczecin\u2019s surrounding areas \u2014 Gryfino, Goleni\u00f3w, and Kamie\u0144 Pomorski. On the Swedish side, only D\u0105bie remained, regarded as part of the Szczecin fortress. Consequently, Stargard continued to play the most important role in the Brandenburg administration of Pomerania.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1668, the Elector established in Stargard the College for Trade Affairs. A Commission for the Regulation of Municipal Matters was also created to define the main directions<\/p>\n\n<p>of urban economic development.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe main task of the College for Trade Affairs was to revitalize trade between Stargard on the Ina River and Ko\u0142obrzeg. In this way, the Elector sought to make the new capital economically independent from Swedish-held Szczecin.&#13;\n&#13;\nHowever, these efforts did not yield the desired results. Despite higher licensing fees, it remained more profitable to maintain existing trade relations with Szczecin. Each year, a few small vessels entered the port at Inouj\u015bcie, taking on goods floated down from Stargard and Goleni\u00f3w.&#13;\n&#13;\nAccording to estimates, the ships\u2019 holds were filled with hundreds of lasts of grain and timber. In 1680\u20131681, the Elector even considered building a canal between Kostrzyn and Stargard, which was intended to expand the grain market\u2019s reach \u2014 but the project was never realized due to technical difficulties.<\/p>\n\n<p>An important measure supporting economic development was the establishment of the Brandenburg mint in Stargard, whose purpose was to produce coins with a higher silver content. It was believed that better-quality currency would drive out the inferior Polish coins, which were widely used in Brandenburg Pomerania.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe mint master and lessee was Siegmund Dannies. Despite issuing, between 1689 and 1694, circulating coins with denominations of 1\/12, 1\/3, and 2\/3 thaler, as well as pfennigs, 2-, 3-, 4-, and 6-pfennig coins, and 1\/48 thaler pieces, with a total circulation value of 973,466 thalers, the use of Brandenburg currency did not increase significantly.<\/p>\n\n<p>Nevertheless, Stargard\u2019s merchants successfully regained control of the Pomeranian and Neumark markets that had previously been dominated by Szczecin. This became especially evident after 1679, when the Elector himself sought to boost trade and production in Stargard.&#13;\n&#13;\nA significant role was played by the French colony established in 1687, which became the earliest and largest Huguenot settlement in Brandenburg Pomerania. Thanks to their presence, textile workshop production increased, along with related trades such as dyers and tailors.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe tailors\u2019 guild gained particular notoriety in 1673, when a young master tailor, acting in self-defense during a brawl, stabbed another craftsman to death. Although he confessed and the court recognized that he had acted in self-defense, after more than a year in prison, he was nevertheless executed by sword in the town square.<\/p>\n\n<p>Other crafts also flourished, especially those related to the construction industry. There was a notable increase in workshops working with wood \u2014 from 14 in 1665 to 41 in 1680. The carpenters\u2019 guild, numbering 15 masters, held the leading position, driven primarily by the reconstruction of the city and region devastated by the Thirty Years\u2019 War.&#13;\n&#13;\nMetalworking trades also developed successfully, with a rapid increase in the number of workshops over a short period.&#13;\n&#13;\nTrade exchange was regulated in part by annual fairs \u2014 already at the beginning of the 17th century, five fairs were held each year in Stargard. Since at least the 16th century, the city had hosted central wool markets, where wool was brought from Pomerania, the Neumark, and Greater Poland. By the turn of the 17th and 18th centuries, three spring and three autumn fairs were being organized annually.<\/p>\n\n<p><p data-start=\"0\" data-end=\"439\">The <strong data-start=\"4\" data-end=\"41\">economic acceleration of Stargard<\/strong> at the <strong data-start=\"49\" data-end=\"106\">end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century<\/strong> was evident not only in the <strong data-start=\"135\" data-end=\"185\">growth of production, trade, and craftsmanship<\/strong>, but also in the <strong data-start=\"203\" data-end=\"260\">increasing demand for luxury goods and higher culture<\/strong>. Archaeological excavations have uncovered <strong data-start=\"304\" data-end=\"345\">faience products from the Netherlands<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"350\" data-end=\"371\">Chinese porcelain<\/strong>, indicating the city\u2019s growing affluence and cosmopolitan tastes.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"441\" data-end=\"710\"><strong data-start=\"441\" data-end=\"479\">Spiritual and intellectual culture<\/strong> flourished thanks to two closely connected institutions:<br data-start=\"536\" data-end=\"539\"\/>first, the <strong data-start=\"550\" data-end=\"587\">Pomeranian Evangelical Consistory<\/strong>, which governed the regional church and was headed by a <strong data-start=\"644\" data-end=\"670\">General Superintendent<\/strong>; and second, <strong data-start=\"684\" data-end=\"707\">secondary education<\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"712\" data-end=\"1283\">A key figure in this cultural revival was <strong data-start=\"754\" data-end=\"772\">G\u00fcnther Heiler<\/strong>, General Superintendent between <strong data-start=\"805\" data-end=\"822\">1688 and 1707<\/strong>, a <strong data-start=\"826\" data-end=\"837\">Pietist<\/strong> and scholar who left behind a vast intellectual legacy, most notably the <strong data-start=\"911\" data-end=\"935\">Pomeranian Chronicle<\/strong>. On his initiative, a <strong data-start=\"958\" data-end=\"995\">German-language illustrated Bible<\/strong> was published in Stargard, featuring <strong data-start=\"1033\" data-end=\"1087\">copperplate engravings by Johann Wilhelm Michaelis<\/strong>, whom Heiler had invited to the city. Michaelis, serving as <strong data-start=\"1148\" data-end=\"1164\">structuarius<\/strong> (administrator) at <strong data-start=\"1184\" data-end=\"1209\">St. George\u2019s Hospital<\/strong>, created portraits of many prominent figures of Stargard and Pomerania.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"1285\" data-end=\"1638\">Heiler\u2019s successors, <strong data-start=\"1306\" data-end=\"1324\">David Nerreter<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"1329\" data-end=\"1349\">Lorenz Bollhagen<\/strong>, continued his work both spiritually and materially. During their tenure (around <strong data-start=\"1431\" data-end=\"1444\">1714\u20131737<\/strong>), the <strong data-start=\"1451\" data-end=\"1483\">sculptor Bartholom\u00e4us Frantz<\/strong> worked in Stargard, producing <strong data-start=\"1514\" data-end=\"1531\">pulpit altars<\/strong> for rural churches in <strong data-start=\"1554\" data-end=\"1564\">Lubowo<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"1569\" data-end=\"1582\">S\u0142odk\u00f3wko<\/strong>, as well as a <strong data-start=\"1597\" data-end=\"1635\">pulpit for the church in Marianowo<\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"1640\" data-end=\"2129\" data-is-last-node=\"\" data-is-only-node=\"\">Around <strong data-start=\"1647\" data-end=\"1655\">1723<\/strong>, Frantz designed <strong data-start=\"1673\" data-end=\"1699\">architectural drawings<\/strong> for the <strong data-start=\"1708\" data-end=\"1770\">helmet of the north tower of St. Mary\u2019s Church in Stargard<\/strong>. Based on his plans, a <strong data-start=\"1794\" data-end=\"1844\">two-tiered Baroque dome with openwork elements<\/strong> was constructed between <strong data-start=\"1869\" data-end=\"1886\">1723 and 1724<\/strong> by the city carpenter <strong data-start=\"1909\" data-end=\"1927\">Matthias Rieck<\/strong>. In <strong data-start=\"1932\" data-end=\"1940\">1731<\/strong>, Frantz built a <strong data-start=\"1957\" data-end=\"1994\">supraporta and inscription plaque<\/strong> for the chapel of <strong data-start=\"2013\" data-end=\"2036\">Mayor Peter Gr\u00f6ning<\/strong>, and three years later another supraporta for the <strong data-start=\"2087\" data-end=\"2128\">chapel of Mayor Joachim Caspar Movius<\/strong>.<\/p><\/p>\n\n<p><p data-start=\"0\" data-end=\"344\">This period coincided with a <strong data-start=\"29\" data-end=\"94\">broad debate about reforming Stargard\u2019s most important school<\/strong>, the <strong data-start=\"100\" data-end=\"127\">Collegium Groeningianum<\/strong>. The institution was <strong data-start=\"149\" data-end=\"169\">reopened in 1668<\/strong>, at the same time as the transfer of Brandenburg\u2019s provincial authorities to the city \u2014 an event marked by a <strong data-start=\"279\" data-end=\"341\">theatrical play performed before Elector Frederick William<\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"346\" data-end=\"611\">The play, <strong data-start=\"356\" data-end=\"454\"><em data-start=\"358\" data-end=\"452\">Stargaris seu fata Stargardiae \/ Stargaris oder der Stadt Stargard Gl\u00fcck- und Ungl\u00fccks-F\u00e4lle<\/em><\/strong>, was written by <strong data-start=\"471\" data-end=\"495\">Christoph Praetorius<\/strong> and published in <strong data-start=\"513\" data-end=\"521\">1669<\/strong>, bearing the telling subtitle <em data-start=\"552\" data-end=\"609\">\u201cThe Fortunes and Misfortunes of the City of Stargard.\u201d<\/em><\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"613\" data-end=\"1063\">At the <strong data-start=\"620\" data-end=\"659\">turn of the 17th and 18th centuries<\/strong>, the <strong data-start=\"665\" data-end=\"744\">Stargard school became a point of contention between Brandenburg and Sweden<\/strong>. Repeated efforts to reform it culminated in a <strong data-start=\"792\" data-end=\"836\">resolution to elevate it to a university<\/strong>, inspired by Swedish plans to <strong data-start=\"867\" data-end=\"920\">transfer the University of Greifswald to Szczecin<\/strong>. However, when Sweden abandoned those plans, <strong data-start=\"966\" data-end=\"1060\">the idea of transforming the Stargard school into an academic institution was also dropped<\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"1065\" data-end=\"1167\">Nevertheless, in <strong data-start=\"1082\" data-end=\"1090\">1714<\/strong>, the school was granted the prestigious title of <strong data-start=\"1140\" data-end=\"1164\"><em data-start=\"1142\" data-end=\"1162\">Collegium Illustre<\/em><\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"1169\" data-end=\"1426\" data-is-last-node=\"\" data-is-only-node=\"\">During this period, its rectors \u2014 <strong data-start=\"1203\" data-end=\"1227\">Christoph Praetorius<\/strong>, <strong data-start=\"1229\" data-end=\"1257\">Nicolaus Benedict Pascha<\/strong>, and <strong data-start=\"1263\" data-end=\"1292\">Joachim Friedrich Schmidt<\/strong> \u2014 made significant scholarly contributions. The latter, <strong data-start=\"1349\" data-end=\"1378\">Joachim Friedrich Schmidt<\/strong>, would later become <strong data-start=\"1399\" data-end=\"1425\">General Superintendent<\/strong>.<\/p><\/p>\n\n<p>During the reign of Elector Frederick III, who in 1701 crowned himself as the first King in Prussia,<\/p>\n\n<p><p data-start=\"0\" data-end=\"329\">During the reign of <strong data-start=\"20\" data-end=\"45\">Elector Frederick III<\/strong>, who in <strong data-start=\"54\" data-end=\"121\">1701 crowned himself as the first King in Prussia \u2013 Frederick I<\/strong>, <strong data-start=\"123\" data-end=\"181\">Stargard became the largest city in Prussian Pomerania<\/strong>. It was here that, on <strong data-start=\"204\" data-end=\"226\">October 9\u201310, 1699<\/strong>, a grand <strong data-start=\"236\" data-end=\"255\">homage ceremony<\/strong> was held in the Elector\u2019s presence, organized with remarkable splendor.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"331\" data-end=\"631\">However, the city\u2019s favorable development was soon halted by the outbreak of an <strong data-start=\"411\" data-end=\"423\">epidemic<\/strong>, identified as <strong data-start=\"439\" data-end=\"479\">plague and various forms of \u201cfever.\u201d<\/strong> In response, a <strong data-start=\"495\" data-end=\"539\">Sanitary College (<em data-start=\"515\" data-end=\"536\">Collegium Sanitatis<\/em>)<\/strong> was established in <strong data-start=\"559\" data-end=\"567\">1709<\/strong>, whose efforts helped to extinguish the epidemic in Stargard.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"633\" data-end=\"844\">The institution managed <strong data-start=\"657\" data-end=\"807\">finances, supplies, medical treatment, sanitary inspections, epidemic investigations, disinfection, the city lazaretto, burials of plague victims,<\/strong> and the work of <strong data-start=\"824\" data-end=\"841\">public guards<\/strong>.<\/p><br\/><p data-start=\"846\" data-end=\"1028\" data-is-last-node=\"\" data-is-only-node=\"\">The disease ravaged the city <strong data-start=\"875\" data-end=\"913\">from October 1709 to February 1711<\/strong>, claiming the lives of <strong data-start=\"937\" data-end=\"958\">around 430 people<\/strong>, while probably an equal number <strong data-start=\"991\" data-end=\"1027\">fled the city and never returned<\/strong>.<\/p><\/p>\n\n<p>The desire to weaken Swedish rule over the western part of Pomerania had driven Brandenburg, and later Prussia, ever since the partition of Pomeranian lands. After unsuccessful attempts to subjugate the territory around Szczecin in 1677\u20131678, another opportunity arose.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe Great Northern War, which had initially been fought in Holstein, Livonia, and Poland, reached Pomerania in August 1711. At first, Prussia remained neutral, but when in 1713 the troops of the Duke of Holstein occupied Szczecin, King Frederick William I concluded an agreement with Russia, which provided the basis for the temporary transfer of part of Swedish Pomerania to the Hohenzollerns.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe king immediately sent his soldiers to Szczecin, who disarmed the Holstein troops and ordered them to leave the city. Frederick William I personally came to Szczecin to emphasize the importance of the act of taking possession.&#13;\n&#13;\nA year later, the Swedes launched a campaign to recover their lost Pomeranian territories. In May 1715, Frederick William I declared war on Charles XII of Sweden. After the defeat of the Swedish army, the Prussian king granted Stralsund and the territory west of the Peene River, along with the islands of Usedom and Wolin, to Denmark, while keeping Szczecin and the area east of the Peene for himself.&#13;\n&#13;\nDespite earlier agreements with Russia, he treated Szczecin as his rightful possession, transferring the city\u2019s administration to the state authorities in Stargard.&#13;\n&#13;\nFinally, under the Treaty of Stockholm (1720), Prussian control over part of Swedish Pomerania, including Szczecin, was formally recognized.<\/p>\n\n<p>In January 1723, the Office of the War Commissariat and the Economic Chamber were formally merged into a single institution \u2014 the War and Treasury Chamber (Kriegs- und Dom\u00e4nenkammer).&#13;\nThis reform had a profound impact on the structure and functioning of the Pomeranian Administration. The changes encompassed not only internal reorganization but also a relocation of the seat of government.&#13;\n&#13;\nThe center of Prussian administrative power was moved to Szczecin. In December 1723, both the War and Treasury Chamber and the Pomeranian Government Board were transferred from Stargard to Szczecin.&#13;\n&#13;\nMeanwhile, the Evangelical Consistory for all of Prussian Pomerania had already been moved to Szczecin in 1720, although between 1726 and 1738, it temporarily returned to Stargard.&#13;\nUltimately, the Consistory was permanently relocated to Szczecin in 1738, followed by the Court of Appeal (Hofgericht) the following year.<\/p>\n\n<p>The nearly sixty-year period during which Stargard served as the capital had a profound impact on the reconstruction and development of the city following the devastation of the Thirty Years\u2019 War.&#13;\nIts role as the chief center of Brandenburg-Prussian administration also left a lasting mark on the development of education, culture, and \u2014 above all \u2014 on the city\u2019s demographic growth.&#13;\n&#13;\nEven though Szczecin gradually assumed the functions of the provincial capital after 1720, Stargard remained the most populous city in Prussian Pomerania.<\/p>\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"554\" src=\"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-1024x554.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-1679\" srcset=\"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-1024x554.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-300x162.jpg 300w, https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-768x415.jpg 768w, https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-1536x831.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-2048x1108.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n<p>Illustration: View of Stargard from the northeast, after a drawing by R. Meyer, c. 1734<\/p>\n\n<p>(from the collection of the Museum of Archaeology and History in Stargard)<\/p>\n\n<p>More:<\/p>\n\n<p>Szultka Z., Lesi\u0144ski H., \u0141ukaszewicz D., Wielopolski A. (oprac.), <em>Historia Pomorza<\/em>, pod red. G. Labudy, t. II, cz. 3. Pozna\u0144 2003.<\/p>\n\n<p><em>W czasach, gdy Stargard by\u0142 stolic\u0105\u2026 O kuflu monetowym ma\u0142\u017conk\u00f3w von Lockst\u00e4dt w zbiorach Muzeum Archeologiczno-Historycznego w Stargardzie<\/em>, pod red. M. Majewskiego, Stargard 2014.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":1907,"parent":0,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_kad_blocks_custom_css":"","_kad_blocks_head_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_body_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_footer_custom_js":"","_kadence_starter_templates_imported_post":false,"_kad_post_transparent":"","_kad_post_title":"","_kad_post_layout":"","_kad_post_sidebar_id":"","_kad_post_content_style":"","_kad_post_vertical_padding":"","_kad_post_feature":"","_kad_post_feature_position":"","_kad_post_header":false,"_kad_post_footer":false},"kategoria-epoki":[55],"class_list":["post-1908","epoka","type-epoka","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","kategoria-epoki-pomorze-szwedzkie-i-brandenbursko-pruskie"],"acf":[],"taxonomy_info":{"kategoria-epoki":[{"value":55,"label":"Pomorze Szwedzkie i Brandenbursko-Pruskie"}]},"featured_image_src_large":["https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/Ilustracja-Stoleczny-Stargard-1024x554.jpg",1024,554,true],"author_info":[],"comment_info":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/epoka\/1908","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/epoka"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/epoka"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1907"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1908"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"kategoria-epoki","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/historiapomorza.pl\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/kategoria-epoki?post=1908"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}