The Manor in Lublewo
The first historical mentions of the village of Lublewo (Lüblow) date back to June 24, 1348. In a document of the Regional Court of Lębork-Puck, it was recorded that two village owners - Danoke and Matzke - were punished with penance for committing murder. One hundred years later, the village was described in documents as a Kashubian estate.
The brick, eclectic manor in Lublewo Lęborskie was built in the second half of the 19th century. It is a two-story manor with subtle Art Nouveau features, built on an elongated rectangular plan and covered with a hipped roof with eyebrow windows. Next to the manor, there is a farmstead complex consisting of two barns, a forge, and a small landscaped park where beautiful specimens of old-growth trees have been preserved.
The farmstead was established in the mid-16th century by the Mach family, who owned Lublewo for three centuries. However, the existing buildings were constructed in the second half of the 19th century by the successive owners of the estate, the von Eckoff family.
