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Rummel is a legendary bandit robber in the very distant past, in the vicinity of Miastko. As in many of these legends, Rummel robber plundered the rich, and gained in this manner distributed among the poor. Among other robbers stood out, however, that the goods acquired for myself not to leave nothing at all, and even starve and was very thin. The local potentate of the house Massow decided to calm the situation and get along with the robber. He told him that he could get as much land as will tour on horseback in one day. The agreement was kept, - Massow handed in possession of as much managed to evade from dawn to dusk, the whole current land. Its capital city named in honor of the good robber Rummelsburg (Miastko today). Rummel his death he was a role mayor. Robber also commemorates the local currency - called Rummel ducat, minted in February 2009 by the City Council of Miastko.
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The Museum - Kashubian Ethnographic Park named after Teodora and Izydor Gulgowscy in Wdzydze Kiszewskie, whose origins date back to 1906. The founders were the teacher Izydor Gulgowski and his wife Teodora, a painter. They organized a museum in an 18th-century peasant's cottage purchased from a local farmer. The interior was filled with Kashubian artifacts, including a valuable collection of gold-embroidered bonnets, glass paintings, and ceramics. Despite the fire that destroyed the cottage in 1932, Teodora Gulgowska rebuilt the museum, which was transferred to the state in 1948. In the 1960s, the park was expanded, and in 1969 it was transformed into an independent Kashubian Ethnographic Park, currently covering 22 hectares on the shore of Lake Gołuń. The open-air museum is divided into sectors corresponding to the individual regions of Kashubia, containing over 50 buildings, such as cottages, manors, schools, smithies, mills, and sacred and farm buildings from Kashubia, Kociewie, and the Tuchola Forest. Thanks to faithfully recreated interiors and authentic equipment, the open-air museum transports visitors back in time. The museum hosts numerous folk events, such as the Wdzydze Fair and the "With a hoe for potatoes" festival, as well as demonstrations of crafts and lessons in traditional Kashubian activities, making it a living monument to Kashubian culture and tradition.
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