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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. During the Middle Ages, an Old Prussian fort called Malcekuke, loosely translated as "woods of the subterraneous" or "devil''s ground", was located near the current site of Pieni no. This was linguistically corrupted by German settlers to Mehlsack, meaning "flour sack", and then by Poles to Melzak. In the 14th century it was founded as a town west of Heilsberg (Lidzbark Warmi ski) in Warmia. The town''s coat of arms depicts three bags of flour spaced in between a…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. During the Middle Ages, an Old Prussian fort called Malcekuke, loosely translated as "woods of the subterraneous" or "devil''s ground", was located near the current site of Pieni no. This was linguistically corrupted by German settlers to Mehlsack, meaning "flour sack", and then by Poles to Melzak. In the 14th century it was founded as a town west of Heilsberg (Lidzbark Warmi ski) in Warmia. The town''s coat of arms depicts three bags of flour spaced in between a golden sword and a silver key, all on a blue background. The website recalls a story that the inhabitants defied a Swedish siege in the 17th century by spilling their last sack of flour as a deception to convince them that they still had plenty of food left.