'Żarnowiec' is a village in northern
Poland in
Puck County, northern
Pomeranian Voivodeship, close to
Żarnowieckie Lake. It had a population of 861 (2005).
Żarnowiec was the location for the first Polish
nuclear power plant (
Żarnowiec Nuclear Power Plant), but construction was stopped in 1990 after protests from local protestors.
History

Church in Żarnowiec
The earliest evidence of settlement in the region dates from the
8th century BC: the inhabitants were apparently linked with the
Lusatian and
East Pomeranian cultures. There was a settlement near the Żarnowiec lake from the seventh to the tenth century AD. A village known alternately as ''Sarnkow'', ''Sarnowitz'', ''Sarnowicz'' or ''Czarnowicz'' is first mentioned in sources dating from the thirteenth century, when it was inhabited by the
Kashubians.
In
1215, Żarnowiec belonged to Cystertian order based in
Oliwa Abbey, which founded a monastery for women there. In
1297 the monastery received special economical and juridical privileges from
Mściwój II,
Duke of Pomerania.
In
14th century Żarnowiec, together with all of
Gdańsk Pomerania was incorporated by the
Teutonic Order. In
1433, it was raided by
Hussite army. In
1462, during the
Thirteen Years' War, the Polish army under
Piotr Dunin defeated the Teutonic Knights there (see
Battle of Świecino, also known as the Battle of Żarnowiec). After the war Żarnowiec became a part of
Royal Prussia (''Prusy Królewskie'').
In
1590 it was taken over by a female order of Benedictines from
Chełmno, who founded an abbey there in
1617. In
1772, after the first
partition of Poland, it was taken over by
Prussia, and in
1834 the abbey was liquidated. It was refounded in
1946 by a female order of
Benedictines from
Vilnius.
The American writer Joel Barlow (1754-1812) died here on December 26, 1812, while fleeing Russian forces pursuing remnants of the French army after Napoleon's unsuccessful invasion of Russia.