The first mention of the town comes from 1333, from a document in which Otto I, Duke of Szczecin, granted the village to Stargard. In 1628, the owner of 5½ lans of land was Dionizy of Rosov. In the second half of the 18th century, the village belonged to Fryderyk Konrad and Karol Wilhelm von Wedel. From 1767, part of the estate belonged to Juliusz Henryk von Wedel. The next owners were Hans Otto Ernest von Wedel, from 1847 captain Hermann Ludwik Schalleyn, the Valtheim and von Hagen families. In 1939, the owner was Fryderyk Hone, and his estate included 800 ha, a distillery, a bakery and a mill. In 1939, the village had 448 inhabitants on 109 farms.
In the village there is a palace built in the neoclassical style. It is a two-story building (originally a Renaissance manor house of the von Wedel family) with a ceiling dating back to 1565, expanded at the end of the 19th century and in the 1930s. It is a brick building, covered with a gable roof, with a portico supporting a balcony and rusticated elements on the façade.
After 1945, the palace belonged to the State Agricultural Farm, but is now private property.
In the vicinity there are preserved farm buildings and a palace park from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries with an area of 8.75 ha. The park has a preserved pond and rich old trees, including: from common and purple beech, red and spotted chestnut, silver linden, common hornbeam and common ash.
The facility is inaccessible from the outside.