Oświęcim

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Oświęcim
Old Market Square

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Coat of arms
Oświęcim is located in Poland
Oświęcim
Oświęcim
Coordinates: 50°3′N 19°14′E / 50.05°N 19.233°E / 50.05; 19.233
Country  Poland
Voivodeship Lesser Poland
County Oświęcim County
Gmina Oświęcim (urban gmina)
Established 12th century
Town rights 1291
Government
 - Mayor Janusz Andrzej Marszałek
Area
 - Total 30.3 km2 (11.7 sq mi)
Elevation 230 m (755 ft)
Population (2006)
 - Total 40,979
 - Density 1,352.4/km2 (3,502.8/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 32-600, 32-601, 32-602, 32-603, 32-606, 32-610
Area code(s) +48 033
Car plates KOS
Website Oswiecim (English)

Oświęcim, Lesser Poland Voivodeship [ɔɕˈfjeɲt​͡ɕim] ( listen) (German: Auschwitz, Yiddish Oshpitsin אָשפּיצין, Romany: Aushvitsa, Osvyenchim, Czech: Osvětim, Slovak: Osvienčim, Russian: Освенцим) is a town in southern Poland, situated 50 kilometres (31 mi) west of Kraków, near the confluence of the rivers Vistula (Wisła) and Soła. The town became part of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship in 1998 after previously being in the Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship since 1975.

Oświęcim is noted for being the location of the former German Nazi Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration and Extermination Camp (1940-1945), now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a state museum.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

The city was first mentioned in 1117. In 1179, it was detached from the senior Province of Kraków by Casimir the Just, and attached to the Duchy of Opole for his younger brother Mieszek. The town was destroyed in 1241 during the Tatar invasions. Around 1272 the newly rebuilt Oświęcim received municipal rights modeled on those of Lwówek Śląski (a Polish variation of the Magdeburg Law). Throughout much of history, Germans and Poles lived here together peacefully. From 1315 Oświęcim was the capital of independent duchy. In 1327, John I, Duke of Oświęcim joined with a western part of Galicia (Central Europe), the Duchy of Oświęcim, and Duchy of Zator a vassal state attached to the Kingdom of Bohemia. Later, the area went again to the dukes of Te and Grossglogau. In the 14th century the population declined. The portion of ethnic Germans in Oświęcim shrank and in 1457 the Polish king Casimir IV bought the rights to Oświęcim which was attached afterwards to the Cracow Voivodeship. Jews, invited by Polish kings to settle in the region, had already become the majority of the population in the 15th century. Oświęcim also became one of the centres of Protestant culture in Poland.[2]

St. Mary’s Church in Oświęcim, built in the 14th century

The town was destroyed again by Swedish troops in 1655. When the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was partitioned and dissolved in the late 18th century, Oświęcim became part of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria (an Austro-Hungarian province) in 1772 and was located close to the borders of Russia and Prussia. "Duke of Auschwitz" (German: Herzog von Auschwitz) was one of the minor titles held by the Habsburg Emperors (see Francis II).

In the 1866 war between Austria and the Prussian-led North German Confederation, a cavalry skirmish was fought at Oświęcim, in which an Austrian force defeated a Prussian incursion.[3][4] After World War I the town returned to Poland. On the eve of World War II there were about 8,000 Jews in the city, over half the population.[5]

[edit] World War II

Unlike other parts of the Second Polish Republic which were reorganized under the name Government General, Oświęcim was immediately annexed to the German Reich in October 1939. From 1939 until 1945 the town was subject to a Nazi German mayor. In 1940, using forced labor, Nazi authorities built the Auschwitz concentration camp and a new subdivision to house the guards and staff. Between 1940 and 1945 approximately 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, were killed by the Nazis in the Auschwitz-Birkenau gas chambers.[6] The large IG Farben Buna-Werke chemical plant used forced laborers of the Auschwitz III - Monowitz concentration camp and was bombed during the Oil Campaign of World War II. Nineteen of the town's twenty synagogues were destroyed during the war, and the surviving Auschwitz Synagogue is now open as a museum.

Auschwitz I entrance

Post-war, new housing complexes were developed with large buildings of rectangular and concrete constructions. The chemical industry became the main employer of Oświęcim and in later years, a service industry and trade were added. The concentration camp became a museum and memorial sites. Currently, about 1 million visitors tour Auschwitz-Birkenau labor/death camps every year. This tourism is an important source of revenue for local businesses in the village.

In the mid-1990s, the chemical works (renamed Dwory S.A.) began to downsize and lay off its workers. During the communist era, they employed about 10,000 people. Following their restructuring and financial problems after 1989, employment at the plant shrank to only 1,500 people.

[edit] Layout of town

Oświęcim's old town is located east of the Soła, with the Main Market Square (Rynek Główny) at its centre. The railway station is across the river, in the north west of the town, with the main museum in the west of the town. The Birkenau part of the museum is in the village of Brzezinka, to the west of the railway station. The chemical works are located in the east of the town.

[edit] Transport

[edit] Road

Local bus services within the town and the surrounding area are operated by PKS Oświęcim. The main bus station is in ulica Chemików in the east of town.

[edit] Rail

The PKP railway station is located on ulica Powstańców Śląskich in the west of the town. Train services are available to Kraków, Katowice and Czechowice-Dziedzice. International destinations include Vienna and Prague.

[edit] Politics

Members of Parliament (Sejm) elected from this constituency: Janusz Chwierut (PO), Paweł Graś(PO), Paweł Kowal (PiS), Marek Jerzy Łatas (PiS), Leszek Murzyn (LPR), Marek Polak (PiS), Stanisław Rydzoń (SLD-UP), Beata Szydło (PiS).

[edit] Sports

The ice hockey team of Oświęcim was repeatedly Polish champions, and many Polish figure skaters are from Oświęcim, including the pair Dorota Zagórska and Mariusz Siudek, Sabina Wojtala, Anna Jurkiewicz and others.

[edit] Twinned cities

Since 1993, Oświęcim has been twinned with the city of Kerpen in Germany.[2]

[edit] Notable people

Łukasz Górnicki (1527-1603) Polish poet
Simon Syrenius (1540-1611) professor, botanist
Tadeusz Makowski (1882-1932) Polish expressionist painter
Aaron Miller (cantor), rebbe, father of chazzan Benzion Miller
Victor Zarnowitz (1919-2009) American economist
Szymon Kluger (1925-2000), Last Jew of Oświęcim
Arkadiusz Skrzypaszek (1968) modern pentathlete
Paweł Korzeniowski, (1985) swimmer

[edit] References

  1. ^ Auschwitz. Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
  2. ^ a b Elzbieta Skalinska-Dindorf, historian, State Archive in Oświęcim, The History of the City of Oswiecim. CHRONICLE
  3. ^ Prussian General Staff, The Campaign of 1866 in Germany, 1907, page 97.
  4. ^ Balck, William, trans by Walter KruegerTactics, Volume II: Cavalry, Field, and Heavy Artilliery in Field Warfare., ; U.S. Cavalry association, 1914,page 5
  5. ^ ספר אושפיצין (Sefer Oshpitzin--Oświęcim Memorial Book, Hebrew, published in Israel by the Oświęcim Descendant and Survivor Association)
  6. ^ Piper, Franciszek; review of Meyer, Fritjof. "Die Zahl der Opfer von Auschwitz. Neue Erkentnisse durch neue Archivfunde", Osteuropa, 52, Jg., 5/2002, pp. 631-641.
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