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Koźle

Coordinates: 50°20′07″N 18°08′45″E / 50.33528°N 18.14583°E / 50.33528; 18.14583
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Koźle (German: Kosel) is a district of the town of Kędzierzyn-Koźle and a former town itself. It is located in Poland at the junction of the Kłodnica and the Odra, 29 Ifl. S.E. of Opole by rail. It has an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church, an old chateau and a grammarschool (Progymnasium). Its industries are of some importance, including a manufactory of cellulose (employing 1200 hands), steam saw- and flour-mills and a petroleum refinery. There is a lively trade by river.

The first mention of Kozle appears in the Cronicae et gesta ducum sive principum Polonorum, written between 1112-1116. From 1306 to 1359 it was the seat of an independent duchy held by a cadet line of the dukes of Teschen. In 1532 it fell to the emperor, was several times besieged during the Thirty Years War, and came into Prussian possession by the treaty of Breslau in 1742. Frederick IL converted it into a fortress, which was besieged in vain by the Austrians in 1758, 1759, 1760 and 1762. In 1807 it withstood another siege, by the Bavarian allies of Napoleon. The fortifications were razed and their site converted into promenades in 1874.

50°20′07″N 18°08′45″E / 50.33528°N 18.14583°E / 50.33528; 18.14583