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Żary

Żary ([ˈʐarɨ] , German: Sorau, Lower Sorbian: Žarow, pronounced [ˈʒarɔw]) is a town in western Poland with 37,502 inhabitants (2019), situated in the Lubusz Voivodeship since 1999. It is the administrative seat of the Żary County and of the Gmina Żary within the county, though the town is not part of the gmina (commune).

Żary
From left to right: Town Hall, Kościelna Street, Holy Heart of Jesus Church, Municipal Library, Promnitz Park
Żary
Coordinates: 51°38′N 15°8′E / 51.633°N 15.133°E / 51.633; 15.133
Country Poland
Voivodeship Lubusz
CountyŻary
GminaŻary (urban gmina)
First mentioned1007
Town rights1260
Government
 • MayorDanuta Madej
Area
 • Total33.24 km2 (12.83 sq mi)
Elevation
160 m (520 ft)
Population
 (2019-06-30[1])
 • Total37,502
 • Density1,100/km2 (2,900/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
68-200 to 68-205
Car platesFZA
ClimateCfb
Websitewww.zary.pl

Żary is located in the east of the historic Lower Lusatia region, in the borderland with the Silesian lowlands and Greater Poland, roughly outlined by the Bóbr and Oder rivers. The city is one of the biggest economic and tourist centers in the southern Lubuskie region and the largest town in the Polish part of Lusatia, and is also referred as its unofficial capital.[citation needed] The city, whose history dates back more than 1000 years,[2] features many historic sites.

History edit

 
Medieval defensive walls

The beginnings of settlement in the Żary area date back to prehistoric times. The name “Zara”, deriving most likely from a small, independent West Slavic tribe, appeared for the first time in 1007 in the chronicles of Thietmar of Merseburg, after Duke Bolesław I Chrobry of Poland had conquered the Żary land along with Lusatia. Regained by Emperor Conrad II in 1031. In the early 13th century it was part of the Duchy of Silesia within fragmented Piast-ruled Poland. Lost by Poland, the town was chartered on the Magdeburg law by the Wettin margrave Henry III of Meissen about 1260. It covered the following three areas: a trade settlement on the “Salt Trail” running from Leipzig to Wrocław, a fortified town erected among bogs (in the area of the later castle), and a Franciscan settlement established in 1274.

The city was under the domain of the Polish Silesian Piasts until Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV in 1364 purchased Lower Lusatia and incorporated it into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown. In 1635 the town became part of the Electorate of Saxony per the Peace of Prague. The Saxon Electors also served as Kings of Poland in 1697–1706 and 1709–1763 and of the two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town at that time.[3] Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland visited Sorau many times, including in 1705, 1718, 1730, 1748 and 1763.[4] The royal cabinet minister Erdmann II of Promnitz built a new Baroque palace in the town.

 
The Castle Square in the early 20th century

After the 1815 Congress of Vienna, Sorau fell to the Kingdom of Prussia, which in 1871 was united with other German states into the German Empire. The town's prominent families included the Dewins, Packs, Bibersteins and Promnitzs, whose residence was the castle-palace complex.

Near the end of World War II, Soviet Red Army troops conquered the town on 13 February 1945. After the war, British and American representatives at the Potsdam Conference of July–August 1945 were initially unwilling to agree to Polish administration being extended as far west as Stalin demanded. After some negotiations, both the Soviet and Polish representatives indicated that they would be willing to concede a frontier along the historic Lusatian border with Silesia at the Oder-Bóbr-Kwisa rivers, which would have left Sorau in German territory. However, ultimately the town was transferred to Poland under extensive border changes promulgated at the conference.[5] The German residents of Sorau were expelled, and the town was gradually repopulated by Poles, incl. those displaced from former Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union.

Initially, from 1945 it was administratively located in the Lower Silesian/Wrocław Voivodeship, then from 1950 to 1975 in the "larger" Zielona Góra Voivodeship, and from 1975 to 1998, in the "smaller" Zielona Góra Voivodeship.

Economy edit

For several centuries the town was a center of a “free state”. Its residents grew wealthy through trade and craftsmanship. As early as the 14th century the town featured guilds of clothiers, dry-goods merchants, brewers, cobblers, and dyers. In the 19th century the town had become a powerful industrial center. The local textile factories, employing 50% of all area people working in industry, played a particular role in the city's economy.[citation needed]

During World War II a branch of the Focke-Wulf aircraft factory was moved to the town. In April 1944, after a bombing raid of the Allies, some buildings of the Old Town were reduced to a heap of rubble.

Today Żary, which is a county seat, features headquarters of many offices and institutions, used by residents of this part of the region, including the Tax Office, Social Insurance Institution, Employment Office, 8 bank branches, insurance companies, high schools, and the Lusatian Higher School of the Humanities.

Żary's border area location has a significant influence on its economic growth. In the proximity of the city (20–40 km) there are Polish-German border crossings in Olszyna, Łęknica, Przewóz, and Zasieki as well as a railroad checkpoint in Forst. Żary is also an attractive tourist destination.

Transport edit

 
The A18 autostrada (freeway), which runs near Żary

Two main national roads, no. 12 and 27 intersect in Żary. They run together on a stretch of the city bypass. Two of the three sections of the city bypass that have been opened have significantly improved the traffic in the city. Construction of the bypass was subsidized by the Phare Fund. Presently, work continues on the last section of the bypass, which will be completed in 2005.

In the proximity of the city runs the international European route E36 from Berlin to Bolesławiec, which soon will be transformed into the A18 autostrada. On this road, near the border with Germany, 25 kilometres (16 miles) from Żary, in nearby Olszyna there is one of the biggest cargo terminals in the country. Construction of the A18 and A4 highways is underway and should be completed by the end of 2010. The E36 on the German side is known as the Bundesautobahn 15 highway, providing a quick access to Berlin via a network of motorways. The international airports in Berlin are about 160–185 kilometres (99–115 miles) away, about a one-and-a-half-hour drive away.

Inter-City trains travel from Berlin and Hamburg via Żary to Kraków. In a relatively short distance from Żary there are smaller airports in Babimost near Zielona Góra as well as in the German town of Rothenburg (about 15 kilometres (9 miles) from the border crossing at Przewóz).

In Żary there are two telecommunication companies, having a great effect on the quality of provided service. The city has also good coverage of wireless service providers. It also has a fiber optic network that offers quick Internet access.

Roads running through Żary edit

  Voivodeship road 287

  National road 27

  National road 12

Important roads running near Żary edit

  Voivodeship road 350

  National road 32

  National road 112

  National road 115

  National road 156

    Motorway 15 / E 36

    Motorway A18 / E 36

    Motorway A4 / E 40

    Expressway S3 / E 65

Historical sites edit

 
Church of the Holiest Heart of Jesus

Despite significant war damage, many interesting architectural historic sites have been preserved in Żary, including its medieval municipal urban arrangement.

  • In the northwest part of the city there is the Dewins-Packs-Bibersteins' Castle, a huge, 13th century structure, reconstructed later in the Renaissance style. It neighbors on the Baroque Promnitzs' Palace, which was designed by Swiss architect Giovanni Simonetti. Both residences, purchased by a private investor, continue to wait for renovation. They are surrounded by the remains of an old geometrical park, with a garden palace and the Blue Gate dating from 1708.
  • The Gothic Sacred Heart Church towers above the Old Town. The church, which obtained its principal shape in the 15th century, remembers the times when the city was chartered; fragments of the wall in the northern wing date from the 13th century. Initially it was a Roman Catholic church, then a Protestant Lutheran church from 1524 to 1945, when it became a Roman Catholic church again. The Baroque Promnitz Chapel near the eastern wall was added in 1670–1672. In the vicinity of the church we can find a Gothic rectory and a Gothic-Renaissance building of the old commissariat. Today it houses a museum.
  • The garrison Church under the invocation of the Elevation of the Holy Cross build in the turn of the 14th/15th centuries; originally the church of Grey Friars
  • Church under the invocation of St. Peter and Paul (13th century) located in the former cemetery
 
Town Hall
  • One of the main treasures of the Market Square is the newly renovated Town Hall dating from the turn of the 14th century, featuring a beautiful Renaissance portal. There are also tenement houses that surround the Market Square and some at Bolesława Chrobrego Street, which is a major commercial thoroughfare of the city. The oldest buildings date from the 17th century.
  • The remains of the medieval fortifications of the city are fragments of walls, two defense towers (the taller one of the 14th/15th centuries, with ashlars made from meadow ore, has become a “landmark” of Żary), and a stone belfry from the turn of the 14th century.
  • The Blue Gate build in 1708
  • One of the tourist and natural attractions of the area is the “Green Forest” located near the southern border of the city, featuring the highest altitude in the Lubuski Region (227 m above sea level).

Municipal projects edit

 
Woodstock Stop Festival 2003 in Żary

The Żary calendar of events includes many cultural festivals: in April the International Music Festival “Eurosilesia”, in the beginning of June the city celebrates with pomp the Festival of Żary, in August there is the International Plein-air Painting and Sculpture Event, the International Festival of Street Theaters, in October the Vienna Music Festival, and in December the Telemann Youth Festival. For six years rock music concerts called “Woodstock Stop Festival” have been organized in Żary.

Żary invites to its new complex of indoor swimming pools called “Wodnik”, featuring state-of-the-art fitness equipment. Other places in the city that offer pleasant atmosphere during meetings include myriad restaurants, cafes, and pubs. On the first Saturday of every month a flea market is held in the pedestrian precinct in Żary and the Exhibition Salon is located in the Żary pedestrian precinct near the Town Hall.

Thanks to an annual growth of revenues from local taxes and quick privatization of the municipal property, the community was able to finance several large-scale investment projects. The city has a sewage treatment plant with throughput of 15,000 cu. m per day, and a municipal landfill that meets the requirements of European standards. In 1998 a new water treatment plant was opened. Work continues on expansion of gas grid, heat distribution system, and water-sewage hookups.

In 2000 a large section of the bypass and a complex of indoor swimming pools were opened. Modernization of local roads is underway. In 2005 the last section of the bypass will be opened. Preparations continue on the revitalization of the Old Town of Żary. The pavement of the market square will soon be renovated. The projects of development of the town's pedestrian zone, park and the former military area.

The communication arrangement of the town is being modernized and expenses are being appropriated for the educational infrastructure. The construction of the sports and showroom is underway and junior high schools and primary schools are being redecorated. The community has benefited significantly from the funds of the European Union such as Phare CBC and Interreg.

Education edit

There is one institution of higher education based in Żary:

  • Łużycka Wyższa Szkoła Humanistyczna[6]

Sport edit

Cuisine edit

The officially protected traditional food from Żary is kiełbasa żarska, a local type of kiełbasa (as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland).[9]

Notable people edit

International relations edit

Żary is part of the Spree-Nysa-Bóbr Euroregion – a voluntary association of townships on both sides of the border. Apart from its twin towns, the city also develops relations with the borderland towns of Forst and Spremberg. In 2003 the 1st Level State Music School of Żary signed a cooperation agreement with a conservatory from Magdeburg. These are the only music schools named after composer G.P. Telemann.

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Żary is twinned with:[10]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Population. Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019. As of 30th June". stat.gov.pl. Statistics Poland. 2019-10-15. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  2. ^ "The word "Zara" (which probably referred to a small independent Slavonic tribe) appeared for the first time in Thietmar's Chronicle from 1007"""Żary - Serwis miejski - Looking Back to the Past". Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  3. ^ "Informacja historyczna, Dresden-Warszawa". Retrieved June 2, 2019.
  4. ^ "Żary, Dresden-Warszawa". Retrieved June 2, 2019.
  5. ^ US Dept of State, Foreign Relations of the United States, The Conference of Berlin (Potsdam) 1945, vol. II p. 480
  6. ^ "ŁWSH Żary". Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  7. ^ "Promień Żary". Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  8. ^ "Unia Kunice". Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  9. ^ "Kiełbasa żarska". Ministerstwo Rolnictwa i Rozwoju Wsi - Portal Gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  10. ^ "Współpraca z zagranicą". zary.pl (in Polish). Żary. Retrieved 2020-04-11.

Further reading edit

  • Johann Samuel Magnus: Historische Beschreibung der Hoch-Reichs-Gräfflichen Promnitzschen Residentz-Stadt Sorau in Niederlausitz, Und Deroselben Regenten Kirchen- und Regiment-Sachen, Wie auch Gelehrten Leuthen Und Sonderbahren Begebenheiten. Rohrlach u. a., Leipzig u. a. 1710 (Digitalisat).
  • Johann Gottlob Worbs: Geschichte der Herrschaften Sorau und Triebel. Rauert, Sorau 1826 (Digitalisat), (Reprint: Niederlausitzer Verlag, Guben 2008, ISBN 978-3-935881-49-4).
  • Johannes Schwela: Sorau N.-L. und Umgebung in Wort und Bild. Jülich, Chemnitz 1908 (Digitalisat).
  • Julius Helbig: Urkundliche Beiträge zur Geschichte der edlen Herren von Biberstein und ihrer Güter. Aus dem handschriftlichen Nachlass des Generalmajors Paul Rogalla von Bieberstein mitgeteilt von Albert Hirtz. Bearbeitet, erläutert und um einen Regesten-Nachtrag vermehrt. Selbstverlag des Vereines für Heimatkunde des Jeschken-Isergaues, Reichenberg, 1911.
  • Emil Engelmann: Geschichte der Stadt Sorau im Jahrhundert ihrer Selbstverwaltung 1832–1932. Rauert & Pittius, Sorau 1936 (Digitalisat)
  • Klaus-Henning Rauert, Friedrich Wendig: Siebenhundert Jahre Sorau. Die Geschichte einer ostdeutschen Stadt 1260–1960. Sorauer Heimatverlag, Dortmund 1960.
  • Tomasz Jaworski: Żary w dziejach pogranicza śląsko-łużyckiego. Zakład Poligrafii WSP, Żary 1993. (summary in German)
  • Jerzy Piotr Majchrzak: Encyklopedia Ziemi Żarskiej w jej historycznych i współczesnych granicach. Dom Wydawniczy Soravia, Żary 2002, ISBN 83-87677-17-5.
  • P. Baron's Heimatkarte des Kreises Sorau. Geographisches Institut Baron, Liegnitz o. J. (4. Auflage, Reprint. Niederlausitzer Verlag, Guben 2008, ISBN 978-3-935881-53-1), (mehrfarbig, Maßstab 1:100 000, 71 x 52 cm, Stand 1939)
  • Tomasz Jaworski (intro), Izabela Taraszczuk (transl.): "Żary w ostatnich dniach II Wojny Światowej" (Sorau in den letzten Tagen des Zweiten Weltkriegs, Tagebuchnotizen der Zeitzeugin Martha Neumann Soraus Schreckenstage), in: Kronika Ziemi Żarskiej, Nr. 1 (45)/2008, Żary, S. 90–96, ISSN 1427-5457.
  • Tomasz Jaworski (intro), Izabela Taraszczuk (transl.): "Okupacja Żar przez wojska radzieckie" (Die Besetzung der Stadt Sorau durch die sowjetischen Truppen, Tagebuchnotizen der Zeitzeugin Martha Neumann Soraus Schreckenstage - Fortsetzung), in: Kronika Ziemi Żarskiej, Nr. 2 (46)/2008, Żary, S. 88–96, ISSN 1427-5457.
  • Edward Białek, Łukasz Bieniasz (edit.): Hereditas Culturalis Soraviensis. Beiträge zur Geschichte der Stadt Sorau und zu ihrer Kultur. Neisse-Verlag, Dresden 2010, ISBN 978-3-86276-002-2 (Orbis Linguarum Beiheft 95).

External links edit

  • Jewish Community in Żary on Virtual Shtetl

Żary, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, ˈʐarɨ, german, sorau, lower, sorbian, Žarow, pronounced, ˈʒarɔw, town, western, poland, with, inhabitants, 2019, situated, lubusz, voivodeship, since, 1999, administrative, seat, county, gmina, within, cou. For other places with the same name see Zary disambiguation Zary ˈʐarɨ German Sorau Lower Sorbian Zarow pronounced ˈʒarɔw is a town in western Poland with 37 502 inhabitants 2019 situated in the Lubusz Voivodeship since 1999 It is the administrative seat of the Zary County and of the Gmina Zary within the county though the town is not part of the gmina commune ZaryFrom left to right Town Hall Koscielna Street Holy Heart of Jesus Church Municipal Library Promnitz ParkFlagCoat of armsZaryCoordinates 51 38 N 15 8 E 51 633 N 15 133 E 51 633 15 133Country PolandVoivodeship LubuszCountyZaryGminaZary urban gmina First mentioned1007Town rights1260Government MayorDanuta MadejArea Total33 24 km2 12 83 sq mi Elevation160 m 520 ft Population 2019 06 30 1 Total37 502 Density1 100 km2 2 900 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code68 200 to 68 205Car platesFZAClimateCfbWebsitewww wbr zary wbr pl Zary is located in the east of the historic Lower Lusatia region in the borderland with the Silesian lowlands and Greater Poland roughly outlined by the Bobr and Oder rivers The city is one of the biggest economic and tourist centers in the southern Lubuskie region and the largest town in the Polish part of Lusatia and is also referred as its unofficial capital citation needed The city whose history dates back more than 1000 years 2 features many historic sites Contents 1 History 2 Economy 3 Transport 3 1 Roads running through Zary 3 2 Important roads running near Zary 4 Historical sites 5 Municipal projects 6 Education 7 Sport 8 Cuisine 9 Notable people 10 International relations 10 1 Twin towns sister cities 11 Gallery 12 References 12 1 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Medieval defensive walls The beginnings of settlement in the Zary area date back to prehistoric times The name Zara deriving most likely from a small independent West Slavic tribe appeared for the first time in 1007 in the chronicles of Thietmar of Merseburg after Duke Boleslaw I Chrobry of Poland had conquered the Zary land along with Lusatia Regained by Emperor Conrad II in 1031 In the early 13th century it was part of the Duchy of Silesia within fragmented Piast ruled Poland Lost by Poland the town was chartered on the Magdeburg law by the Wettin margrave Henry III of Meissen about 1260 It covered the following three areas a trade settlement on the Salt Trail running from Leipzig to Wroclaw a fortified town erected among bogs in the area of the later castle and a Franciscan settlement established in 1274 The city was under the domain of the Polish Silesian Piasts until Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV in 1364 purchased Lower Lusatia and incorporated it into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown In 1635 the town became part of the Electorate of Saxony per the Peace of Prague The Saxon Electors also served as Kings of Poland in 1697 1706 and 1709 1763 and of the two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town at that time 3 Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland visited Sorau many times including in 1705 1718 1730 1748 and 1763 4 The royal cabinet minister Erdmann II of Promnitz built a new Baroque palace in the town nbsp The Castle Square in the early 20th century After the 1815 Congress of Vienna Sorau fell to the Kingdom of Prussia which in 1871 was united with other German states into the German Empire The town s prominent families included the Dewins Packs Bibersteins and Promnitzs whose residence was the castle palace complex Near the end of World War II Soviet Red Army troops conquered the town on 13 February 1945 After the war British and American representatives at the Potsdam Conference of July August 1945 were initially unwilling to agree to Polish administration being extended as far west as Stalin demanded After some negotiations both the Soviet and Polish representatives indicated that they would be willing to concede a frontier along the historic Lusatian border with Silesia at the Oder Bobr Kwisa rivers which would have left Sorau in German territory However ultimately the town was transferred to Poland under extensive border changes promulgated at the conference 5 The German residents of Sorau were expelled and the town was gradually repopulated by Poles incl those displaced from former Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union Initially from 1945 it was administratively located in the Lower Silesian Wroclaw Voivodeship then from 1950 to 1975 in the larger Zielona Gora Voivodeship and from 1975 to 1998 in the smaller Zielona Gora Voivodeship Economy editFor several centuries the town was a center of a free state Its residents grew wealthy through trade and craftsmanship As early as the 14th century the town featured guilds of clothiers dry goods merchants brewers cobblers and dyers In the 19th century the town had become a powerful industrial center The local textile factories employing 50 of all area people working in industry played a particular role in the city s economy citation needed During World War II a branch of the Focke Wulf aircraft factory was moved to the town In April 1944 after a bombing raid of the Allies some buildings of the Old Town were reduced to a heap of rubble Today Zary which is a county seat features headquarters of many offices and institutions used by residents of this part of the region including the Tax Office Social Insurance Institution Employment Office 8 bank branches insurance companies high schools and the Lusatian Higher School of the Humanities Zary s border area location has a significant influence on its economic growth In the proximity of the city 20 40 km there are Polish German border crossings in Olszyna Leknica Przewoz and Zasieki as well as a railroad checkpoint in Forst Zary is also an attractive tourist destination Transport edit nbsp The A18 autostrada freeway which runs near Zary Two main national roads no 12 and 27 intersect in Zary They run together on a stretch of the city bypass Two of the three sections of the city bypass that have been opened have significantly improved the traffic in the city Construction of the bypass was subsidized by the Phare Fund Presently work continues on the last section of the bypass which will be completed in 2005 In the proximity of the city runs the international European route E36 from Berlin to Boleslawiec which soon will be transformed into the A18 autostrada On this road near the border with Germany 25 kilometres 16 miles from Zary in nearby Olszyna there is one of the biggest cargo terminals in the country Construction of the A18 and A4 highways is underway and should be completed by the end of 2010 The E36 on the German side is known as the Bundesautobahn 15 highway providing a quick access to Berlin via a network of motorways The international airports in Berlin are about 160 185 kilometres 99 115 miles away about a one and a half hour drive away Inter City trains travel from Berlin and Hamburg via Zary to Krakow In a relatively short distance from Zary there are smaller airports in Babimost near Zielona Gora as well as in the German town of Rothenburg about 15 kilometres 9 miles from the border crossing at Przewoz In Zary there are two telecommunication companies having a great effect on the quality of provided service The city has also good coverage of wireless service providers It also has a fiber optic network that offers quick Internet access Roads running through Zary edit nbsp Voivodeship road 287 nbsp National road 27 nbsp National road 12 Important roads running near Zary edit nbsp Voivodeship road 350 nbsp National road 32 nbsp National road 112 nbsp National road 115 nbsp National road 156 nbsp nbsp Motorway 15 E 36 nbsp nbsp Motorway A18 E 36 nbsp nbsp Motorway A4 E 40 nbsp nbsp Expressway S3 E 65Historical sites edit nbsp Church of the Holiest Heart of Jesus Despite significant war damage many interesting architectural historic sites have been preserved in Zary including its medieval municipal urban arrangement In the northwest part of the city there is the Dewins Packs Bibersteins Castle a huge 13th century structure reconstructed later in the Renaissance style It neighbors on the Baroque Promnitzs Palace which was designed by Swiss architect Giovanni Simonetti Both residences purchased by a private investor continue to wait for renovation They are surrounded by the remains of an old geometrical park with a garden palace and the Blue Gate dating from 1708 The Gothic Sacred Heart Church towers above the Old Town The church which obtained its principal shape in the 15th century remembers the times when the city was chartered fragments of the wall in the northern wing date from the 13th century Initially it was a Roman Catholic church then a Protestant Lutheran church from 1524 to 1945 when it became a Roman Catholic church again The Baroque Promnitz Chapel near the eastern wall was added in 1670 1672 In the vicinity of the church we can find a Gothic rectory and a Gothic Renaissance building of the old commissariat Today it houses a museum The garrison Church under the invocation of the Elevation of the Holy Cross build in the turn of the 14th 15th centuries originally the church of Grey Friars Church under the invocation of St Peter and Paul 13th century located in the former cemetery nbsp Town Hall One of the main treasures of the Market Square is the newly renovated Town Hall dating from the turn of the 14th century featuring a beautiful Renaissance portal There are also tenement houses that surround the Market Square and some at Boleslawa Chrobrego Street which is a major commercial thoroughfare of the city The oldest buildings date from the 17th century The remains of the medieval fortifications of the city are fragments of walls two defense towers the taller one of the 14th 15th centuries with ashlars made from meadow ore has become a landmark of Zary and a stone belfry from the turn of the 14th century The Blue Gate build in 1708 One of the tourist and natural attractions of the area is the Green Forest located near the southern border of the city featuring the highest altitude in the Lubuski Region 227 m above sea level Municipal projects edit nbsp Woodstock Stop Festival 2003 in Zary The Zary calendar of events includes many cultural festivals in April the International Music Festival Eurosilesia in the beginning of June the city celebrates with pomp the Festival of Zary in August there is the International Plein air Painting and Sculpture Event the International Festival of Street Theaters in October the Vienna Music Festival and in December the Telemann Youth Festival For six years rock music concerts called Woodstock Stop Festival have been organized in Zary Zary invites to its new complex of indoor swimming pools called Wodnik featuring state of the art fitness equipment Other places in the city that offer pleasant atmosphere during meetings include myriad restaurants cafes and pubs On the first Saturday of every month a flea market is held in the pedestrian precinct in Zary and the Exhibition Salon is located in the Zary pedestrian precinct near the Town Hall Thanks to an annual growth of revenues from local taxes and quick privatization of the municipal property the community was able to finance several large scale investment projects The city has a sewage treatment plant with throughput of 15 000 cu m per day and a municipal landfill that meets the requirements of European standards In 1998 a new water treatment plant was opened Work continues on expansion of gas grid heat distribution system and water sewage hookups In 2000 a large section of the bypass and a complex of indoor swimming pools were opened Modernization of local roads is underway In 2005 the last section of the bypass will be opened Preparations continue on the revitalization of the Old Town of Zary The pavement of the market square will soon be renovated The projects of development of the town s pedestrian zone park and the former military area The communication arrangement of the town is being modernized and expenses are being appropriated for the educational infrastructure The construction of the sports and showroom is underway and junior high schools and primary schools are being redecorated The community has benefited significantly from the funds of the European Union such as Phare CBC and Interreg Education editThere is one institution of higher education based in Zary Luzycka Wyzsza Szkola Humanistyczna 6 Sport editPromien Zary men s football team 3rd league 7 Unia Kunice men s football team 3rd league 8 MLKS AGROS Zary sports club athletics and wrestling sections MKS Sokol Zary women s volleyball former 1st league teamCuisine editThe officially protected traditional food from Zary is kielbasa zarska a local type of kielbasa as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland 9 Notable people editBasil Faber 1520 1576 Lutheran theologian Johann Cruger 1598 1662 German composer of Lutheran hymns Erdmann Neumeister 1671 1756 Preacher of Erdmann II Promnitz Christoph Friedrich Richter 1676 1711 German hymnwriter and entomologist Georg Philipp Telemann 1681 1767 German composer Friedrich von Wendt 1738 1818 German physician Christoph Christian Sturm 1740 1786 German preacher and author Gustav Fechner 1801 1887 German experimental psychologist philosopher and physicist Ernst Kummer 1810 1893 German mathematician Maximilian Gritzner 1829 1902 German expert on heraldry Willy Jahde 1908 2002 Wehrmacht officer Friedrich Schoenfelder 1916 2011 German actor Tadeusz Slusarski 1950 1998 Olympic gold and silver medalist in pole vault Jozef Tracz born 1964 wrestler Greco Roman style who won three Olympic medals Mariusz Liberda born 1976 footballer Andrzej Niedzielan born 1979 footballer Sebastian Dudek born 1980 footballer Andrzej Tychowski born 1981 retired footballer Mateusz Lis born 1997 footballerInternational relations editZary is part of the Spree Nysa Bobr Euroregion a voluntary association of townships on both sides of the border Apart from its twin towns the city also develops relations with the borderland towns of Forst and Spremberg In 2003 the 1st Level State Music School of Zary signed a cooperation agreement with a conservatory from Magdeburg These are the only music schools named after composer G P Telemann Twin towns sister cities edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Zary is twinned with 10 nbsp Gardony Hungary 2009 nbsp Longuyon France 2004 nbsp Weisswasser Germany 1996 Gallery edit nbsp Promnitzs Palace nbsp Brama Dolna Lower Gate nbsp Museum with the old belfry in the background nbsp Zary Culture Center nbsp Our Lady of the Scapular church nbsp Okrzei Street nbsp Dewins Packs Bibersteins Castle nbsp CourthouseReferences edit Population Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019 As of 30th June stat gov pl Statistics Poland 2019 10 15 Retrieved 2020 04 11 The word Zara which probably referred to a small independent Slavonic tribe appeared for the first time in Thietmar s Chronicle from 1007 Zary Serwis miejski Looking Back to the Past Retrieved 2009 06 14 Informacja historyczna Dresden Warszawa Retrieved June 2 2019 Zary Dresden Warszawa Retrieved June 2 2019 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the United States The Conference of Berlin Potsdam 1945 vol II p 480 LWSH Zary Retrieved 2009 06 12 Promien Zary Retrieved 2009 06 12 Unia Kunice Retrieved 2009 06 12 Kielbasa zarska Ministerstwo Rolnictwa i Rozwoju Wsi Portal Gov pl in Polish Retrieved 4 June 2021 Wspolpraca z zagranica zary pl in Polish Zary Retrieved 2020 04 11 Further reading edit Johann Samuel Magnus Historische Beschreibung der Hoch Reichs Grafflichen Promnitzschen Residentz Stadt Sorau in Niederlausitz Und Deroselben Regenten Kirchen und Regiment Sachen Wie auch Gelehrten Leuthen Und Sonderbahren Begebenheiten Rohrlach u a Leipzig u a 1710 Digitalisat Johann Gottlob Worbs Geschichte der Herrschaften Sorau und Triebel Rauert Sorau 1826 Digitalisat Reprint Niederlausitzer Verlag Guben 2008 ISBN 978 3 935881 49 4 Johannes Schwela Sorau N L und Umgebung in Wort und Bild Julich Chemnitz 1908 Digitalisat Julius Helbig Urkundliche Beitrage zur Geschichte der edlen Herren von Biberstein und ihrer Guter Aus dem handschriftlichen Nachlass des Generalmajors Paul Rogalla von Bieberstein mitgeteilt von Albert Hirtz Bearbeitet erlautert und um einen Regesten Nachtrag vermehrt Selbstverlag des Vereines fur Heimatkunde des Jeschken Isergaues Reichenberg 1911 Emil Engelmann Geschichte der Stadt Sorau im Jahrhundert ihrer Selbstverwaltung 1832 1932 Rauert amp Pittius Sorau 1936 Digitalisat Klaus Henning Rauert Friedrich Wendig Siebenhundert Jahre Sorau Die Geschichte einer ostdeutschen Stadt 1260 1960 Sorauer Heimatverlag Dortmund 1960 Tomasz Jaworski Zary w dziejach pogranicza slasko luzyckiego Zaklad Poligrafii WSP Zary 1993 summary in German Jerzy Piotr Majchrzak Encyklopedia Ziemi Zarskiej w jej historycznych i wspolczesnych granicach Dom Wydawniczy Soravia Zary 2002 ISBN 83 87677 17 5 P Baron s Heimatkarte des Kreises Sorau Geographisches Institut Baron Liegnitz o J 4 Auflage Reprint Niederlausitzer Verlag Guben 2008 ISBN 978 3 935881 53 1 mehrfarbig Massstab 1 100 000 71 x 52 cm Stand 1939 Tomasz Jaworski intro Izabela Taraszczuk transl Zary w ostatnich dniach II Wojny Swiatowej Sorau in den letzten Tagen des Zweiten Weltkriegs Tagebuchnotizen der Zeitzeugin Martha Neumann Soraus Schreckenstage in Kronika Ziemi Zarskiej Nr 1 45 2008 Zary S 90 96 ISSN 1427 5457 Tomasz Jaworski intro Izabela Taraszczuk transl Okupacja Zar przez wojska radzieckie Die Besetzung der Stadt Sorau durch die sowjetischen Truppen Tagebuchnotizen der Zeitzeugin Martha Neumann Soraus Schreckenstage Fortsetzung in Kronika Ziemi Zarskiej Nr 2 46 2008 Zary S 88 96 ISSN 1427 5457 Edward Bialek Lukasz Bieniasz edit Hereditas Culturalis Soraviensis Beitrage zur Geschichte der Stadt Sorau und zu ihrer Kultur Neisse Verlag Dresden 2010 ISBN 978 3 86276 002 2 Orbis Linguarum Beiheft 95 External links editJewish Community in Zary on Virtual Shtetl Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zary amp oldid 1182986744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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