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Olsztyn

Olsztyn (UK: /ˈɒlʃtɪn/ OL-shtin,[2] Polish: [ˈɔlʂtɨn] ; German: Allenstein [ˈʔalənʃtaɪn] ; Old Prussian: Alnāsteini [a]) is a city on the Łyna River in northern Poland. It is the capital of the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, and is a city with county rights. The population of the city was estimated at 169,793 residents in 2021.[1]

Olsztyn
  • Left to right: Old Town and Olsztyn Castle
  • Old Town Hall
  • St. James Pro-cathedral
  • Rynek (Market Square)
Motto(s): 
Olsztyn – Miasto Młode Duchem…
(Olsztyn – a city young in spirit…)
Anthem: O Warmio moja miła
Olsztyn
Coordinates: 53°46′40″N 20°28′45″E / 53.77778°N 20.47917°E / 53.77778; 20.47917
Country Poland
Voivodeship Warmian-Masurian
Countycity county
Established14th century
City rights1353
Government
 • City mayorRobert Szewczyk (KO)
Area
 • Total88.328 km2 (34.104 sq mi)
Highest elevation
154 m (505 ft)
Lowest elevation
88 m (289 ft)
Population
 (31 December 2021)
 • Total169,793 (20th)[1]
 • Density1,950/km2 (5,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
10-001 to 11–041
Area code+48 89
Car platesNO
ClimateDfb
Primary airportOlsztyn-Mazury Airport
Highways
Websitehttp://www.olsztyn.eu

Olsztyn is the largest city in Warmia, and has been the capital of the voivodeship since 1999. In the same year, the University of Warmia and Masuria was founded from the fusion of three other local universities. Today, the Castle of Warmian Cathedral Chapter houses a museum and is a venue for concerts, art exhibitions, film shows and other cultural events, which make Olsztyn a popular tourist destination.[5][6] The city is the seat of the Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Warmia.

The most important sights of the city include the medieval Old Town and the St. James Pro-cathedral (former St. James Parish Church), which dates back more than 600 years. The market square is part of the European Route of Brick Gothic and the pro-cathedral is regarded as one of the greatest monuments of Gothic architecture in Poland.[7]

Olsztyn, for a number of years, has been ranked very highly in quality of life, income, employment and safety. It is one of the best places in Poland to live and work.[8][9] It is also one of the happiest cities in the country.[9]

History edit

Historical affiliations

  Teutonic Order 1353–1454
  Kingdom of Poland 1454–1455
  Teutonic Order 1455–1463
  Kingdom of Poland 1463–1569
  Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569–1772
  Kingdom of Prussia 1772–1871
  German Empire 1871–1918
  Weimar Germany 1918–1933
  Nazi Germany 1933–1945
  People's Republic of Poland 1945–1989
  Republic of Poland 1990–present

Historical population
YearPop.±%
195043,831—    
196067,887+54.9%
197094,753+39.6%
1980133,314+40.7%
1990162,935+22.2%
2000172,843+6.1%
2010175,420+1.5%
2020171,249−2.4%
source [10]

Middle Ages edit

 
Old Town Hall on the Market Square

In 1334, a watchtower was established on the Łyna River. In 1346, the forest was cleared at the location for a new settlement, mentioned in a historical document from 1348.[11] The following year, the Teutonic Knights began the construction of an Ordensburg (castle) as a stronghold against the Baltic Prussians.[12] Allenstein was granted municipal rights by the cathedral chapter of the Bishopric of Warmia in October 1353.[12][13] The German "Allenstein" referred to the river's Baltic Prussian name Alna, which meant a hind.[14] Local Poles, having arrived along with German settlers, called it Holstin and Olsztyn,[12] which are Polonizations of the German name. The castle was completed in 1397.[14] The town was captured by the Kingdom of Poland during the Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War in 1410, and again in 1414 during the Hunger War, but it was returned to the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights after hostilities ended.

The city joined the Prussian Confederation in 1440,[15] and rebelled against the Teutonic Knights in 1454 upon the outbreak of the Thirteen Years' War to join the Kingdom of Poland under King Casimir IV Jagiellon. In 1454, upon the request of the Confederation, King Casimir IV signed the act of incorporation of the region to Poland,[16] and the townspeople took the castle and recognized the Polish king as the rightful ruler.[14] Although the Teutonic Knights recaptured the city the following year, it was retaken by Polish troops in 1463.[17] The Second Peace of Thorn in 1466 confirmed Allenstein as part of the Kingdom of Poland.[18] Administratively it was located in the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia within the provinces of Royal Prussia and Greater Poland.

Modern era edit

 
Saint James's Parish Church (now Pro-cathedral) in the Old Town

From 1516 to 1521, Nicolaus Copernicus lived in the town castle as an administrator and then in Mehlsack (Melzak, now Pieniężno). Copernicus was in charge of the Polish defences in the Siege of Allenstein during the Polish-Teutonic War of 1519–21.[19] He also started and managed the repopulation of the region, inviting a new wave of Polish settlers from Mazovia.[14] The town along with Warmia then entered what is considered the region's golden age,[17] when crafts and trade developed, thanks also to the city's location on the Warsaw-Königsberg trade route.[14] During this period, the city was still visited several times by Copernicus, as well as leading figures of the Polish Renaissance, writers, royal secretaries and diplomats: Johannes Dantiscus, called the "father of Polish diplomacy", and Marcin Kromer, who was also a historian and music theorist. St. James' Pro-Cathedral, one of the most distinctive landmarks of the cityscape, was completed at that time.[18]

Prosperity was halted in the 1620s, when the town suffered a fire[18] and an epidemic.[17] In 1626, during the Swedish invasion, clerics from Frauenburg (Frombork) took refuge in the town, which the Swedes did not reach.[17] The city was sacked by Swedish troops later, in 1655 and 1708, during the next Polish-Swedish wars, and its population was nearly wiped out in 1710 by epidemics of the bubonic plague and cholera.

The town became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1772 after the First Partition of Poland and its economy initially collapsed.[11] Poles became subject to extensive Germanisation policies.[citation needed] A Prussian census recorded a population of 1,770 people, predominantly farmers,[citation needed] and Allenstein was administered within the newly created Province of East Prussia.

 
Battle of Allenstein (Olsztyn), February 3, 1807

On February 3, 1807, the Battle of Allenstein took place. The French Army clashed with the Imperial Russian army. On that day, Allenstein was visited by Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon gathered enormous forces in the city and planned to engage the Russians and Prussians in a decisive battle. The Russian army was stationed in Jonkowo, but retreated after the French attack. Thanks to the victory at Allenstein, Napoleon's army was able to move north and a few days later the general Battle of Eylau took place.[20]

The growth of the city started again after it became a district seat in 1818,[17] a significant influx of German settlers began and by 1825, the town was inhabited by 1,341 Germans and 1,266 Poles.[21] In the early 1830s the city suffered from a cholera epidemic and a hunger crisis, however afterwards it flourished again, when despite Germanisation policies it was administered by Polish mayor Jakub Rarkowski from 1836 to 1865.[17][22] Under Rarkowski the city was expanded and modernized,[17] and the mayor also hid Polish insurgents in the city during the January Uprising.[22] The first German-language newspaper, the Allensteiner Zeitung, began publishing in 1841. Polish historian Wojciech Kętrzyński was arrested in Jomendorf (the present-day district of Jaroty),[17] and imprisoned in the city's High Gate in 1863 for smuggling weapons for the Polish January Uprising in the Russian Partition of Poland.[23] The town hospital was founded in 1867.

 
Historic building that was once the headquarters of Gazeta Olsztyńska (Olsztyn Daily Newspaper)

In 1871, with the unification of Germany, Allenstein became part of the German Empire. Two years later, the city was connected by railway to Thorn (Toruń). Despite Germanisation attempts the city remained an important Polish centre.[11] Its first Polish language newspaper, the Gazeta Olsztyńska, was founded in 1886.[18] Allenstein's infrastructure developed[24] rapidly: gas was installed in 1890, telephones in 1892, public water supply in 1898, and electricity in 1907. The Provincial Mental Sanatorium Kortau was established in 1886 just south of Allenstein (today part of Olsztyn-Kortowo). In 1905, the city became the capital of Regierungsbezirk Allenstein, a government administrative region in East Prussia. From 1818 to 1910, the city was administered within the East Prussian Allenstein District, after which it became an independent city.

World War I, interbellum and World War II edit

 
Kopernikusplatz (postcard, 1917)
 
Józef Bem Square, 2020

Shortly after the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Russian troops captured Allenstein, but it was recovered by the Imperial German Army in the Battle of Tannenberg.

After the defeat of Germany in World War I, the East Prussian plebiscite was held in 1920 to determine whether the populace of the region, including Allenstein, wished to remain in German East Prussia or become part of Poland, which had just regained independence. In order to advertise the plebiscite, special postage stamps were produced by overprinting German stamps and sold on 3 April of that year. One kind of overprint read PLÉBISCITE / OLSZTYN / ALLENSTEIN, while the other read TRAITÉ / DE / VERSAILLES / ART. 94 et 95 inside an oval whose border gave the full name of the plebiscite commission. Each overprint was applied to 14 denominations ranging from 5 Pfennigs to 3 Marks. The Polish community faced discrimination, Polish rallies were dispersed, the participants were threatened and beaten.[17] In March, Polish activist Bogumił Linka died in Allenstein, a few weeks after being attacked by the German militia in nearby Szczytno in Masuria.[25][26][27] He was buried in Allenstein, however, his grave was soon devastated by local German nationalists.[25][26][28] A monument to Linka was unveiled after Poland regained control of the city after World War II.[25][26] The presence of a Royal Irish battalion ensured a relative peace in Allenstein.[29] The plebiscite, held on 11 July, produced 16,742 votes for Germany and 342 votes for Poland.[17]

 
Headquarters of various Polish organizations in the interbellum

In the interwar period, numerous Polish organisations operated in the city, including the Polish Scouting and Guiding Association, Union of Poles in Germany, a People's Bank (Bank Ludowy),[11] local Poles organised a school, library, puppet theatre.[17] The Polish Consulate also operated. After the January 1933 Nazi seizure of power in Germany, Poles and Jews in Allenstein were increasingly persecuted.[17] In 1935, the German Wehrmacht made the city the seat of the Allenstein Militärischer Bereich. It was then home of the 11th and 217th infantry divisions and 11th Artillery Regiment. At the same time, the football club SV Hindenburg Allenstein played in Allenstein from 1921 to 1945.

Beginning in 1936, members of the Polish minority were increasingly persecuted, especially members of the Union of Poles in Germany.[17] In early 1939, many local Polish activists were expelled.[30] In an attempt to rig the results of an upcoming census and understate the number of Poles in the city and region, the Germans terrorized the Polish population and, in May 1939, the Gestapo confiscated 10,000 Polish information leaflets in the headquarters of the Gazeta Olsztyńska.[31] In August 1939, Germany introduced martial law in the region, which allowed for even more blatant persecution of Poles.[32] In August and September 1939, the authorities carried out mass arrests of local Poles, including the chairman of the local Polish bank and his assistant, the chief of the "Rolnik" Cooperative,[33] and the principal of the local Polish school.[34]

Nazi Germany co-formed the Einsatzgruppe V in the city, which then entered several Polish cities and towns, including Grudziądz, Mława, Ciechanów, Łomża and Siedlce, to commit various atrocities against Poles during the German invasion of Poland that began World War II in 1939.[35] German troops invaded Poland also from Olsztyn (then called Allenstein).[36] After the German invasion of Poland, local Poles were also subjected to mass executions[11] and deportations to occupied Poland. Arrested Poles were held in a local prison and then forced to remove Polish signs and inscriptions in the city, while the German population gathered and insulted them.[37] The Gazeta Olsztyńska was abolished by the German authorities, the newspaper's headquarters was demolished and the editor-in-chief Seweryn Pieniężny was arrested and executed in the Hohenbruch concentration camp [de][17][36] along with co-publisher Wojciech Gałęziewski and the "Rolnik" Cooperative chief Leon Włodarczyk, while Pieniężny's wife was deported to the Ravensbrück concentration camp.[38] The last pre-war Polish consul in Allenstein, Bohdan Jałowiecki, along with the consulate staff, was imprisoned in the Hohenbruch and Soldau concentration camps,[39] and then murdered.[40] Polish teachers were deported to the Dachau concentration camp.[38]

 
Home Army monument

During the war five forced labour camps were established in the city.[11] On 12 October 1939, the Wehrmacht established an area headquarters for one of its military districts, Wehrkreis I (headquartered at Königsberg), that controlled the environs of Allenstein, including Lötzen (now Giżycko), and Ciechanów in occupied Poland. As part of the Aktion T4, Nazi Germany conducted medical experiments on the patients of the psychiatric hospital in the present-day district of Kortowo, in which at least 5,000 people were killed.[41]

On 22 January 1945, near the end of the war, the city was plundered and burned by the conquering Soviet Red Army, and much of its German population fled.[42] The remaining, mostly Polish population, was subjected to various crimes, including murder, rape and looting.[36][17] The Soviets also murdered the remaining patients and staff of the psychiatric hospital, who were either burned alive or shot.[41] Remains of three Roman Catholic nuns who served as nurses at Olsztyn's St. Mary's Hospital and were killed by Soviet soldiers in 1945 were excavated in October 2020.[43][44]

On 23 May 1945, the Soviets established a Polish administration in the region which aroused British and American protest.[45] The Polish rule was accepted under the preliminary provisions of the Potsdam Conference. In October 1945, the remaining German population was expelled in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement, and remaining Poles were joined by new Polish settlers,[46] mostly those expelled from pre-war Polish regions of Vilnius, Grodno and Volhynia, annexed by the Soviet Union, as well as settlers from Warsaw, which had been destroyed by German forces during World War II.[17] Reconstruction and removal of damage lasted until the 1950s.[citation needed]

Contemporary history edit

In December 1945, a match factory was launched in Olsztyn, as the city's first post-war industrial plant of national importance.[47] A tyre factory was founded in Olsztyn in 1967. Its subsequent names included OZOS, Stomil and Michelin.[48] City limits were greatly expanded in 1966 and 1987.[36]

In 1956, Olsztyn was the site of the largest Polish demonstration of support for the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[49] On the 500th anniversary of the birth of Nicolaus Copernicus, in 1973, a planetarium was opened in Olsztyn.[18] In 1989 the former Gazeta Olsztyńska headquarters was rebuilt and re-opened as a museum. In 1991 Pope John Paul II visited the city.[18] In 1999 the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn was established, which is now one of the largest universities in northeastern Poland.

Olsztyn became the capital of the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship in 1999. It was previously in the Olsztyn Voivodeship.

Olsztyn Castle edit

 
Olsztyn Castle

The Olsztyn Castle was built between 1346–1353 and by then it had one wing on the north-east side of the rectangular courtyard. Access to the castle leads from the drawbridge over the river Łyna, surrounded by a belt of defensive walls and a moat. The south-west wing of the castle was built in the 15th century, the tower situated in the west corner of the courtyard, from the middle of the 14th century, was rebuilt in the early 16th century and had a round shape on a square base and was 40 meters high. At the same time, the castle walls were raised to a height of 12 meters and a second belt of the lower walls was built. The castle walls were partly combined with city walls, which made the castle look as if it had been a powerful bastion defending access to the city. The castle was owned by Warmia Chapter, which until 1454, together with the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia, was under the military protection of the Teutonic Knights and their Monastic State in Prussia.[50]

The castle had played a huge role in the Polish-Teutonic wars by then. After the Battle of Grunwald in 1410, the Poles took it after a few days siege. In the Thirteen Years' War (1454–66) it was jumping from rule to rule. The Knights threatened the castle and the town in 1521, but the defense was very effective. They contained one failed assault. There is a connection between the history of the castle, the city of Olsztyn, and Nicolaus Copernicus. He prepared the defense of Olsztyn against the invasion of the Teutonic Knights in 1520.[50]

 
Interior of the Olsztyn Castle

In the sixteenth century, there were two prince-bishops of Warmia that stayed there: Johannes Dantiscus – the first Sarmatian poet, endowed with the imperial laurel wreath for "Latin Songs" (1538, 1541) and Marcin Kromer, who wrote with equal ease in Latin and Polish scientific and literary works (1580). Kromer consecrated the chapel of St. Anna, which was built in the south-west wing of the castle. In the course of time, both wings of the castle lost military importance, which for residential purposes has become very convenient. In 1779, Prince-Bishop Ignacy Krasicki stopped here as well.

After the Prussian annexation of Warmia during the First Partition of Poland in 1772, the castle became the property of the state board of estates (Kriegs- und Domänenkammer — War and Domain Chamber). In 1845, the bridge over the moat was replaced by a causeway better connecting the castle with the city. In 1901–1911 a general renovation of the castle was performed, however, several sections of the building were violated at the same time where they changed the original look of the castle e.g. putting on window frames in a cloister. The tower was topped off in 1921 and again in 1926.

In 1945, the whole castle became home to the Masurian Museum, which today is called the Museum of Warmia and Masuria. In addition, there are also popular events held within the frameworks of the Olsztyn Artistic Summer and so-called "evenings of the castle" and "Sundays in the Museum".

Jewish community edit

Although Jews were permitted to trade in the city itself and its fairs during the medieval times, they were restricted from trading freely in the villages surrounding the town.[51] In 1718, Bishop Teodor Andrzej Potocki imposed a ban on Jewish trade in the city as well.[52] The ban, even if continued by successive bishops, proved not to be particularly successful in the light of repeated complains by the local merchants about Jewish dealing in animal leather and similar products as the one recorded in 1742. Permanent Jewish settlement can be dated to 1780 when the Jews were finally permitted to settle in the city albeit outside the immediate city walls.[53] In 1814, the Simonson brothers opened the first Jewish store. Yet, the growth of the Jewish community worried city authorities that attempted to curb it with various restrictions and punitive measures. For example, in 1850, a new law was enacted imposing fines and imprisonment on anyone harbouring a 'wandering' Jew in their home.[54]

 
Remains of the Jewish cemetery

The roots of the Jewish congregation in the town can be traced to 1820. Shortly after that date, an official prayer room was established on Richterstraße. In 1877, the congregation bought a plot of land on Liebstädterstraße and built a synagogue there.[55] A Jewish cemetery was built on Seestraße (present-day Grunwaldzka). At its peak, the town's Jewish population reached 448 people (1933).

During the Kristallnacht, the town synagogue was destroyed by Nazi Germans, only to be later used as a bomb shelter.[56] Today, the site of the former synagogue is occupied by a local sports club.[57]

By 1939, only 135 Jews were left in the city. The remainder fled the country. Those who still lived in the town by 1940 were deported to Nazi concentration camps.[58] In June 1946, 16 Holocaust survivors settled in the city and in 1948, the congregation had 190 worshipers. Most of them emigrated to Israel throughout the next few decades. There is no trace of the Jewish cemetery.[59]

The city was the birthplace of world-famous Jewish architect Erich Mendelsohn. In town, Mendelsohn planned the mourners' chapel (called the Mendelsohn house) next to the cemetery.[60] The building is restored.[61] In addition, it was the birthplace of German Socialist and SPD leader Hugo Haase. Frieda Strohmberg [pl], an Impressionist, lived and worked in the city from 1910 to 1927. Documentation of the Jewish owned shops in town exists.[62]

Geography edit

 
Lake Ukiel (Krzywe)
 
Lake Kortowskie
 
Lake Tyrsko (Żbik)

Olsztyn is located in the north-east part of Poland in the region known as the "Thousand Lakes".[63]

Greenbelt edit

More than half of the forests occupying 21.2% of the city area form a single complex of the Municipal Forest (1050 ha) used mainly for recreation and tourism purposes. Within the Municipal Forest area are situated two peat-land flora sanctuaries, Mszar and Redykajny. Municipal greenery (560 ha, 6.5% of the town area) developed in the form of numerous parks, green spots and three cemeteries over a century old. The greenery includes 910 monuments of nature and groups of protected trees in the form of beech, oak, maple and lime-lined avenues.[citation needed]

Lakes edit

The city is situated in a lake region of forests and plains. There are 15 lakes inside the administrative bounds of the city (13 with areas greater than 1 ha). The overall area of lakes in Olsztyn is about 725 ha, which constitutes 8.25% of the total city area.

Lake Area (ha) Maximum depth (m)
Lake Ukiel (a.k.a. Jezioro Krzywe) 412 43
Lake Kortowskie 89.7 17.2
Lake Track (a.k.a. Trackie) 52.8 4.6
Lake Skanda 51.5 12
Lake Redykajny 29.9 20.6
Lake Długie 26.8 17.2
Lake Sukiel 20.8 25
Lake Tyrsko (a.k.a. Żbik or Duży Żbik) 18.6 30.6
Lake Stary Dwór 6.0 23.3
Lake Siginek 6.0 insufficient data
Lake Czarne approximately 1.3 insufficient data
Lake Żbik (a.k.a. Mały Żbik) approximately 1.2 insufficient data
Lake Pereszkowo approximately 1.2 insufficient data
Lake Mummel approximately 0.3 insufficient data
Lake Modrzewiowe 0.25 insufficient data

Climate edit

Olszytn has an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb) using the −3 °C (27 °F) isotherm or a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfb) using the 0 °C (32 °F) isotherm.[64][65]

Climate data for Olsztyn (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 12.2
(54.0)
16.7
(62.1)
23.9
(75.0)
30.2
(86.4)
31.5
(88.7)
33.7
(92.7)
36.1
(97.0)
36.2
(97.2)
34.6
(94.3)
25.9
(78.6)
17.8
(64.0)
13.2
(55.8)
36.2
(97.2)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 0.4
(32.7)
1.8
(35.2)
6.2
(43.2)
13.3
(55.9)
18.6
(65.5)
21.7
(71.1)
23.8
(74.8)
23.4
(74.1)
18.1
(64.6)
11.8
(53.2)
5.5
(41.9)
1.7
(35.1)
12.2
(54.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) −2.0
(28.4)
−1.1
(30.0)
2.2
(36.0)
7.9
(46.2)
12.9
(55.2)
16.1
(61.0)
18.3
(64.9)
17.8
(64.0)
13.2
(55.8)
8.0
(46.4)
3.3
(37.9)
−0.4
(31.3)
8.0
(46.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −4.4
(24.1)
−3.8
(25.2)
−1.5
(29.3)
2.6
(36.7)
7.1
(44.8)
10.7
(51.3)
13.2
(55.8)
12.7
(54.9)
8.9
(48.0)
4.8
(40.6)
1.2
(34.2)
−2.6
(27.3)
4.1
(39.4)
Record low °C (°F) −30.6
(−23.1)
−30.6
(−23.1)
−23.5
(−10.3)
−9.7
(14.5)
−4.8
(23.4)
−0.5
(31.1)
4.0
(39.2)
1.9
(35.4)
−4.2
(24.4)
−11.0
(12.2)
−20.2
(−4.4)
−26.0
(−14.8)
−30.6
(−23.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 42.1
(1.66)
33.1
(1.30)
39.4
(1.55)
37.5
(1.48)
59.8
(2.35)
70.1
(2.76)
88.0
(3.46)
63.8
(2.51)
58.5
(2.30)
57.7
(2.27)
47.0
(1.85)
45.4
(1.79)
642.4
(25.29)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 9.5
(3.7)
9.7
(3.8)
6.5
(2.6)
1.7
(0.7)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.8
(0.3)
3.2
(1.3)
6.2
(2.4)
9.7
(3.8)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 17.37 15.00 14.13 12.40 13.50 14.30 14.43 13.33 13.03 14.13 15.57 17.63 174.84
Average snowy days (≥ 0 cm) 18.4 17.6 9.6 1.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 4.1 12.5 64.0
Average relative humidity (%) 88.2 85.0 77.6 69.9 70.4 72.6 74.7 75.3 80.7 84.7 89.7 89.8 79.9
Source 1: Institute of Meteorology and Water Management[66][67][68][69][70][71][72][73]
Source 2: Meteomodel.pl (records, relative humidity 1991–2020)[74][75][76]

Administrative division edit

 
Districts of Olsztyn
Aerial views of various districts of Olsztyn
 
Śródmieście
 
Brzeziny
 
Dajtki
 
Kortowo

Olsztyn is divided into 23 districts:

District Population Area Density
Brzeziny 1,456 2.25 km2 (0.87 sq mi) 647.1/km2
Dajtki 5,863 7.5 km2 (2.9 sq mi) 781.7/km2
Generałów 6,500 no data no data
Grunwaldzkie 6,027 1.46 km2 (0.56 sq mi) 4,128.1/km2
Gutkowo 2,256 7.2 km2 (2.8 sq mi) 313.3/km2
Jaroty 29,046 4.82 km2 (1.86 sq mi) 6,026.1/km2
Kętrzyńskiego 7,621 4.83 km2 (1.86 sq mi) 1,577.8/km2
Kormoran 16,166 1.1 km2 (0.4 sq mi) 14,696.4/km2
Kortowo 1,131 4.22 km2 (1.63 sq mi) 268/km2
Kościuszki 6,704 1.18 km2 (0.46 sq mi) 5,681.4/km2
Likusy 2,286 2.1 km2 (0.8 sq mi) 1,088.6/km2
Mazurskie 4,615 5.98 km2 (2.31 sq mi) 771.7/km2
Nad Jeziorem Długim 2,408 4.23 km2 (2 sq mi) 569.3/km2
Nagórki 12,538 1.69 km2 (0.65 sq mi) 7,418.9/km2
Pieczewo 10,918 2.24 km2 (0.86 sq mi) 4,874.1/km2
Podgrodzie 11,080 1.35 km2 (0.52 sq mi) 8,207.4/km2
Podleśna 10,414 9.93 km2 (3.83 sq mi) 1,048.7/km2
Pojezierze 13,001 2.39 km2 (0.92 sq mi) 5,439.7/km2
Redykajny 1,555 6.1 km2 (2.36 sq mi) 254.9/km2
Śródmieście 3,448 0.58 km2 (0.22 sq mi) 5,944.8/km2
Wojska Polskiego 6,759 5.03 km2 (2 sq mi) 1,343.7/km2
Zatorze 6,988 0.45 km2 (0.17 sq mi) 15,528.9/km2
Zielona Górka 1,015 6.44 km2 (2.49 sq mi) 157.6/km2

There are many smaller districts: Jakubowo, Karolin, Kolonia Jaroty, Kortowo II, Łupstych, Niedźwiedź, Piękna Góra, Podlesie, Pozorty, Skarbówka Poszmanówka, Słoneczny Stok, Stare Kieźliny, Stare Miasto, Stare Zalbki, Stary Dwór, Track. These do not have council representative assemblies.

Culture edit

 
Stefan Jaracz Theatre (built 1925)
 
Museum of Nature

Theatres edit

Cinemas edit

Museums edit

  • Museum of Warmia and Mazury (Muzeum Warmii i Mazur) – Olsztyn's largest museum.
    • Gazeta Olsztyńska House (Dom "Gazety Olsztyńskiej")
    • Museum of Nature (Muzeum Przyrody)
  • Museum of Sports (Muzeum Sportu)
  • Muzeum Nowoczesności

Architecture edit

 
Old townhouses at the Rynek (Market Square) in the Old Town

The historic central district of Olsztyn is the Old Town (Stare Miasto), which contains various historic buildings and structures, including:

  • the Gothic castle of Warmian Chapter, built during the 14th century, former home of Nicolaus Copernicus, now a museum
  • Gothic St. James' Pro-cathedral with Gothic-Renaissance-Baroque interior
  • Old Town Hall on the Market Square – built in the mid-14th century.
  • Gazeta Olsztyńska House at the Targ Rybny ("Fish Market"), now a museum.
  • the town walls and the High Gate (until the mid-19th century known as the Upper Gate).
  • Our Lady Queen of Poland church
  • Monument to Nicolaus Copernicus
  • Park Zamkowy (Castle Park)
  • Baroque Archpresbyter's Palace (Pałac Archiprezbitera)
  • Gothic Revival Church of the Salvator

Notable structures outside of the Old Town include:

  • the New City Hall
  • Jewish Tahara house in Olsztyn built in 1911-1912 by Erich Mendelsohn
  • Modernist planetarium with mosaics by Stefan Knapp
  • the Jerusalem Chapel [pl], built in 1565
  • Neogothic Sacred Heart church, built during the years 1901–1902
  • Church of St. Lawrence in the Gutkowo district, built in the late 14th century
  • Home Army and Stefan Jaracz monuments and the White Eagle Column
  • the Railway Bridge over the River Łyna gorge near Artyleryjska and Wyzwolenia streets, built during the years 1872–1873
  • Main Post Office
  • Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship office
  • Instytut Północny im. Wojciecha Kętrzyńskiego ("Wojciech Kętrzyński Northern Institute")
  • Park Centralny (Central Park)
  • the Książnica Polska building with one of the oldest active passenger elevators in Poland and Europe
  • FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo – 360 metres high, since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland

Music edit

The city is home to the National Symphony Orchestra.

Economy edit

 
Michelin Polska tyre company

The Michelin Polska tyre company (former Stomil Olsztyn) is the largest employer in the region of Warmia and Masuria.[77] Other important industries are food processing and furniture manufacturing.

Transportation edit

Road edit

Bus edit

A bus network with 36 bus lines exists, including 6 suburban lines and 2 night-time lines.[78]

Trolleybus edit

In 1939, due to poor economic situation throughout the interwar period and the city's growing population, a trolleybus line began operation, partially replacing the original tram network. During the Second World War the cars were mainly driven by women.[citation needed]

The trolleybus network consisting of 4 lines was decommissioned on 31 July 1971.[79]

Rail edit

Olsztyn has train connections to various major cities in Poland, including Warsaw, Kraków, Gdańsk, Szczecin, Poznań, Bydgoszcz, Białystok, Wrocław, Łódź, Toruń, and various towns in the region, including Elbląg, Iława, Działdowo and Ełk. Olsztyn Główny is the main railway station in the city. Plans exist to demolish the building and replace it with new infrastructure,[80] contrary to previous information about the current building being renovated.[81]

Tram edit

 
Tram network in Olsztyn re-opened in December 2015

Historically, the city's first tram line was built in 1907 and gradually expanded over the years. It ceased operation in 1965.[82]

In 2006, authorities considered the reintroduction of trams in the city to address transport problems and subsequently concluded feasibility studies on the matter in 2009.[83] An 11-kilometre (7-mile) long tram network was built between 2011 and 2015. The contract was signed in 2011 and construction commenced in 2012.[82] It was a first new tram system built in Poland in 55 years; 15 low-floor Tramino trams were ordered from Solaris in September 2012.[84] There are three tram lines in operation.[78]

A 6 kilometres (4 miles) long extension is planned and Turkish manufacturer Durmazlar had been selected to supply 24 trams for the network.[85]

Air edit

 
Olsztyn-Mazury Airport

The region and city is served by Olsztyn-Mazury Airport with scheduled international passenger flights. It is located in Szymany, 10 km off Szczytno and 58 km south of the city of Olsztyn. The airport operates flights to London, Dortmund, Kraków and seasonal flights to Rzeszów and Wrocław.[86]

Education edit

 
Main library building of the Olsztyn University

Sports edit

 
KOS Orlik - A public football field near the 18th Primary School
  • Indykpol AZS Olsztynmen's volleyball team playing in the Polish Volleyball League (PLS, Polska Liga Siatkówki), five time Polish champions
  • Stomil Olsztyn – men's football team, playing in the I liga (second tier). It played in the Ekstraklasa, the country's top flight, from 1994 to 2002.
  • Warmia Olsztyn [pl] – men's handball team playing in the I liga (second tier). It played in the Superliga, the country's top flight, most recently from 2005 to 2012.
  • Warmia Olsztyn [pl] – one of the oldest football clubs in the city, playing in the lower leagues. It played on the second tier, most recently in the 1990s
  • AZS UWM Trójeczka Olsztyn – men's basketball team playing in the Polish Second League
  • WMPD Olsztyn – men's rugby team, playing in the First Polish League
  • Budowlani Olsztyn – a wrestling team
  • Joanna Jędrzejczyk (born 1987), Polish Muay-Thai and MMA fighter, former UFC Women's Strawweight Champion
  • Łukasz Gikiewicz (born 1987), Polish footballer
  • Rafał Gikiewicz (born 1987), Polish footballer
  • Filip Kurto (born 1991), Polish footballer
  • Olsztyn Lakers – American football team

The Memorial of Hubert Jerzy Wagner, an international volleyball friendly tournament, was organized in Olsztyn from 2003 to 2008. The Tour de Pologne, one of UCI World Tour races, was organized in Olsztyn numerous times, most recently in 2008 (as of 2019).

Politics edit

Members of the Sejm elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005:

Members of Senate elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005:

Notable people edit

 
Statue of Nicolaus Copernicus in front of the castle
 
Plaque commemorating Feliks Nowowiejski on his former home

International relations edit

Twin towns – Sister cities edit

Olsztyn is twinned with:

Olsztyn belongs to the Federation of Copernicus Cities, an association of cities where Copernicus lived and worked, such as Bologna, Frombork, Kraków, and Toruń. The main office of the federation is situated at Olsztyn Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory, located on St. Andrew's Hill (143 m) in a former water tower erected in 1897.

Citations edit

Notes edit

  1. ^

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Activities in Olsztyn
  • News Olsztyn (in Polish)

olsztyn, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schol. For other uses see Olsztyn disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Olsztyn news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Olsztyn UK ˈ ɒ l ʃ t ɪ n OL shtin 2 Polish ˈɔlʂtɨn German Allenstein ˈʔalenʃtaɪn Old Prussian Alnasteini a is a city on the Lyna River in northern Poland It is the capital of the Warmian Masurian Voivodeship and is a city with county rights The population of the city was estimated at 169 793 residents in 2021 update 1 OlsztynLeft to right Old Town and Olsztyn CastleOld Town HallSt James Pro cathedralRynek Market Square FlagCoat of armsBrandmarkMotto s Olsztyn Miasto Mlode Duchem Olsztyn a city young in spirit Anthem O Warmio moja milaOlsztynCoordinates 53 46 40 N 20 28 45 E 53 77778 N 20 47917 E 53 77778 20 47917Country PolandVoivodeship Warmian MasurianCountycity countyEstablished14th centuryCity rights1353Government City mayorRobert Szewczyk KO Area Total88 328 km2 34 104 sq mi Highest elevation154 m 505 ft Lowest elevation88 m 289 ft Population 31 December 2021 Total169 793 20th 1 Density1 950 km2 5 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code10 001 to 11 041Area code 48 89Car platesNOClimateDfbPrimary airportOlsztyn Mazury AirportHighwaysWebsitehttp www olsztyn eu Olsztyn is the largest city in Warmia and has been the capital of the voivodeship since 1999 In the same year the University of Warmia and Masuria was founded from the fusion of three other local universities Today the Castle of Warmian Cathedral Chapter houses a museum and is a venue for concerts art exhibitions film shows and other cultural events which make Olsztyn a popular tourist destination 5 6 The city is the seat of the Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Warmia The most important sights of the city include the medieval Old Town and the St James Pro cathedral former St James Parish Church which dates back more than 600 years The market square is part of the European Route of Brick Gothic and the pro cathedral is regarded as one of the greatest monuments of Gothic architecture in Poland 7 Olsztyn for a number of years has been ranked very highly in quality of life income employment and safety It is one of the best places in Poland to live and work 8 9 It is also one of the happiest cities in the country 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 Modern era 1 3 World War I interbellum and World War II 1 4 Contemporary history 1 5 Olsztyn Castle 1 6 Jewish community 2 Geography 2 1 Greenbelt 2 2 Lakes 2 3 Climate 3 Administrative division 4 Culture 4 1 Theatres 4 2 Cinemas 4 3 Museums 4 4 Architecture 4 5 Music 5 Economy 6 Transportation 6 1 Road 6 1 1 Bus 6 1 2 Trolleybus 6 2 Rail 6 2 1 Tram 6 3 Air 7 Education 8 Sports 9 Politics 10 Notable people 11 International relations 11 1 Twin towns Sister cities 12 Citations 12 1 Notes 12 2 References 12 3 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editHistorical affiliations nbsp Teutonic Order 1353 1454 nbsp Kingdom of Poland 1454 1455 nbsp Teutonic Order 1455 1463 nbsp Kingdom of Poland 1463 1569 nbsp Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1772 nbsp Kingdom of Prussia 1772 1871 nbsp German Empire 1871 1918 nbsp Weimar Germany 1918 1933 nbsp Nazi Germany 1933 1945 nbsp People s Republic of Poland 1945 1989 nbsp Republic of Poland 1990 present Historical populationYearPop 195043 831 196067 887 54 9 197094 753 39 6 1980133 314 40 7 1990162 935 22 2 2000172 843 6 1 2010175 420 1 5 2020171 249 2 4 source 10 Middle Ages edit nbsp Old Town Hall on the Market Square In 1334 a watchtower was established on the Lyna River In 1346 the forest was cleared at the location for a new settlement mentioned in a historical document from 1348 11 The following year the Teutonic Knights began the construction of an Ordensburg castle as a stronghold against the Baltic Prussians 12 Allenstein was granted municipal rights by the cathedral chapter of the Bishopric of Warmia in October 1353 12 13 The German Allenstein referred to the river s Baltic Prussian name Alna which meant a hind 14 Local Poles having arrived along with German settlers called it Holstin and Olsztyn 12 which are Polonizations of the German name The castle was completed in 1397 14 The town was captured by the Kingdom of Poland during the Polish Lithuanian Teutonic War in 1410 and again in 1414 during the Hunger War but it was returned to the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights after hostilities ended The city joined the Prussian Confederation in 1440 15 and rebelled against the Teutonic Knights in 1454 upon the outbreak of the Thirteen Years War to join the Kingdom of Poland under King Casimir IV Jagiellon In 1454 upon the request of the Confederation King Casimir IV signed the act of incorporation of the region to Poland 16 and the townspeople took the castle and recognized the Polish king as the rightful ruler 14 Although the Teutonic Knights recaptured the city the following year it was retaken by Polish troops in 1463 17 The Second Peace of Thorn in 1466 confirmed Allenstein as part of the Kingdom of Poland 18 Administratively it was located in the Prince Bishopric of Warmia within the provinces of Royal Prussia and Greater Poland Modern era edit nbsp Saint James s Parish Church now Pro cathedral in the Old Town From 1516 to 1521 Nicolaus Copernicus lived in the town castle as an administrator and then in Mehlsack Melzak now Pieniezno Copernicus was in charge of the Polish defences in the Siege of Allenstein during the Polish Teutonic War of 1519 21 19 He also started and managed the repopulation of the region inviting a new wave of Polish settlers from Mazovia 14 The town along with Warmia then entered what is considered the region s golden age 17 when crafts and trade developed thanks also to the city s location on the Warsaw Konigsberg trade route 14 During this period the city was still visited several times by Copernicus as well as leading figures of the Polish Renaissance writers royal secretaries and diplomats Johannes Dantiscus called the father of Polish diplomacy and Marcin Kromer who was also a historian and music theorist St James Pro Cathedral one of the most distinctive landmarks of the cityscape was completed at that time 18 Prosperity was halted in the 1620s when the town suffered a fire 18 and an epidemic 17 In 1626 during the Swedish invasion clerics from Frauenburg Frombork took refuge in the town which the Swedes did not reach 17 The city was sacked by Swedish troops later in 1655 and 1708 during the next Polish Swedish wars and its population was nearly wiped out in 1710 by epidemics of the bubonic plague and cholera The town became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1772 after the First Partition of Poland and its economy initially collapsed 11 Poles became subject to extensive Germanisation policies citation needed A Prussian census recorded a population of 1 770 people predominantly farmers citation needed and Allenstein was administered within the newly created Province of East Prussia nbsp Battle of Allenstein Olsztyn February 3 1807 On February 3 1807 the Battle of Allenstein took place The French Army clashed with the Imperial Russian army On that day Allenstein was visited by Napoleon Bonaparte Napoleon gathered enormous forces in the city and planned to engage the Russians and Prussians in a decisive battle The Russian army was stationed in Jonkowo but retreated after the French attack Thanks to the victory at Allenstein Napoleon s army was able to move north and a few days later the general Battle of Eylau took place 20 The growth of the city started again after it became a district seat in 1818 17 a significant influx of German settlers began and by 1825 the town was inhabited by 1 341 Germans and 1 266 Poles 21 In the early 1830s the city suffered from a cholera epidemic and a hunger crisis however afterwards it flourished again when despite Germanisation policies it was administered by Polish mayor Jakub Rarkowski from 1836 to 1865 17 22 Under Rarkowski the city was expanded and modernized 17 and the mayor also hid Polish insurgents in the city during the January Uprising 22 The first German language newspaper the Allensteiner Zeitung began publishing in 1841 Polish historian Wojciech Ketrzynski was arrested in Jomendorf the present day district of Jaroty 17 and imprisoned in the city s High Gate in 1863 for smuggling weapons for the Polish January Uprising in the Russian Partition of Poland 23 The town hospital was founded in 1867 nbsp Historic building that was once the headquarters of Gazeta Olsztynska Olsztyn Daily Newspaper In 1871 with the unification of Germany Allenstein became part of the German Empire Two years later the city was connected by railway to Thorn Torun Despite Germanisation attempts the city remained an important Polish centre 11 Its first Polish language newspaper the Gazeta Olsztynska was founded in 1886 18 Allenstein s infrastructure developed 24 rapidly gas was installed in 1890 telephones in 1892 public water supply in 1898 and electricity in 1907 The Provincial Mental Sanatorium Kortau was established in 1886 just south of Allenstein today part of Olsztyn Kortowo In 1905 the city became the capital of Regierungsbezirk Allenstein a government administrative region in East Prussia From 1818 to 1910 the city was administered within the East Prussian Allenstein District after which it became an independent city World War I interbellum and World War II edit nbsp Kopernikusplatz postcard 1917 nbsp Jozef Bem Square 2020 Shortly after the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Russian troops captured Allenstein but it was recovered by the Imperial German Army in the Battle of Tannenberg After the defeat of Germany in World War I the East Prussian plebiscite was held in 1920 to determine whether the populace of the region including Allenstein wished to remain in German East Prussia or become part of Poland which had just regained independence In order to advertise the plebiscite special postage stamps were produced by overprinting German stamps and sold on 3 April of that year One kind of overprint read PLEBISCITE OLSZTYN ALLENSTEIN while the other read TRAITE DE VERSAILLES ART 94 et 95 inside an oval whose border gave the full name of the plebiscite commission Each overprint was applied to 14 denominations ranging from 5 Pfennigs to 3 Marks The Polish community faced discrimination Polish rallies were dispersed the participants were threatened and beaten 17 In March Polish activist Bogumil Linka died in Allenstein a few weeks after being attacked by the German militia in nearby Szczytno in Masuria 25 26 27 He was buried in Allenstein however his grave was soon devastated by local German nationalists 25 26 28 A monument to Linka was unveiled after Poland regained control of the city after World War II 25 26 The presence of a Royal Irish battalion ensured a relative peace in Allenstein 29 The plebiscite held on 11 July produced 16 742 votes for Germany and 342 votes for Poland 17 nbsp Headquarters of various Polish organizations in the interbellum In the interwar period numerous Polish organisations operated in the city including the Polish Scouting and Guiding Association Union of Poles in Germany a People s Bank Bank Ludowy 11 local Poles organised a school library puppet theatre 17 The Polish Consulate also operated After the January 1933 Nazi seizure of power in Germany Poles and Jews in Allenstein were increasingly persecuted 17 In 1935 the German Wehrmacht made the city the seat of the Allenstein Militarischer Bereich It was then home of the 11th and 217th infantry divisions and 11th Artillery Regiment At the same time the football club SV Hindenburg Allenstein played in Allenstein from 1921 to 1945 Beginning in 1936 members of the Polish minority were increasingly persecuted especially members of the Union of Poles in Germany 17 In early 1939 many local Polish activists were expelled 30 In an attempt to rig the results of an upcoming census and understate the number of Poles in the city and region the Germans terrorized the Polish population and in May 1939 the Gestapo confiscated 10 000 Polish information leaflets in the headquarters of the Gazeta Olsztynska 31 In August 1939 Germany introduced martial law in the region which allowed for even more blatant persecution of Poles 32 In August and September 1939 the authorities carried out mass arrests of local Poles including the chairman of the local Polish bank and his assistant the chief of the Rolnik Cooperative 33 and the principal of the local Polish school 34 Nazi Germany co formed the Einsatzgruppe V in the city which then entered several Polish cities and towns including Grudziadz Mlawa Ciechanow Lomza and Siedlce to commit various atrocities against Poles during the German invasion of Poland that began World War II in 1939 35 German troops invaded Poland also from Olsztyn then called Allenstein 36 After the German invasion of Poland local Poles were also subjected to mass executions 11 and deportations to occupied Poland Arrested Poles were held in a local prison and then forced to remove Polish signs and inscriptions in the city while the German population gathered and insulted them 37 The Gazeta Olsztynska was abolished by the German authorities the newspaper s headquarters was demolished and the editor in chief Seweryn Pieniezny was arrested and executed in the Hohenbruch concentration camp de 17 36 along with co publisher Wojciech Galeziewski and the Rolnik Cooperative chief Leon Wlodarczyk while Pieniezny s wife was deported to the Ravensbruck concentration camp 38 The last pre war Polish consul in Allenstein Bohdan Jalowiecki along with the consulate staff was imprisoned in the Hohenbruch and Soldau concentration camps 39 and then murdered 40 Polish teachers were deported to the Dachau concentration camp 38 nbsp Home Army monument During the war five forced labour camps were established in the city 11 On 12 October 1939 the Wehrmacht established an area headquarters for one of its military districts Wehrkreis I headquartered at Konigsberg that controlled the environs of Allenstein including Lotzen now Gizycko and Ciechanow in occupied Poland As part of the Aktion T4 Nazi Germany conducted medical experiments on the patients of the psychiatric hospital in the present day district of Kortowo in which at least 5 000 people were killed 41 On 22 January 1945 near the end of the war the city was plundered and burned by the conquering Soviet Red Army and much of its German population fled 42 The remaining mostly Polish population was subjected to various crimes including murder rape and looting 36 17 The Soviets also murdered the remaining patients and staff of the psychiatric hospital who were either burned alive or shot 41 Remains of three Roman Catholic nuns who served as nurses at Olsztyn s St Mary s Hospital and were killed by Soviet soldiers in 1945 were excavated in October 2020 43 44 On 23 May 1945 the Soviets established a Polish administration in the region which aroused British and American protest 45 The Polish rule was accepted under the preliminary provisions of the Potsdam Conference In October 1945 the remaining German population was expelled in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement and remaining Poles were joined by new Polish settlers 46 mostly those expelled from pre war Polish regions of Vilnius Grodno and Volhynia annexed by the Soviet Union as well as settlers from Warsaw which had been destroyed by German forces during World War II 17 Reconstruction and removal of damage lasted until the 1950s citation needed Contemporary history edit In December 1945 a match factory was launched in Olsztyn as the city s first post war industrial plant of national importance 47 A tyre factory was founded in Olsztyn in 1967 Its subsequent names included OZOS Stomil and Michelin 48 City limits were greatly expanded in 1966 and 1987 36 In 1956 Olsztyn was the site of the largest Polish demonstration of support for the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 49 On the 500th anniversary of the birth of Nicolaus Copernicus in 1973 a planetarium was opened in Olsztyn 18 In 1989 the former Gazeta Olsztynska headquarters was rebuilt and re opened as a museum In 1991 Pope John Paul II visited the city 18 In 1999 the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn was established which is now one of the largest universities in northeastern Poland Olsztyn became the capital of the Warmian Masurian Voivodeship in 1999 It was previously in the Olsztyn Voivodeship Olsztyn Castle edit nbsp Olsztyn Castle The Olsztyn Castle was built between 1346 1353 and by then it had one wing on the north east side of the rectangular courtyard Access to the castle leads from the drawbridge over the river Lyna surrounded by a belt of defensive walls and a moat The south west wing of the castle was built in the 15th century the tower situated in the west corner of the courtyard from the middle of the 14th century was rebuilt in the early 16th century and had a round shape on a square base and was 40 meters high At the same time the castle walls were raised to a height of 12 meters and a second belt of the lower walls was built The castle walls were partly combined with city walls which made the castle look as if it had been a powerful bastion defending access to the city The castle was owned by Warmia Chapter which until 1454 together with the Prince Bishopric of Warmia was under the military protection of the Teutonic Knights and their Monastic State in Prussia 50 The castle had played a huge role in the Polish Teutonic wars by then After the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 the Poles took it after a few days siege In the Thirteen Years War 1454 66 it was jumping from rule to rule The Knights threatened the castle and the town in 1521 but the defense was very effective They contained one failed assault There is a connection between the history of the castle the city of Olsztyn and Nicolaus Copernicus He prepared the defense of Olsztyn against the invasion of the Teutonic Knights in 1520 50 nbsp Interior of the Olsztyn Castle In the sixteenth century there were two prince bishops of Warmia that stayed there Johannes Dantiscus the first Sarmatian poet endowed with the imperial laurel wreath for Latin Songs 1538 1541 and Marcin Kromer who wrote with equal ease in Latin and Polish scientific and literary works 1580 Kromer consecrated the chapel of St Anna which was built in the south west wing of the castle In the course of time both wings of the castle lost military importance which for residential purposes has become very convenient In 1779 Prince Bishop Ignacy Krasicki stopped here as well After the Prussian annexation of Warmia during the First Partition of Poland in 1772 the castle became the property of the state board of estates Kriegs und Domanenkammer War and Domain Chamber In 1845 the bridge over the moat was replaced by a causeway better connecting the castle with the city In 1901 1911 a general renovation of the castle was performed however several sections of the building were violated at the same time where they changed the original look of the castle e g putting on window frames in a cloister The tower was topped off in 1921 and again in 1926 In 1945 the whole castle became home to the Masurian Museum which today is called the Museum of Warmia and Masuria In addition there are also popular events held within the frameworks of the Olsztyn Artistic Summer and so called evenings of the castle and Sundays in the Museum Jewish community edit Although Jews were permitted to trade in the city itself and its fairs during the medieval times they were restricted from trading freely in the villages surrounding the town 51 In 1718 Bishop Teodor Andrzej Potocki imposed a ban on Jewish trade in the city as well 52 The ban even if continued by successive bishops proved not to be particularly successful in the light of repeated complains by the local merchants about Jewish dealing in animal leather and similar products as the one recorded in 1742 Permanent Jewish settlement can be dated to 1780 when the Jews were finally permitted to settle in the city albeit outside the immediate city walls 53 In 1814 the Simonson brothers opened the first Jewish store Yet the growth of the Jewish community worried city authorities that attempted to curb it with various restrictions and punitive measures For example in 1850 a new law was enacted imposing fines and imprisonment on anyone harbouring a wandering Jew in their home 54 nbsp Remains of the Jewish cemetery The roots of the Jewish congregation in the town can be traced to 1820 Shortly after that date an official prayer room was established on Richterstrasse In 1877 the congregation bought a plot of land on Liebstadterstrasse and built a synagogue there 55 A Jewish cemetery was built on Seestrasse present day Grunwaldzka At its peak the town s Jewish population reached 448 people 1933 During the Kristallnacht the town synagogue was destroyed by Nazi Germans only to be later used as a bomb shelter 56 Today the site of the former synagogue is occupied by a local sports club 57 By 1939 only 135 Jews were left in the city The remainder fled the country Those who still lived in the town by 1940 were deported to Nazi concentration camps 58 In June 1946 16 Holocaust survivors settled in the city and in 1948 the congregation had 190 worshipers Most of them emigrated to Israel throughout the next few decades There is no trace of the Jewish cemetery 59 The city was the birthplace of world famous Jewish architect Erich Mendelsohn In town Mendelsohn planned the mourners chapel called the Mendelsohn house next to the cemetery 60 The building is restored 61 In addition it was the birthplace of German Socialist and SPD leader Hugo Haase Frieda Strohmberg pl an Impressionist lived and worked in the city from 1910 to 1927 Documentation of the Jewish owned shops in town exists 62 Geography edit nbsp Lake Ukiel Krzywe nbsp Lake Kortowskie nbsp Lake Tyrsko Zbik Olsztyn is located in the north east part of Poland in the region known as the Thousand Lakes 63 Greenbelt edit More than half of the forests occupying 21 2 of the city area form a single complex of the Municipal Forest 1050 ha used mainly for recreation and tourism purposes Within the Municipal Forest area are situated two peat land flora sanctuaries Mszar and Redykajny Municipal greenery 560 ha 6 5 of the town area developed in the form of numerous parks green spots and three cemeteries over a century old The greenery includes 910 monuments of nature and groups of protected trees in the form of beech oak maple and lime lined avenues citation needed Lakes edit The city is situated in a lake region of forests and plains There are 15 lakes inside the administrative bounds of the city 13 with areas greater than 1 ha The overall area of lakes in Olsztyn is about 725 ha which constitutes 8 25 of the total city area Lake Area ha Maximum depth m Lake Ukiel a k a Jezioro Krzywe 412 43 Lake Kortowskie 89 7 17 2 Lake Track a k a Trackie 52 8 4 6 Lake Skanda 51 5 12 Lake Redykajny 29 9 20 6 Lake Dlugie 26 8 17 2 Lake Sukiel 20 8 25 Lake Tyrsko a k a Zbik or Duzy Zbik 18 6 30 6 Lake Stary Dwor 6 0 23 3 Lake Siginek 6 0 insufficient data Lake Czarne approximately 1 3 insufficient data Lake Zbik a k a Maly Zbik approximately 1 2 insufficient data Lake Pereszkowo approximately 1 2 insufficient data Lake Mummel approximately 0 3 insufficient data Lake Modrzewiowe 0 25 insufficient data Climate edit Olszytn has an oceanic climate Koppen climate classification Cfb using the 3 C 27 F isotherm or a humid continental climate Koppen climate classification Dfb using the 0 C 32 F isotherm 64 65 Climate data for Olsztyn 1991 2020 normals extremes 1951 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 12 2 54 0 16 7 62 1 23 9 75 0 30 2 86 4 31 5 88 7 33 7 92 7 36 1 97 0 36 2 97 2 34 6 94 3 25 9 78 6 17 8 64 0 13 2 55 8 36 2 97 2 Mean daily maximum C F 0 4 32 7 1 8 35 2 6 2 43 2 13 3 55 9 18 6 65 5 21 7 71 1 23 8 74 8 23 4 74 1 18 1 64 6 11 8 53 2 5 5 41 9 1 7 35 1 12 2 54 0 Daily mean C F 2 0 28 4 1 1 30 0 2 2 36 0 7 9 46 2 12 9 55 2 16 1 61 0 18 3 64 9 17 8 64 0 13 2 55 8 8 0 46 4 3 3 37 9 0 4 31 3 8 0 46 4 Mean daily minimum C F 4 4 24 1 3 8 25 2 1 5 29 3 2 6 36 7 7 1 44 8 10 7 51 3 13 2 55 8 12 7 54 9 8 9 48 0 4 8 40 6 1 2 34 2 2 6 27 3 4 1 39 4 Record low C F 30 6 23 1 30 6 23 1 23 5 10 3 9 7 14 5 4 8 23 4 0 5 31 1 4 0 39 2 1 9 35 4 4 2 24 4 11 0 12 2 20 2 4 4 26 0 14 8 30 6 23 1 Average precipitation mm inches 42 1 1 66 33 1 1 30 39 4 1 55 37 5 1 48 59 8 2 35 70 1 2 76 88 0 3 46 63 8 2 51 58 5 2 30 57 7 2 27 47 0 1 85 45 4 1 79 642 4 25 29 Average extreme snow depth cm inches 9 5 3 7 9 7 3 8 6 5 2 6 1 7 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 3 3 2 1 3 6 2 2 4 9 7 3 8 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 17 37 15 00 14 13 12 40 13 50 14 30 14 43 13 33 13 03 14 13 15 57 17 63 174 84 Average snowy days 0 cm 18 4 17 6 9 6 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 1 12 5 64 0 Average relative humidity 88 2 85 0 77 6 69 9 70 4 72 6 74 7 75 3 80 7 84 7 89 7 89 8 79 9 Source 1 Institute of Meteorology and Water Management 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 Source 2 Meteomodel pl records relative humidity 1991 2020 74 75 76 Administrative division edit nbsp Districts of Olsztyn Aerial views of various districts of Olsztyn nbsp Srodmiescie nbsp Brzeziny nbsp Dajtki nbsp Kortowo Olsztyn is divided into 23 districts District Population Area Density Brzeziny 1 456 2 25 km2 0 87 sq mi 647 1 km2 Dajtki 5 863 7 5 km2 2 9 sq mi 781 7 km2 Generalow 6 500 no data no data Grunwaldzkie 6 027 1 46 km2 0 56 sq mi 4 128 1 km2 Gutkowo 2 256 7 2 km2 2 8 sq mi 313 3 km2 Jaroty 29 046 4 82 km2 1 86 sq mi 6 026 1 km2 Ketrzynskiego 7 621 4 83 km2 1 86 sq mi 1 577 8 km2 Kormoran 16 166 1 1 km2 0 4 sq mi 14 696 4 km2 Kortowo 1 131 4 22 km2 1 63 sq mi 268 km2 Kosciuszki 6 704 1 18 km2 0 46 sq mi 5 681 4 km2 Likusy 2 286 2 1 km2 0 8 sq mi 1 088 6 km2 Mazurskie 4 615 5 98 km2 2 31 sq mi 771 7 km2 Nad Jeziorem Dlugim 2 408 4 23 km2 2 sq mi 569 3 km2 Nagorki 12 538 1 69 km2 0 65 sq mi 7 418 9 km2 Pieczewo 10 918 2 24 km2 0 86 sq mi 4 874 1 km2 Podgrodzie 11 080 1 35 km2 0 52 sq mi 8 207 4 km2 Podlesna 10 414 9 93 km2 3 83 sq mi 1 048 7 km2 Pojezierze 13 001 2 39 km2 0 92 sq mi 5 439 7 km2 Redykajny 1 555 6 1 km2 2 36 sq mi 254 9 km2 Srodmiescie 3 448 0 58 km2 0 22 sq mi 5 944 8 km2 Wojska Polskiego 6 759 5 03 km2 2 sq mi 1 343 7 km2 Zatorze 6 988 0 45 km2 0 17 sq mi 15 528 9 km2 Zielona Gorka 1 015 6 44 km2 2 49 sq mi 157 6 km2 There are many smaller districts Jakubowo Karolin Kolonia Jaroty Kortowo II Lupstych Niedzwiedz Piekna Gora Podlesie Pozorty Skarbowka Poszmanowka Sloneczny Stok Stare Kiezliny Stare Miasto Stare Zalbki Stary Dwor Track These do not have council representative assemblies Culture edit nbsp Stefan Jaracz Theatre built 1925 nbsp Museum of Nature Theatres edit Stefan Jaracz Theatre est 1925 the host of International Theatre Festival DEMOLUDY Puppet Theatre Cinemas edit Helios Multikino Museums edit Museum of Warmia and Mazury Muzeum Warmii i Mazur Olsztyn s largest museum Gazeta Olsztynska House Dom Gazety Olsztynskiej Museum of Nature Muzeum Przyrody Museum of Sports Muzeum Sportu Muzeum Nowoczesnosci Architecture edit nbsp Old townhouses at the Rynek Market Square in the Old Town The historic central district of Olsztyn is the Old Town Stare Miasto which contains various historic buildings and structures including the Gothic castle of Warmian Chapter built during the 14th century former home of Nicolaus Copernicus now a museum Gothic St James Pro cathedral with Gothic Renaissance Baroque interior Old Town Hall on the Market Square built in the mid 14th century Gazeta Olsztynska House at the Targ Rybny Fish Market now a museum the town walls and the High Gate until the mid 19th century known as the Upper Gate Our Lady Queen of Poland church Monument to Nicolaus Copernicus Park Zamkowy Castle Park Baroque Archpresbyter s Palace Palac Archiprezbitera Gothic Revival Church of the Salvator Notable structures outside of the Old Town include the New City Hall Jewish Tahara house in Olsztyn built in 1911 1912 by Erich Mendelsohn Modernist planetarium with mosaics by Stefan Knapp the Jerusalem Chapel pl built in 1565 Neogothic Sacred Heart church built during the years 1901 1902 Church of St Lawrence in the Gutkowo district built in the late 14th century Home Army and Stefan Jaracz monuments and the White Eagle Column the Railway Bridge over the River Lyna gorge near Artyleryjska and Wyzwolenia streets built during the years 1872 1873 Main Post Office Warmian Masurian Voivodeship office Instytut Polnocny im Wojciecha Ketrzynskiego Wojciech Ketrzynski Northern Institute Park Centralny Central Park the Ksiaznica Polska building with one of the oldest active passenger elevators in Poland and Europe FM and TV mast Olsztyn Pieczewo 360 metres high since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland nbsp High Gate nbsp Our Lady Queen of Poland Church nbsp New City Hall nbsp Astronomical observatory nbsp Jerusalem Chapel nbsp Sacred Heart church nbsp Voivodeship office nbsp Jewish Tahara house by Erich Mendelsohn Music edit The city is home to the National Symphony Orchestra Economy edit nbsp Michelin Polska tyre company The Michelin Polska tyre company former Stomil Olsztyn is the largest employer in the region of Warmia and Masuria 77 Other important industries are food processing and furniture manufacturing Transportation editRoad edit Bus edit A bus network with 36 bus lines exists including 6 suburban lines and 2 night time lines 78 Trolleybus edit In 1939 due to poor economic situation throughout the interwar period and the city s growing population a trolleybus line began operation partially replacing the original tram network During the Second World War the cars were mainly driven by women citation needed The trolleybus network consisting of 4 lines was decommissioned on 31 July 1971 79 Rail edit Olsztyn has train connections to various major cities in Poland including Warsaw Krakow Gdansk Szczecin Poznan Bydgoszcz Bialystok Wroclaw Lodz Torun and various towns in the region including Elblag Ilawa Dzialdowo and Elk Olsztyn Glowny is the main railway station in the city Plans exist to demolish the building and replace it with new infrastructure 80 contrary to previous information about the current building being renovated 81 Tram edit nbsp Tram network in Olsztyn re opened in December 2015 Main article Trams in Olsztyn Historically the city s first tram line was built in 1907 and gradually expanded over the years It ceased operation in 1965 82 In 2006 authorities considered the reintroduction of trams in the city to address transport problems and subsequently concluded feasibility studies on the matter in 2009 83 An 11 kilometre 7 mile long tram network was built between 2011 and 2015 The contract was signed in 2011 and construction commenced in 2012 82 It was a first new tram system built in Poland in 55 years 15 low floor Tramino trams were ordered from Solaris in September 2012 84 There are three tram lines in operation 78 A 6 kilometres 4 miles long extension is planned and Turkish manufacturer Durmazlar had been selected to supply 24 trams for the network 85 Air edit nbsp Olsztyn Mazury Airport The region and city is served by Olsztyn Mazury Airport with scheduled international passenger flights It is located in Szymany 10 km off Szczytno and 58 km south of the city of Olsztyn The airport operates flights to London Dortmund Krakow and seasonal flights to Rzeszow and Wroclaw 86 Education edit nbsp Main library building of the Olsztyn University University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn 87 Masurian Institute est 1943 Sports edit nbsp KOS Orlik A public football field near the 18th Primary School Indykpol AZS Olsztyn men s volleyball team playing in the Polish Volleyball League PLS Polska Liga Siatkowki five time Polish champions Stomil Olsztyn men s football team playing in the I liga second tier It played in the Ekstraklasa the country s top flight from 1994 to 2002 Warmia Olsztyn pl men s handball team playing in the I liga second tier It played in the Superliga the country s top flight most recently from 2005 to 2012 Warmia Olsztyn pl one of the oldest football clubs in the city playing in the lower leagues It played on the second tier most recently in the 1990s AZS UWM Trojeczka Olsztyn men s basketball team playing in the Polish Second League WMPD Olsztyn men s rugby team playing in the First Polish League Budowlani Olsztyn a wrestling team Joanna Jedrzejczyk born 1987 Polish Muay Thai and MMA fighter former UFC Women s Strawweight Champion Lukasz Gikiewicz born 1987 Polish footballer Rafal Gikiewicz born 1987 Polish footballer Filip Kurto born 1991 Polish footballer Olsztyn Lakers American football team The Memorial of Hubert Jerzy Wagner an international volleyball friendly tournament was organized in Olsztyn from 2003 to 2008 The Tour de Pologne one of UCI World Tour races was organized in Olsztyn numerous times most recently in 2008 as of 2019 Politics editMembers of the Sejm elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005 Mieczyslaw Aszkielowicz Self Defense of the Republic of Poland Samoobrona Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Beata Bublewicz Civic Platform PO Platforma Obywatelska Jerzy Gosiewski Law and Justice PiS Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc Tadeusz Iwinski Democratic Left Alliance SLD Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej Edward Osko League of Polish Families LPR Liga Polskich Rodzin Adam Puza Law and Justice PiS Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc Slawomir Rybicki Civic Platform PO Platforma Obywatelska Lidia Staron Civic Platform PO Platforma Obywatelska Aleksander Marek Szczyglo Law and Justice PiS Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc Zbigniew Wlodkowski Polish Peasant Party PSL Polskie Stronnictwo Ludowe Members of Senate elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005 Ryszard Jozef Gorecki Civic Platform PO Platforma Obywatelska Jerzy Szmit Law and Justice PiS Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc Notable people edit nbsp Statue of Nicolaus Copernicus in front of the castle nbsp Plaque commemorating Feliks Nowowiejski on his former home Johannes von Leysen 1310 1388 town founder and mayor Nicolaus Copernicus 1473 1543 astronomer administrator and town commander Johannes Knolleisen 1511 German academic and provider of academic stipends Lucas David 1503 1583 German historian of Prussia Marcin Kromer 1512 1589 Polish cartographer diplomat and historian personal secretary of Kings of Poland Bishop of Warmia Antoni Blank 1785 1844 Polish painter Hugo Haase 1863 1919 Jewish German politician jurist and pacifist Franz Justus Rarkowski 1873 1950 military bishop 1938 1945 August Trunz 1875 1963 founder of the Prussica Sammlung Trunz Feliks Nowowiejski 1877 1946 Polish composer conductor concert organist Maximilian Kaller 1880 1947 German prelate bishop of Ermland in 1930 1945 Erich Mendelsohn 1887 1953 German Jewish architect who fled the Nazis Olga Desmond 1891 1964 German dancer and actress Hermann Dohna Finckenstein 1894 1942 German estate owner and politician Gunter Wand 1912 2002 German conductor Kurt Baluses 1914 72 German football soccer player and manager Herbert Schachtschneider 1919 2008 German operatic tenor Hans Jurgen Wischnewski 1922 2005 German politician Curt Lowens 1925 2017 German actor Leonhard Pohl 1929 2014 German gymnast Jozef Glemp 1929 2013 Polish prelate bishop of Warmia 1979 1981 Jorg Kuebart 1934 2018 German general of the German Air Force Karl Heinz Hopp 1936 2007 German rower who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics Wolf Lepenies born 1941 German sociologist political scientist and author Eugeniusz Geno Malkowski 1942 2016 Polish artist painter and academic Ulrich Schrade 1943 2009 German Polish philosopher and pedagogue Marian Bublewicz 1950 1993 Polish rally and race driver of the 1980s and 1990s Juliusz Machulski born 1955 Polish film director Izabela Trojanowska born 1955 Polish actress and singer Andrzej Friszke born 1956 Polish historian Krzysztof Holowczyc born 1962 Polish rally driver Piotr Peter Wiwczarek born 1965 Polish musician vocalist and lead guitarist of the death metal band Vader Artur Wojdat born 1968 swimmer Elzbieta Jablonska born 1970 Polish multidisciplinary artist born in Olsztyn 88 Mamed Khalidov born 1980 Russian Polish mixed martial artist Wojciech Grzyb born 1981 Polish volleyball player Julia Marcell born 1982 Polish singer songwriter and pianist Malgorzata Jasinska born 1984 Polish professional cyclist retd Michal Trzeciakiewicz born 1984 retired Polish footballer Marcin Mozdzonek born 1985 volleyball player Adrian Mierzejewski born 1986 Polish footballer Lukasz Gikiewicz born 1987 Polish footballer Rafal Gikiewicz born 1987 Polish footballer Joanna Jedrzejczyk born 1987 Muay Thai and MMA fighter former UFC Women s Strawweight Champion Pawel Dawidowicz born 1995 Polish footballer Artur Szalpuk born 1995 Polish volleyball player 2018 World ChampionInternational relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Twin towns Sister cities edit Olsztyn is twinned with nbsp Calpe Alicante Valencian Community Spain nbsp Chateauroux Indre Centre Val de Loire France 89 nbsp Gelsenkirchen North Rhine Westphalia Germany 90 nbsp Lutsk Ukraine nbsp Offenburg Baden Wurttemberg Germany nbsp Richmond VA United States nbsp Rovaniemi Finland nbsp Bielsko Biala Silesian Voivodeship Poland 91 nbsp Weifang China 92 Olsztyn belongs to the Federation of Copernicus Cities an association of cities where Copernicus lived and worked such as Bologna Frombork Krakow and Torun The main office of the federation is situated at Olsztyn Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory located on St Andrew s Hill 143 m in a former water tower erected in 1897 Citations editNotes edit Pronunciation British English UK ˈ ɒ l ʃ t ɪ n OL shtin 3 Polish Polish ˈɔlʂtɨn German Allenstein ˈʔalenʃtaɪn Latin Allenstenium Holstin 4 References edit a b Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved 24 July 2022 Data for territorial unit 2862000 Olsztyn Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Olsztyn Lexico UK English Dictionary UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Prawo Kanoniczne p 9 o o StayPoland Sp z Olsztyn Tourism Tourist Information Olsztyn Poland Retrieved 17 November 2016 Presentation of castle and museum trail cultural historical attractions of the Baltic Sea region Retrieved 17 November 2016 Budzillo Elzbieta Olsztyn Copernicus city with 15 lakes Retrieved 17 November 2016 W Olsztynie zyje sie prawie najlepiej W rankingu miast awansowalismy na czwarte miejsce Retrieved 29 March 2017 a b Ranking jakosci miejskiego zycia W Olsztynie zyje sie bardzo dobrze Retrieved 29 March 2017 Olsztyn Warminsko mazurskie mapy nieruchomosci GUS noclegi szkoly regon atrakcje kody pocztowe wypadki drogowe bezrobocie wynagrodzenie zarobki tabele edukacja demografia a b c d e f Olsztyn Encyklopedia PWN in Polish Retrieved 10 February 2020 a b c Miasto Olsztyn perla Warmii najwieksze miasto wojewodztwa warminsko mazurskiego Retrieved 17 November 2016 Zabytki Olsztyn Atrakcje Historii Zwiedzanie Miasta w Centrum Retrieved 17 November 2016 a b c d e Historia in Polish Retrieved 17 November 2016 Gorski Karol 1949 Zwiazek Pruski i poddanie sie Prus Polsce zbior tekstow zrodlowych in Polish Poznan Instytut Zachodni p XXXVII Gorski p 54 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Historia Olsztyna atrakcje Olsztyn pl in Polish Retrieved 10 February 2020 a b c d e f Historia Olsztyna in Polish Retrieved 29 March 2017 Hohne Manfred Historia Olsztyna Prusy Wschodnie Retrieved 17 November 2016 Historia Olsztyna Castles of Poland Retrieved 17 November 2016 Historia Pomorza 1815 1850 Gerard Labuda Poznanskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciol Nauk page 157 1993 a b Rocznica smierci burmistrza Olsztyna Jakuba Rarkowskiego Kultura wm pl in Polish Retrieved 26 March 2020 Wojciech Ketrzynski Atrakcje turystyczne Olsztyna in Polish Retrieved 26 March 2020 Olsztyn Golebnik w srodku miasta Atrakcje turystyczne Olsztyna Ciekawe miejsca Olsztyna Retrieved 17 November 2016 a b c 90 lecie smierci Bogumila Linki Olsztyn24 in Polish Retrieved 26 March 2020 a b c Pamieci Bogumila Linki w rocznice smierci Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish Retrieved 26 March 2020 Piotr Stawecki Warmiacy i Mazurzy kawalerowie Krzyza i Medalu Niepodleglosci Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie issue 2 3 page 309 Bogumil Linka PWN Encyclopedia Williamson David G 2017 The British in interwar Germany London New York Bloomsbury Academic p 78 ISBN 978 1 4725 9582 9 Cyganski Miroslaw 1984 Hitlerowskie przesladowania przywodcow i aktywu Zwiazkow Polakow w Niemczech w latach 1939 1945 Przeglad Zachodni in Polish 4 38 Cyganski p 39 Cyganski p 40 Wardzynska Maria 2003 Intelligenzaktion na Warmii Mazurach i polnocnym Mazowszu Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej in Polish No 12 1 35 36 IPN p 39 ISSN 1641 9561 Cyganski p 42 Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN p 54 a b c d The history of Olsztyn Visit Olsztyn Retrieved 13 November 2020 Wardzynska 2009 p 77 a b Wardzynska 2003 p 41 Wardzynska 2009 p 228 Cyganski p 60 a b Dzisiaj mija 74 rocznica rzezi w Kortowie Sowieckie oddzialy zamordowaly okolo 600 osob Radio Olsztyn in Polish Retrieved 29 December 2020 Olsztyn Barwna historia miasta Zabawa Mazury pl Retrieved 17 November 2016 Olsztyn Poszukiwania szczatkow siostr zakonnych ofiar sowieckich zolnierzy Poszukiwania in Polish 12 November 2020 Skeletons of WWII era nuns murdered by Soviets unearthed in Poland Live Science March 2021 Viktoria Vierheller 1970 Polen und die Deutschland Frage 1939 1949 in German Vol 23 Verlag Wissenschaft und Politik p 105 Sebastian Siebel Achenbach Niederschlesien 1942 bis 1949 alliierte Diplomatie und Nachkriegswirklichheit in German Bergstadtverlag Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn pp 96 97 joanna Historia lokalna Olsztyn rok 1945 i pierwsze lata powojenne Retrieved 17 November 2016 Wiadomosci Mazurskie 4 40 1945 p 3 in Polish e V Christoph Pienkoss DV Deutscher Verband fur Stadtebau und Wohnungswesen EuRoB Europaische Route der Backsteingotik Strona internetowa Miasta nad Szlaku Polska Olsztyn Historia miasta Retrieved 17 November 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Agnieszka Libudzka 30 October 2018 W 62 rocznice Powstania Wegierskiego odslonieto pamiatkowa tablice w Olsztynie Dzieje pl in Polish Retrieved 4 September 2022 a b Zamek w Olsztynie olsztyndzisiaj pl in Polish 1 June 2011 Retrieved 9 March 2023 W Knercer Cmentarze i zabytki kultury zydowskiej w wojewodztwie olsztynskim Borussia no 6 1993 p 53 vide K Forstreuter Die ersten Juden in Ostpreussen Altpreussische Forschungen ch 14 1937 pp 42 48 History Jewish community before 1989 Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Archived from the original on 1 January 2014 Retrieved 17 November 2016 J Jasinski Olsztyn w latach 1772 1918 in Olsztyn 1353 2003 ed S Achremczyk W Ogrodzinski Olsztyn 2003 p 228 J Jasinski Olsztyn w latach 1772 1918 in Olsztyn 1353 2003 ed S Achremczyk W Ogrodzinski Olsztyn 2003 p 229 Old synagogue Synagogues prayer houses and others Heritage Sites Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Retrieved 17 November 2016 Archive east prussia Allenstein Retrieved 17 November 2016 Jewish culture in Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Retrieved 17 November 2016 https www bundesarchiv de gedenkbuch directory html frmResults matches for Allenstein with marked Wohnort and Geburtsort as of 25 March 2009 http www yadvashem org wps portal ut p s 7 0 A 7 0 2KE next form advanced search people living in Olsztyn before the war matches for Allenstein with marked Before the War as of 25 March 2009 http www yadvashem org wps portal ut p s 7 0 A 7 0 2KE next form advanced search people born in Olsztyn matches for Allenstein with marked Birth as of 25 March 2009 Jewish Cemetery Zyndrama z Maszkowic Street Cemeteries Heritage Sites Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Retrieved 17 November 2016 Family House of Erich Mendelsohn 21 Podgorna Street Oberstrasse today s 10 Staromiejska Heritage sites Heritage Sites Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Archived from the original on 1 January 2014 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Mendelsohn s house will be renovated Virtual Shtetl Retrieved 17 November 2016 History Jewish community before 1989 Olsztyn Virtual Shtetl Archived from the original on 1 January 2014 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Bridge Adrian 17 June 2016 13 cities you can t pronounce but should definitely visit The Telegraph UK Kottek Markus Grieser Jurgen Beck Christoph Rudolf Bruno Rubel Franz 2006 World Map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification updated PDF Meteorologische Zeitschrift 15 3 259 263 Bibcode 2006MetZe 15 259K doi 10 1127 0941 2948 2006 0130 Peel M C Finlayson B L amp McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification PDF Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 ISSN 1027 5606 Srednia dobowa temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 3 December 2021 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Srednia minimalna temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Srednia maksymalna temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Miesieczna suma opadu Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 9 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Liczba dni z opadem gt 0 1 mm Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Srednia grubosc pokrywy snieznej Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Liczba dni z pokrywa sniezna gt 0 cm Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Srednia suma uslonecznienia h Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Olsztyn Absolutna temperatura maksymalna in Polish Meteomodel pl Retrieved 31 January 2022 Olsztyn Absolutna temperatura minimalna in Polish Meteomodel pl Retrieved 31 January 2022 Olsztyn Srednia wilgotnosc in Polish Meteomodel pl Retrieved 31 January 2022 100 milionowa opona w olsztynskiej fabryce Michelin Autoflesz pl Niezalezny Portal Motoryzacyjny Autoflesz pl Archived from the original on 21 May 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2011 a b Schematy Komunikacyjne ZDZiT Zarzad Drog Zieleni i Transportu w Olsztynie in Polish Retrieved 3 February 2019 Jandula Martyn 6 March 2016 Trolejbusowe szalenstwo Olsztyna Transport Publiczny pl in Polish Retrieved 3 February 2019 Kurs Tomasz 2 February 2019 Tajemnicza ukladanka czyli jak bedzie wygladal Olsztyn Glowny olsztyn wyborcza pl in Polish Retrieved 3 February 2019 Urbanowicz Witold 6 November 2017 Rusza przetarg na projekt budowy nowego Olsztyna Glownego Transport Publiczny pl in Polish a b Trams return to Olsztyn after 50 years www tautonline com 27 April 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Olsztyn city reintroduces trams Railway PRO Communication Platform 13 January 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Solaris to deliver 15 Tramino low floor trams to Olsztyn www breakingtravelnews com 1 October 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Durmazlar to supply trams to Olsztyn Metro Report International 17 May 2018 Retrieved 3 February 2019 Transportation Olsztyn Mazury Airport Retrieved 3 February 2019 Universitx website Jablonska Elzbieta Kunstforum de in German Retrieved 2 January 2023 Le service municipal des jumelages Chateauroux municipal twinning service Ville de Chateauroux in French Archived from the original on 20 September 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2013 List of Twin Towns in the Ruhr District PDF Twins2010 com Archived from the original PDF on 28 November 2009 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Bielsko Biala Partner Cities 2008 Urzedu Miejskiego w Bielsku Bialej Retrieved 10 December 2008 Weifang Urzad Miasta Olsztyna Retrieved 26 March 2020 Further reading edit http www olsztyn eu in Polish http www bezrobocie net stat powiaty php in Polish https web archive org web 20100220023326 http zamkigotyckie org pl olsztyn htm in Polish https web archive org web 20120308112401 http www pascal pl atrakcja php id 25797 in Polish External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olsztyn Official website Activities in Olsztyn News Olsztyn in Polish Jewish history of Olsztyn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olsztyn amp oldid 1221708098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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