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Brańsk

Brańsk [braɲsk] (Belarusian: Бранск, Lithuanian: Branskas) is a town in eastern Poland. It is situated within Podlaskie Voivodeship (province).

Brańsk
Church of the Assumption of Mary in Brańsk
Location within Bielsk County
Brańsk
Location within Poland
Brańsk
Brańsk (Podlaskie Voivodeship)
Coordinates: 52°45′N 22°50′E / 52.750°N 22.833°E / 52.750; 22.833Coordinates: 52°45′N 22°50′E / 52.750°N 22.833°E / 52.750; 22.833
Country Poland
VoivodeshipPodlaskie
CountyBielsk
GminaBrańsk (urban gmina)
Town rights18 January 1493
Government
 • MayorEugeniusz Tomasz Koczewski
Area
 • Total32.43 km2 (12.52 sq mi)
Population
 (30 June 2021[1])
 • Total3,667
 • Density110/km2 (290/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
17-120
Area code+48 085
Car platesBBI
National roads
Voivodeship roads
Websitehttp://www.bransk.podlaskie.pl

Etymology

The name of the town comes from the river Bronka, a nearby tributary of the Nurzec River.

Geography

Location

Brańsk is located in the geographical region of Europe known as the Wysoczyzny Podlasko–Białoruskie (English: Podlaskie and Belarus Plateau) and the mesoregion known as the Bielsk Plain (Polish: Równina Bielska). The Nurzec River, a tributary of the Bug River, passes through Brańsk. The town covers an area of 32.43 square kilometres (12.5 sq mi).

It is located approximately:

Climate

The region has a continental climate characterized by high temperatures during summer and long and frosty winters . The average amount of rainfall during the year exceeds 550 millimetres (21.7 in).

History

On 23–25 June 1264 the Battle of Brańsk was fought in the town's vicinity. Polish forced led by Duke Boleslaw V the Chaste defeated the forces of Yotvingia led by Komata (Kumata).

On 18 January 1493, Brańsk received a city charter based on Magdeburg rights from the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Alexander Jagiellon. It was the first city in Podlachia to receive such a charter.

 
Brańsk on a map from 1804

Brańsk was a royal town of Poland, administratively located in the Podlaskie Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown. In 1795, as a result of the Third Partition of Poland, Brańsk was annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia and administered as a part of the newly formed Białystok Department. In 1807, as a result of the Treaties of Tilsit, Brańsk was annexed to the Russian Empire and administered at first as a part of Belostok Oblast and from 1842 on as a part of Grodno Governorate. The town was reintegrated with Poland, after the country regained independence following World War I in 1918.

World War II

On September 1, 1939, Germany attacked Poland and started World War II. Within days of the war's beginning, Brańsk suffered German bombardment. On September 17, 1939, the Soviet Union attacked Poland from the east, and in partnership with Nazi Germany, partitioned Poland under the terms of the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of August 23. Brańsk along with all areas of Poland east of the Bug River was then occupied by the Soviet Union. All Polish and Jewish businesses of substance were confiscated by the Communist State. Several Poles from Brańsk were murdered by the Russians in the large Katyn massacre in 1940.[2] The Soviets remained in control of Brańsk until June 1941 when the Germans invaded their erstwhile Soviet allies.

The German Army occupied the town and ordered the Jewish community to build a ghetto surrounded by barbed wire, to which the Jewish population (some 65% of the town) was confined. On November 8, 1942, the Jews of Brańsk were ordered to report to the town center, forced to march to the nearby town of Bielsk, and then transported by train to Treblinka. Within weeks, the vast majority were murdered by gassing at the Treblinka extermination camp.[3][4] Several local Jews were hidden and rescued by Poles (including the local parish priest) in Brańsk and nearby villages.[5] Some hiding places in nearby villages were discovered by the Germans, who then murdered captured Jews.[6] Their Polish rescuers were either also murdered or managed to hide from the Germans until the end of the German occupation.[6]

On August 1, 1944, the town was captured by Soviet forces. On August 4, 1944, the Russians arrested 12 officers of the Polish underground Home Army in Brańsk, after they were deceitfully gathered for a supposed formal meeting with the command of the Soviet 65th Army.[7] The town was soon restored to Poland.

Demographics

Population

According to the 1921 census, the village was inhabited by 3.739 people, among whom 1.474 were Roman Catholic, 100 Orthodox, and 2.165 Mosaic. At the same time, 1.530 inhabitants declared Polish nationality, 32 Belarusian, 2.165 Jewish and 12 Russian. There were 493 residential buildings in the village.[8]

Detailed data as of 30 June 2021:[1]

  Total Women Men
Unit Number % Number % Number %
Population 3,667 100 1,808 49.3 1,859 50.7
Population Density
(persons/km²)
113.1 55.8 57.3

Municipal government

It is the seat of Gmina Brańsk, but is not part of Gmina Brańsk.

Executive branch

The chief executive of the government is the Mayor (Polish: Burmistrz).

Legislative branch

The legislative portion of the government is the Council (Polish: Rada) composed of the President (Polish: Przewodniczšcy), the Vice President (Polish: Wiceprzewodniczšcy) and thirteen councilors.

Neighbouring political subdivisions

Brańsk is bordered by Gminy Rudka and Brańsk.

Transport

Roads and highways

Brańsk is at the intersection of a National Road and a Voivodeship Road:

Streets

The major streets (Polish: Ulica) in Brańsk are:

  • Rynek
  • Armii Krajowej (National Road   DK 66)
  • Bielska
  • Binduga
  • Boćkowska
  • Błonie
  • Jagiellońska
  • Jana Pawła II (Voivodeship Road   DW 681)
  • Kapicy Milewskiego
  • Kasztanowa
  • Klonowa
  • Konopnickiej
  • Kościelna
  • Kościuszki (Voivodeship Road   DW 681)
  • Mickiewicza
  • Piłsudskiego
  • Poniatowskiego
  • Senatorska
  • Sienkiewicza
  • Skłodowskiej-Curie
  • Szkolna
  • Słowackiego
  • Witosa
  • Wyszyńskiego
  • Ściegiennego

Public transport

Bus service

Regular bus service is provided by Państwowa Komunikacja Samochodowa (State Car Communication, PKS) via PKS Bielsk Podlaskie, PKS Białystok and PKS Siemiatycze

Rail service

The closest passenger train service is provided by Polskie Koleje Państwowe (Polish State Railways, PKP) SA from the following stations:

Economy

The land-use is as follows:[9]

  • Agricultural use: 66%
  • Forest land: 27%
  • City: 2.34%

Major business

  • Financial:Banking - Bank Spóldzielczy w Brańsku, ul. Kosciuszki 2A, 17-120 Brańsk, Poland
  • Manufacturing:Plastics - Wald-Gold, ul. M. Konopnickiej 20, 17-120 Brańsk, Poland

Local attractions

Places of worship

Churches, chapels and shrines in Brańsk (examples)
 
Church of the Assumption
 
Saint Simeon church
 
Blessed Virgin Mary shrine
 
Saint Scholastica cemetery chapel
  • St. Simeon Stylites - Polish Orthodox. It is a mission church of the Church of the Apostles St. Peter and Paul in Malesze,[11] part of the Polish Orthodox Diocese of Warsaw-Bielsk.

Nearby attractions

  • Sanktuarium Matki Bożej Pojedniania w Hodyszewie (Our Lady of Hodyszewo Sanctuary) in Hodyzewo - 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) northwest
  • Ossoliński Palace in Rudka - 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) west

Notable people

Miscellanea

External links

  • Jewish cemetery in Brańsk (in Polish - English Text)
  • Video tour of Brańsk on YouTube

References

  1. ^ a b "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved 2022-06-02. Data for territorial unit 2003021.
  2. ^ Janusz Bakunowicz. "Drzewka dla tych, co zginęli w Katyniu". Kurier Poranny (in Polish). Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  3. ^ Eva Hoffman. Shtetl: The Life and Death of a Small Town and the World of Polish Jews. Houghton Mifflin, 1997.
  4. ^ Zbigniew Romaniuk. The Story of Two Shtetls: Brańsk and Ejszyszki, Part One. The Polish Educational Foundation in North America, 1998.
  5. ^ Datner, Szymon (1968). Las sprawiedliwych (in Polish). Warszawa: Książka i Wiedza. pp. 55, 58–59, 62.
  6. ^ a b Rejestr faktów represji na obywatelach polskich za pomoc ludności żydowskiej w okresie II wojny światowej (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. 2014. pp. 363, 370–371, 378.
  7. ^ Zwolski, Marcin (2005). "Deportacje internowanych Polakow z wojewodztwa białostockiego 1944–1945". Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość (in Polish). No. 2 (8). IPN. pp. 91–92. ISSN 1427-7476.
  8. ^ Skorowidz miejscowości Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej: opracowany na podstawie wyników pierwszego powszechnego spisu ludności z dn. 30 września 1921 r. i innych źródeł urzędowych., t. T. 5, województwo białostockie, 1924, s. 14.
  9. ^ "Strona Urzędu Miasta Brańsk - Brańsk Government Website" (in Polish). 2008-06-25.
  10. ^ (in Polish). 2008-08-16. Archived from the original on October 22, 2006.
  11. ^ "Dekanat Bielsk Podlaski" (in Polish). 2008-08-16. Archived from the original on 2002-10-28.
  12. ^ "Another Pole added to Righteous among the Nations - Polskie Radio". 2008-06-23.

brańsk, braɲsk, belarusian, Бранск, lithuanian, branskas, town, eastern, poland, situated, within, podlaskie, voivodeship, province, church, assumption, mary, coat, armslocation, within, bielsk, countylocation, within, polandshow, poland, podlaskie, voivodeshi. Bransk braɲsk Belarusian Bransk Lithuanian Branskas is a town in eastern Poland It is situated within Podlaskie Voivodeship province BranskChurch of the Assumption of Mary in BranskCoat of armsLocation within Bielsk CountyBranskLocation within PolandShow map of PolandBranskBransk Podlaskie Voivodeship Show map of Podlaskie VoivodeshipCoordinates 52 45 N 22 50 E 52 750 N 22 833 E 52 750 22 833 Coordinates 52 45 N 22 50 E 52 750 N 22 833 E 52 750 22 833Country PolandVoivodeshipPodlaskieCountyBielskGminaBransk urban gmina Town rights18 January 1493Government MayorEugeniusz Tomasz KoczewskiArea Total32 43 km2 12 52 sq mi Population 30 June 2021 1 Total3 667 Density110 km2 290 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code17 120Area code 48 085Car platesBBINational roadsVoivodeship roadsWebsitehttp www bransk podlaskie pl Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Location 2 2 Climate 3 History 3 1 World War II 4 Demographics 4 1 Population 5 Municipal government 5 1 Executive branch 5 2 Legislative branch 5 3 Neighbouring political subdivisions 6 Transport 6 1 Roads and highways 6 1 1 Streets 6 2 Public transport 6 2 1 Bus service 6 2 2 Rail service 7 Economy 7 1 Major business 8 Local attractions 8 1 Places of worship 9 Nearby attractions 10 Notable people 11 Miscellanea 12 External links 13 ReferencesEtymology EditThe name of the town comes from the river Bronka a nearby tributary of the Nurzec River Geography EditLocation Edit Bransk is located in the geographical region of Europe known as the Wysoczyzny Podlasko Bialoruskie English Podlaskie and Belarus Plateau and the mesoregion known as the Bielsk Plain Polish Rownina Bielska The Nurzec River a tributary of the Bug River passes through Bransk The town covers an area of 32 43 square kilometres 12 5 sq mi It is located approximately 140 kilometres 87 0 mi northeast of Warsaw the capital of Poland 69 kilometres 42 9 mi southwest of Bialystok the capital of the Podlaskie Voivodeship 25 kilometres 15 5 mi west of Bielsk Podlaski the seat of Bielsk CountyClimate Edit The region has a continental climate characterized by high temperatures during summer and long and frosty winters The average amount of rainfall during the year exceeds 550 millimetres 21 7 in History EditMain article Bielsk County History On 23 25 June 1264 the Battle of Bransk was fought in the town s vicinity Polish forced led by Duke Boleslaw V the Chaste defeated the forces of Yotvingia led by Komata Kumata On 18 January 1493 Bransk received a city charter based on Magdeburg rights from the Grand Duke of Lithuania Alexander Jagiellon It was the first city in Podlachia to receive such a charter Bransk on a map from 1804 Bransk was a royal town of Poland administratively located in the Podlaskie Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown In 1795 as a result of the Third Partition of Poland Bransk was annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia and administered as a part of the newly formed Bialystok Department In 1807 as a result of the Treaties of Tilsit Bransk was annexed to the Russian Empire and administered at first as a part of Belostok Oblast and from 1842 on as a part of Grodno Governorate The town was reintegrated with Poland after the country regained independence following World War I in 1918 World War II Edit On September 1 1939 Germany attacked Poland and started World War II Within days of the war s beginning Bransk suffered German bombardment On September 17 1939 the Soviet Union attacked Poland from the east and in partnership with Nazi Germany partitioned Poland under the terms of the Nazi Soviet Non Aggression Pact of August 23 Bransk along with all areas of Poland east of the Bug River was then occupied by the Soviet Union All Polish and Jewish businesses of substance were confiscated by the Communist State Several Poles from Bransk were murdered by the Russians in the large Katyn massacre in 1940 2 The Soviets remained in control of Bransk until June 1941 when the Germans invaded their erstwhile Soviet allies The German Army occupied the town and ordered the Jewish community to build a ghetto surrounded by barbed wire to which the Jewish population some 65 of the town was confined On November 8 1942 the Jews of Bransk were ordered to report to the town center forced to march to the nearby town of Bielsk and then transported by train to Treblinka Within weeks the vast majority were murdered by gassing at the Treblinka extermination camp 3 4 Several local Jews were hidden and rescued by Poles including the local parish priest in Bransk and nearby villages 5 Some hiding places in nearby villages were discovered by the Germans who then murdered captured Jews 6 Their Polish rescuers were either also murdered or managed to hide from the Germans until the end of the German occupation 6 On August 1 1944 the town was captured by Soviet forces On August 4 1944 the Russians arrested 12 officers of the Polish underground Home Army in Bransk after they were deceitfully gathered for a supposed formal meeting with the command of the Soviet 65th Army 7 The town was soon restored to Poland Demographics EditPopulation Edit According to the 1921 census the village was inhabited by 3 739 people among whom 1 474 were Roman Catholic 100 Orthodox and 2 165 Mosaic At the same time 1 530 inhabitants declared Polish nationality 32 Belarusian 2 165 Jewish and 12 Russian There were 493 residential buildings in the village 8 Detailed data as of 30 June 2021 1 Total Women MenUnit Number Number Number Population 3 667 100 1 808 49 3 1 859 50 7Population Density persons km 113 1 55 8 57 3Municipal government EditIt is the seat of Gmina Bransk but is not part of Gmina Bransk Executive branch Edit The chief executive of the government is the Mayor Polish Burmistrz Legislative branch Edit The legislative portion of the government is the Council Polish Rada composed of the President Polish Przewodniczscy the Vice President Polish Wiceprzewodniczscy and thirteen councilors Neighbouring political subdivisions Edit Bransk is bordered by Gminy Rudka and Bransk Transport EditRoads and highways Edit Bransk is at the intersection of a National Road and a Voivodeship Road National Road DK 66 Zambrow Bransk Bielsk Podlaski Kleszczele Czeremcha Polowce Border Crossing Belarus Voivodeship Road DW 681 Roszki Wodzki Lapy Bransk CiechanowiecStreets Edit The major streets Polish Ulica in Bransk are Rynek Armii Krajowej National Road DK 66 Bielska Binduga Bockowska Blonie Jagiellonska Jana Pawla II Voivodeship Road DW 681 Kapicy Milewskiego Kasztanowa Klonowa Konopnickiej Koscielna Kosciuszki Voivodeship Road DW 681 Mickiewicza Pilsudskiego Poniatowskiego Senatorska Sienkiewicza Sklodowskiej Curie Szkolna Slowackiego Witosa Wyszynskiego SciegiennegoPublic transport Edit Bus service Edit Regular bus service is provided by Panstwowa Komunikacja Samochodowa State Car Communication PKS via PKS Bielsk Podlaskie PKS Bialystok and PKS Siemiatycze Rail service Edit The closest passenger train service is provided by Polskie Koleje Panstwowe Polish State Railways PKP SA from the following stations Szepietowo express and local service to Warsaw and Bialystok 28 kilometres 17 4 mi northwest Bielsk Podlaski express and local service to Siedlce and Bialystok 25 kilometres 15 5 mi eastEconomy EditThe land use is as follows 9 Agricultural use 66 Forest land 27 City 2 34 Major business Edit Financial Banking Bank Spoldzielczy w Bransku ul Kosciuszki 2A 17 120 Bransk Poland Manufacturing Plastics Wald Gold ul M Konopnickiej 20 17 120 Bransk PolandLocal attractions EditPlaces of worship Edit Churches chapels and shrines in Bransk examples Church of the Assumption Saint Simeon church Blessed Virgin Mary shrine Saint Scholastica cemetery chapel Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Roman Catholic The parish is serving Bransk Bronka Brzeznica Glinnik Jarmarkowszczyzna Kalnica Kiersnowek Majerowizna Oleksin Otapy Patoki Poplawy Swirydy Zaluskie Koronne Zaluskie Koscielne 10 It is part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Drohiczyn St Simeon Stylites Polish Orthodox It is a mission church of the Church of the Apostles St Peter and Paul in Malesze 11 part of the Polish Orthodox Diocese of Warsaw Bielsk Nearby attractions EditSanktuarium Matki Bozej Pojedniania w Hodyszewie Our Lady of Hodyszewo Sanctuary in Hodyzewo 12 kilometres 7 5 mi northwest Ossolinski Palace in Rudka 7 kilometres 4 3 mi westNotable people EditJan Klemens Branicki Polish nobleman Cezary Kosinski Polish actor Ignatius Kapitsa Milewski archivist and author Shimon Shkop Jewish scholar and rabbi 1906 1920 Moshe Rosen Nezer HaKodesh Jewish scholar and rabbi 1870 1957 Zofia Drzewiecka Recipient of the Righteous among the Nations Medal Waclawa and Pawel Sobolewski posthumous recipients of the Righteous among the Nations Medal Antoni Sobolewski posthumous recipient of the Righteous among the Nations Medal Aleksander Sobolewski posthumous recipient of the Righteous among the Nations MedalMiscellanea EditThe Righteous among the Nations Medal has been granted to 14 current and former residents of Bransk by Yad Vashem 12 External links EditJewish cemetery in Bransk in Polish English Text Video tour of Bransk on YouTubeReferences Edit a b Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved 2022 06 02 Data for territorial unit 2003021 Janusz Bakunowicz Drzewka dla tych co zgineli w Katyniu Kurier Poranny in Polish Retrieved 7 November 2021 Eva Hoffman Shtetl The Life and Death of a Small Town and the World of Polish Jews Houghton Mifflin 1997 Zbigniew Romaniuk The Story of Two Shtetls Bransk and Ejszyszki Part One The Polish Educational Foundation in North America 1998 Datner Szymon 1968 Las sprawiedliwych in Polish Warszawa Ksiazka i Wiedza pp 55 58 59 62 a b Rejestr faktow represji na obywatelach polskich za pomoc ludnosci zydowskiej w okresie II wojny swiatowej in Polish Warszawa IPN 2014 pp 363 370 371 378 Zwolski Marcin 2005 Deportacje internowanych Polakow z wojewodztwa bialostockiego 1944 1945 Pamiec i Sprawiedliwosc in Polish No 2 8 IPN pp 91 92 ISSN 1427 7476 Skorowidz miejscowosci Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej opracowany na podstawie wynikow pierwszego powszechnego spisu ludnosci z dn 30 wrzesnia 1921 r i innych zrodel urzedowych t T 5 wojewodztwo bialostockie 1924 s 14 Strona Urzedu Miasta Bransk Bransk Government Website in Polish 2008 06 25 Parafia Wniebowziecia Nmp w Bransku in Polish 2008 08 16 Archived from the original on October 22 2006 Dekanat Bielsk Podlaski in Polish 2008 08 16 Archived from the original on 2002 10 28 Another Pole added to Righteous among the Nations Polskie Radio 2008 06 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bransk amp oldid 1135720013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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