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Ciechanów

Ciechanów [t͡ɕeˈxanuf] is a city in north-central Poland. From 1975 to 1998, it was the capital of the Ciechanów Voivodeship. Since 1999, it has been situated in the Masovian Voivodeship. As of December 2021, it has a population of 43,495.[1]

Ciechanów
Ciechanów Castle
Ciechanów
Coordinates: 52°52′N 20°38′E / 52.867°N 20.633°E / 52.867; 20.633
Country Poland
VoivodeshipMasovian
CountyCiechanów
GminaCiechanów (urban gmina)
First mentioned1065
City rights1400
Government
 • City mayorKrzysztof Kosiński (PSL)
Area
 • Total32.51 km2 (12.55 sq mi)
Highest elevation
151 m (495 ft)
Lowest elevation
116 m (381 ft)
Population
 (31 December 2021[1])
 • Total43,495
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
06-400 to 06-413
Area code+48 023
Car platesWCI
National roads
Voivodeship roads
Websitewww.umciechanow.pl

History edit

The settlement is first mentioned in a 1065 document by Bolesław II the Bold handing the land over to the church. The medieval gord in Ciechanów numbered approximately 3,000 armed men,[2] and together with the region of Mazovia, it became part of the emerging Polish state in the late 10th century.

 
Castle tower

In 1254, Ciechanów is mentioned as the seat of a castellany (Rethiborius Castellanus de Techanow (Racibor, Kasztelan Ciechanowa)). In 1400 Janusz I of Czersk granted Ciechanów town privileges.[3][4] The area eventually become a separate duchy with Casimir I of Warsaw using the title "dominus et heres lub dominus et princeps Ciechanoviensis." In the Middle Ages, the defensive gord of Ciechanów protected northern Mazovia from raids of Lithuanians, Yotvingians, Old Prussians and later, the Teutonic Knights. It is not known when it was granted a town charter. This must have happened before 1475, as a document from that year, issued by Duke Janusz II of Warsaw, states that Ciechanów has a Chełmno town charter.

In the period between the 14th and 16th centuries, Ciechanów prospered with the population reaching 5,000. In the late 14th century, Siemowit III, Duke of Masovia, began construction of a castle, while his son Janusz I of Warsaw invited the Augustinians, who in the mid-15th century began construction of a church and an abbey. The Augustinian Friars were brought to Ciechanów in 1358 by Duke Siemowit III. They experienced the most turbulent times during the Reformation. From the 17th century, the Augustinians’ pastoral presence was growing in the towns. The monastery – characterised by mild observance – was usually inhabited by four to seven monks.[5]

In 1526, together with all Mazovia, Ciechanów was incorporated directly to the Kingdom of Poland. It was a royal city of Poland, the seat of the Land of Ciechanów, a separate administrative unit within the Masovian Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province.

The town was handed over to Bona Sforza, as her dowry. Ciechanów prospered until the Swedish invasion of Poland (1655–1660), when the town was burned and ransacked.

 
Ciechanów coat of arms on the facade of the town hall

After the second partition of Poland (1793), Ciechanów briefly became seat of a newly created voivodeship. In 1795, it was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia, and reduced to the status of a provincial town in Przasnysz county. In 1806, during the Napoleonic Wars, Ciechanów was ransacked and destroyed. In 1807 it became part of the short-lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw. Since 1815, the town belonged to Russian-controlled Congress Poland. Its residents actively supported Polish rebellions. As part of anti-Polish repressions, the Augustinian monastery was dissolved in 1864.[5] In the late 19th century, Ciechanów emerged as a local trade and industry center. In 1864, a brewery was opened, in 1867 it became seat of a county, in 1877 a rail station of the Vistula River Railroad was completed, and in 1882 a sugar refinery was opened. The period of prosperity was short, as during World War I, Ciechanów was almost completely destroyed. Following World War I, in 1918, Poland regained independence and control of the town.

During the Polish–Soviet War, in 1920, the town was briefly occupied by the Soviet Russians, who resorted to rape and looting of stores, houses and schools.[6] The one remaining Catholic priest was harassed by the occupiers, however, thanks to the intercession of the local population, he avoided deportation or death.[7] 150 Polish soldiers were hid from the Russians by the local Jews in the synagogue.[8] Some local socialists and intelligentsia joined the occupation structures for diversionary purposes, and when the Polish army reached the city again on August 15, 1920, they immediately disarmed several hundred Soviets.[9]

In the Second Polish Republic, Ciechanów remained seat of a county in Warsaw Voivodeship. In 1938, its population was 15,000, and the town was a military garrison, home to the 11th Uhlan Regiment of Marshall Edward Smigly-Rydz.

World War II edit

 
Memorial to Home Army soldiers murdered by the Germans in the castle in 1942

Ciechanów was captured by the Wehrmacht on the night of September 3/4, 1939. The town was annexed by Nazi Germany and was known as Zichenau in German. It was the capital of Regierungsbezirk Zichenau, a new subdivision of the Province of East Prussia. The vast majority of the Polish and Jewish population was seen as racially inferior and Germany planned its eventual annihilation.[10] The Einsatzgruppe V entered the city on September 10, 1939, and carried out first mass arrests among local Polish intelligentsia.[11] Residents were imprisoned in Gestapo jails established in municipal buildings and the Town Hall.[11] The Germans carried out mass searches of Polish and Jewish homes, offices and organizations, as well as synagogues, which were desecrated and looted.[12] Several hundred Poles were transported from the jail in Ciechanów and murdered in large massacres in the nearby village of Ościsłowo as part of Intelligenzaktion.[13] Local disabled people were also murdered in Ościsłowo on February 20, 1940.[14] Local teachers were arrested in October and November 1939, and deported to the Soldau concentration camp, where they were murdered in December 1939, and some were also murdered in the Mauthausen concentration camp.[15]

Poles were also subjected to expulsions. Around 600 people were expelled in December 1939, further expulsions were carried out in subsequent years.[16] In Ciechanów, the Germans also organized a transit camp for Poles deported for forced labor to the areas of Klaipeda, Tilsit (Sovetsk) and Königsberg (Kaliningrad),[17] and a forced labor "education" camp.[18]

Before World War II, Ciechanów was home to a large Jewish community of 1,800, but during the Nazi German occupation, in November 1942, the majority of the Jewish community were transported to the Red Forest (Czerwony Bór) northeast of town and murdered in a mass shooting.[19] During the war many Polish Jews and resistance fighters were executed by the Germans in the castle.

On January 17, 1945, Ciechanów was captured from Nazi Germany by the Red Army, and was restored to Poland after the war.

Demographics edit

Detailed data as of 31 December 2021:[1]

Description All Women Men
Unit person percentage person percentage person percentage
Population 43495 100 22757 52.3% 20738 47.7%
Population density 1337.9 700.0 637.9

Number of inhabitants by year edit

Year Population Source
1995 46813 [1]
2000 46564  
2005 45947  
2010 45548  
2015 44506  
2020 43883  
2021 43495  

Monuments and sights edit

  • Castle of the Mazovian Dukes from the 14th century, alongside the Łydynia river
  • Farska Hill – fortified settlement from the 7th century with a Neo-Gothic belfry from the 19th century
  • Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, Late Gothic building from the 16th century
  • Monastery Augustinian Church from the 16th and 18th centuries
  • City Hall from the 19th century
  • Muzeum Szlachty Mazowieckiej (Museum of Mazovian Nobility)
  • Parish cemetery which has functioned since 1828
  • Krzywa Hala, central building of the housing estate Bloki, built in 1942-1943 during the German Occupation of Poland
  • Park Nauki Torus ("Torus Science Park") with the hyperboloid water tower, built in 1972

Economy edit

 
Beer from the local brewery
 
Pułtuska Hall

The Browar Ciechan brewery is located in the town.

Education edit

  • Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Zawodowa
  • Wyższa Szkoła Biznesu i Zarządzania

Transport edit

Through the town are leading two national roads, numbered 50 and 60; and three voivodship roads, numbered 615, 616, 617. Just 25 km away to the West there is the national road number 7, a part of the E77 European route.

The Ciechanów railway station is on the Warsaw - Gdańsk railway, however the Warsaw - Gdańsk - Gdynia express train, colloquially referred as 'Pendolino', does not stop here. Other trains offer connections to Warsaw, Olsztyn, Gdańsk, Gdynia, Kołobrzeg, Kraków and Łódź.

Sports edit

Ciechanów is home to handball club Jurand Ciechanów [pl], which competes in the I liga (Polish second tier), and to football club MKS Ciechanów [pl], which competes in the lower divisions.

Notable people edit

International relations edit

Twin towns – Sister cities edit

Ciechanów is twinned with:[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved July 13, 2022. Data for territorial unit 1402011.
  2. ^ Bogusław Gierlach, Zapiski Ciechanowskie, vol. II p. 9-12, MOBN Ciechanów 1977; and Studia nad archeologią średniowiecznego Mazowsza, Warsaw 1975, p. 24)
  3. ^ W. Górczyk, Ciechanów- Lokacja i Geneza herbu, In Tempore, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika,s.3. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 23, 2012. Retrieved May 12, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Górczyk, Wojciech Jerzy. "Lokacja Ciechanowa". Notatki Płockie.Towarzystwo Naukowe Płockie.
  5. ^ a b Górczyk, Wojciech Jerzy. "Augustianie w Ciechanowie. Zarys dziejów konwentu do kasaty w 1864 r." Notatki Płockie.
  6. ^ Szczepański, Janusz (2020). "Okupacja sowiecka Mazowsza Północnego podczas najazdu 1920 r.". Niepodległość i Pamięć (in Polish). XXVII (2 (70)). Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie: 16. ISSN 1427-1443.
  7. ^ Szczepański, p. 22
  8. ^ Szczepański, p. 43
  9. ^ Szczepański, pp. 29, 38
  10. ^ Jan Grabowski; Zbigniew R. Grabowski (2004). Germans in the Eyes of the Gestapo: The Ciechanów District, 1939–1945. Cambridge University Press: Contemporary European History, No 13. pp. 21–43; page 25: "The majority of the Poles and Jews of the Regierungsbezirk Zichenau were perceived by the Nazi authorities as undesirable elements, and were to be resettled and, eventually, annihilated."
  11. ^ a b Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. p. 112.
  12. ^ Wardzyńska (2009), p. 122
  13. ^ Wardzyńska (2009), p. 226
  14. ^ Wardzyńska (2009), p. 236
  15. ^ Wardzyńska (2009), p. 228, 231
  16. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2017). Wysiedlenia ludności polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich włączonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939-1945 (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. pp. 384, 392. ISBN 978-83-8098-174-4.
  17. ^ Wardzyńska (2017), p. 405
  18. ^ "Arbeitserziehungslager Zichenau". Bundesarchiv.de (in German). Retrieved September 7, 2021.
  19. ^ D.P. (February 13, 2007). "Międzynarodowy Dzień Ofiar Holokaustu: Zagłada ciechanowskich Żydów". Historia. Tygodnik Ciechanowski. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  20. ^ a b c d e "Ciechanów Twin towns". Urząd Miasta Ciechanów. Archived from the original on July 29, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  21. ^ . Ville de Meudon. Archived from the original on May 7, 2013. Retrieved September 11, 2016.

External links edit

  • Wojciech Górczyk, Ciechanów – zarys dziejów do XV w., Kultura i Historia, Uniwersytet Marii Curie Skłodowskiej w lublinie,19/2011, ISSN 1642-9826
  • Architecture of Ciechanow (only in Polish)
  • Czas Ciechanowa (Local weekly magazine, local press)
  • Jewish Community in Ciechanów on Virtual Shtetl
  • Ciechanów city forum
  • Ciechanow website www.ciechanowonline.pl - all you need to know about Ciechanow, including a contemporary gallery of the city November 23, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • Website of Ciechanow City www.eciechanow.pl – City news, history of Ciechanow, information where you can eat, sleep and dance
  • Castle of the Dukes of Mazovia in Ciechanów (en)

ciechanów, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, ɕeˈxanuf, city, north, central, poland, from, 1975, 1998, capital, voivodeship, since, 1999, been, situated, masovian, voivodeship, december, 2021, population, castleflagcoat, armscoordinates, 633coun. For other places with the same name see Ciechanow disambiguation Ciechanow t ɕeˈxanuf is a city in north central Poland From 1975 to 1998 it was the capital of the Ciechanow Voivodeship Since 1999 it has been situated in the Masovian Voivodeship As of December 2021 it has a population of 43 495 1 CiechanowCiechanow CastleFlagCoat of armsCiechanowCoordinates 52 52 N 20 38 E 52 867 N 20 633 E 52 867 20 633Country PolandVoivodeshipMasovianCountyCiechanowGminaCiechanow urban gmina First mentioned1065City rights1400Government City mayorKrzysztof Kosinski PSL Area Total32 51 km2 12 55 sq mi Highest elevation151 m 495 ft Lowest elevation116 m 381 ft Population 31 December 2021 1 Total43 495 Density1 300 km2 3 500 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code06 400 to 06 413Area code 48 023Car platesWCINational roadsVoivodeship roadsWebsitewww umciechanow pl Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 2 Demographics 2 1 Number of inhabitants by year 3 Monuments and sights 4 Economy 5 Education 6 Transport 7 Sports 8 Notable people 9 International relations 9 1 Twin towns Sister cities 10 References 11 External linksHistory editThe settlement is first mentioned in a 1065 document by Boleslaw II the Bold handing the land over to the church The medieval gord in Ciechanow numbered approximately 3 000 armed men 2 and together with the region of Mazovia it became part of the emerging Polish state in the late 10th century nbsp Castle tower In 1254 Ciechanow is mentioned as the seat of a castellany Rethiborius Castellanus de Techanow Racibor Kasztelan Ciechanowa In 1400 Janusz I of Czersk granted Ciechanow town privileges 3 4 The area eventually become a separate duchy with Casimir I of Warsaw using the title dominus et heres lub dominus et princeps Ciechanoviensis In the Middle Ages the defensive gord of Ciechanow protected northern Mazovia from raids of Lithuanians Yotvingians Old Prussians and later the Teutonic Knights It is not known when it was granted a town charter This must have happened before 1475 as a document from that year issued by Duke Janusz II of Warsaw states that Ciechanow has a Chelmno town charter In the period between the 14th and 16th centuries Ciechanow prospered with the population reaching 5 000 In the late 14th century Siemowit III Duke of Masovia began construction of a castle while his son Janusz I of Warsaw invited the Augustinians who in the mid 15th century began construction of a church and an abbey The Augustinian Friars were brought to Ciechanow in 1358 by Duke Siemowit III They experienced the most turbulent times during the Reformation From the 17th century the Augustinians pastoral presence was growing in the towns The monastery characterised by mild observance was usually inhabited by four to seven monks 5 In 1526 together with all Mazovia Ciechanow was incorporated directly to the Kingdom of Poland It was a royal city of Poland the seat of the Land of Ciechanow a separate administrative unit within the Masovian Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province The town was handed over to Bona Sforza as her dowry Ciechanow prospered until the Swedish invasion of Poland 1655 1660 when the town was burned and ransacked nbsp Ciechanow coat of arms on the facade of the town hall After the second partition of Poland 1793 Ciechanow briefly became seat of a newly created voivodeship In 1795 it was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia and reduced to the status of a provincial town in Przasnysz county In 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars Ciechanow was ransacked and destroyed In 1807 it became part of the short lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw Since 1815 the town belonged to Russian controlled Congress Poland Its residents actively supported Polish rebellions As part of anti Polish repressions the Augustinian monastery was dissolved in 1864 5 In the late 19th century Ciechanow emerged as a local trade and industry center In 1864 a brewery was opened in 1867 it became seat of a county in 1877 a rail station of the Vistula River Railroad was completed and in 1882 a sugar refinery was opened The period of prosperity was short as during World War I Ciechanow was almost completely destroyed Following World War I in 1918 Poland regained independence and control of the town During the Polish Soviet War in 1920 the town was briefly occupied by the Soviet Russians who resorted to rape and looting of stores houses and schools 6 The one remaining Catholic priest was harassed by the occupiers however thanks to the intercession of the local population he avoided deportation or death 7 150 Polish soldiers were hid from the Russians by the local Jews in the synagogue 8 Some local socialists and intelligentsia joined the occupation structures for diversionary purposes and when the Polish army reached the city again on August 15 1920 they immediately disarmed several hundred Soviets 9 In the Second Polish Republic Ciechanow remained seat of a county in Warsaw Voivodeship In 1938 its population was 15 000 and the town was a military garrison home to the 11th Uhlan Regiment of Marshall Edward Smigly Rydz World War II edit nbsp Memorial to Home Army soldiers murdered by the Germans in the castle in 1942 Ciechanow was captured by the Wehrmacht on the night of September 3 4 1939 The town was annexed by Nazi Germany and was known as Zichenau in German It was the capital of Regierungsbezirk Zichenau a new subdivision of the Province of East Prussia The vast majority of the Polish and Jewish population was seen as racially inferior and Germany planned its eventual annihilation 10 The Einsatzgruppe V entered the city on September 10 1939 and carried out first mass arrests among local Polish intelligentsia 11 Residents were imprisoned in Gestapo jails established in municipal buildings and the Town Hall 11 The Germans carried out mass searches of Polish and Jewish homes offices and organizations as well as synagogues which were desecrated and looted 12 Several hundred Poles were transported from the jail in Ciechanow and murdered in large massacres in the nearby village of Oscislowo as part of Intelligenzaktion 13 Local disabled people were also murdered in Oscislowo on February 20 1940 14 Local teachers were arrested in October and November 1939 and deported to the Soldau concentration camp where they were murdered in December 1939 and some were also murdered in the Mauthausen concentration camp 15 Poles were also subjected to expulsions Around 600 people were expelled in December 1939 further expulsions were carried out in subsequent years 16 In Ciechanow the Germans also organized a transit camp for Poles deported for forced labor to the areas of Klaipeda Tilsit Sovetsk and Konigsberg Kaliningrad 17 and a forced labor education camp 18 Before World War II Ciechanow was home to a large Jewish community of 1 800 but during the Nazi German occupation in November 1942 the majority of the Jewish community were transported to the Red Forest Czerwony Bor northeast of town and murdered in a mass shooting 19 During the war many Polish Jews and resistance fighters were executed by the Germans in the castle On January 17 1945 Ciechanow was captured from Nazi Germany by the Red Army and was restored to Poland after the war Demographics editDetailed data as of 31 December 2021 1 Description All Women Men Unit person percentage person percentage person percentage Population 43495 100 22757 52 3 20738 47 7 Population density 1337 9 700 0 637 9 Number of inhabitants by year edit Year Population Source 1995 46813 1 2000 46564 nbsp 2005 45947 nbsp 2010 45548 nbsp 2015 44506 nbsp 2020 43883 nbsp 2021 43495 nbsp Monuments and sights editCastle of the Mazovian Dukes from the 14th century alongside the Lydynia river Farska Hill fortified settlement from the 7th century with a Neo Gothic belfry from the 19th century Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary Late Gothic building from the 16th century Monastery Augustinian Church from the 16th and 18th centuries City Hall from the 19th century Muzeum Szlachty Mazowieckiej Museum of Mazovian Nobility Parish cemetery which has functioned since 1828 Krzywa Hala central building of the housing estate Bloki built in 1942 1943 during the German Occupation of Poland Park Nauki Torus Torus Science Park with the hyperboloid water tower built in 1972 nbsp Ciechanow Castle nbsp Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary nbsp Augustinian Church nbsp Town Hall nbsp Belfry on Farska Gora nbsp Museum of Mazovian Nobility nbsp Krzywa Hala nbsp Torus Science ParkEconomy edit nbsp Beer from the local brewery nbsp Pultuska Hall The Browar Ciechan brewery is located in the town Education editPanstwowa Wyzsza Szkola Zawodowa Wyzsza Szkola Biznesu i ZarzadzaniaTransport editThrough the town are leading two national roads numbered 50 and 60 and three voivodship roads numbered 615 616 617 Just 25 km away to the West there is the national road number 7 a part of the E77 European route The Ciechanow railway station is on the Warsaw Gdansk railway however the Warsaw Gdansk Gdynia express train colloquially referred as Pendolino does not stop here Other trains offer connections to Warsaw Olsztyn Gdansk Gdynia Kolobrzeg Krakow and Lodz Sports editCiechanow is home to handball club Jurand Ciechanow pl which competes in the I liga Polish second tier and to football club MKS Ciechanow pl which competes in the lower divisions Notable people editJan Kazimierz Krasinski 1607 1669 Polish official and nobleman royal secretary of Polish King Sigismund III Vasa Ludwik Krasinski 1609 1644 Polish royal courtier and official Zygmunt Krasinski 1812 1859 Polish poet considered one of Poland s Three Bards Maria Konopnicka 1842 1910 Polish poet and novelist Aleksander Swietochowski 1849 1938 Polish writer educator and philosopher Stefan Zeromski 1864 1925 Polish novelist and dramatist Ignacy Moscicki 1867 1946 Polish chemist politician and President of Poland Roza Robota 1921 1945 Polish Jewish resistance member during World War II Mieczyslaw Jagielski 1924 1997 Polish politician and economist Zbigniew Siemiatkowski born 1957 Polish politician Dorota Rabczewska Doda born 1984 Polish singer songwriter Kasia Struss born 1987 Polish model Quebonafide born 1991 Polish rapper Adam Morawski born 1994 Polish handball player member of the Polish national handball team Ania Ahlborn Polish American novelist Maciej Dobrzynski born 2007 Polish activistInternational relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Twin towns Sister cities edit Ciechanow is twinned with 20 nbsp Meudon France 20 21 nbsp Haldensleben Germany 20 nbsp Khmelnytskyi Ukraine 20 nbsp Brezno Slovakia 20 References edit a b c d Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved July 13 2022 Data for territorial unit 1402011 Boguslaw Gierlach Zapiski Ciechanowskie vol II p 9 12 MOBN Ciechanow 1977 and Studia nad archeologia sredniowiecznego Mazowsza Warsaw 1975 p 24 W Gorczyk Ciechanow Lokacja i Geneza herbu In Tempore Uniwersytet Mikolaja Kopernika s 3 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 23 2012 Retrieved May 12 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Gorczyk Wojciech Jerzy Lokacja Ciechanowa Notatki Plockie Towarzystwo Naukowe Plockie a b Gorczyk Wojciech Jerzy Augustianie w Ciechanowie Zarys dziejow konwentu do kasaty w 1864 r Notatki Plockie Szczepanski Janusz 2020 Okupacja sowiecka Mazowsza Polnocnego podczas najazdu 1920 r Niepodleglosc i Pamiec in Polish XXVII 2 70 Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie 16 ISSN 1427 1443 Szczepanski p 22 Szczepanski p 43 Szczepanski pp 29 38 Jan Grabowski Zbigniew R Grabowski 2004 Germans in the Eyes of the Gestapo The Ciechanow District 1939 1945 Cambridge University Press Contemporary European History No 13 pp 21 43 page 25 The majority of the Poles and Jews of the Regierungsbezirk Zichenau were perceived by the Nazi authorities as undesirable elements and were to be resettled and eventually annihilated a b Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN p 112 Wardzynska 2009 p 122 Wardzynska 2009 p 226 Wardzynska 2009 p 236 Wardzynska 2009 p 228 231 Wardzynska Maria 2017 Wysiedlenia ludnosci polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich wlaczonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939 1945 in Polish Warszawa IPN pp 384 392 ISBN 978 83 8098 174 4 Wardzynska 2017 p 405 Arbeitserziehungslager Zichenau Bundesarchiv de in German Retrieved September 7 2021 D P February 13 2007 Miedzynarodowy Dzien Ofiar Holokaustu Zaglada ciechanowskich Zydow Historia Tygodnik Ciechanowski Retrieved June 15 2013 a b c d e Ciechanow Twin towns Urzad Miasta Ciechanow Archived from the original on July 29 2013 Retrieved July 29 2013 Ville de Meudon Villes jumelles Ville de Meudon Archived from the original on May 7 2013 Retrieved September 11 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ciechanow Wojciech Gorczyk Ciechanow zarys dziejow do XV w Kultura i Historia Uniwersytet Marii Curie Sklodowskiej w lublinie 19 2011 ISSN 1642 9826 Official homepage Architecture of Ciechanow only in Polish Czas Ciechanowa Local weekly magazine local press Jewish Community in Ciechanow on Virtual Shtetl Ciechanow city forum Ciechanow website www ciechanowonline pl all you need to know about Ciechanow including a contemporary gallery of the city Archived November 23 2020 at the Wayback Machine Site dedicated to preserving the memory of Ciechanow s Jewish community including an English translation of the memorial book Website of Ciechanow City www eciechanow pl City news history of Ciechanow information where you can eat sleep and dance Castle of the Dukes of Mazovia in Ciechanow en Museum of the Mazovian Nobility en Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ciechanow amp oldid 1220754282, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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