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History of Wrocław

Historical affiliations

Silesians until 985
Duchy of Poland 985–1025
Kingdom of Poland 1025–1038
Duchy of Bohemia 1038–1054
Kingdom of Poland 1054–1320
Duchy of Silesia 1320–1348
 Kingdom of Bohemia 1348–1469
Kingdom of Hungary 1469–1490
 Kingdom of Bohemia 1490–1526
Habsburg monarchy 1526–1742
Kingdom of Prussia 1742–1871
German Empire 1871–1918
Weimar Germany 1918–1933
 Nazi Germany 1933–1945
People's Republic of Poland 1945–1989
 Republic of Poland 1989–present

Wrocław (German: Breslau) has long been the largest and culturally dominant city in Silesia, and is today the capital of Poland's Lower Silesian Voivodeship.

The history of Wrocław starts at a crossroads in Lower Silesia. It was one of the centres of the Duchy and then Kingdom of Poland, and briefly, in the first half of the 13th century, the centre of half of the divided Kingdom of Poland. German settlers arrived in increasing numbers after the first Mongol invasion of Poland in 1241, and Wrocław eventually became part of the Holy Roman Empire after the extinction of local Polish dukes in 1335. It was ruled by Hungary between 1469 and 1490, and after the War of Austrian Succession in the 18th century, the city and region were annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia, and in 1871 became part of the German Empire. In the interwar period and during World War II, the city witnessed discrimination and persecution of its Polish and Jewish inhabitants, including deportations to forced labour and Nazi concentration camps, and in addition, tens of thousands of forced labourers and prisoners of war of various nationalities were imprisoned in multiple German labour camps and prisons throughout the city. After World War II, Wrocław and most of Silesia were transferred to Poland and the German-speaking majority of its population was expelled to Germany.

Origin edit

The city of Wrocław originated as a stronghold situated at the intersection of two long-existing trading routes, the Via Regia and the Amber Road. The city was founded in the 10th century, possibly by a local duke Wrocisław, who the city might also bear its name after. At the time the city was limited to the district of Ostrów Tumski (the Cathedral Island)[1] and was first mentioned by Thietmar of Merseburg in 1000 as "Wrotizlava".[2]

Poland edit

 
Monument to King Bolesław I the Brave in Wrocław

In 985 Duke Mieszko I of Poland of the Piast dynasty conquered Silesia and Wrocław. In 1000 Mieszko's son, Duke and future King Bolesław I of Poland, in the then capital of Poland, Gniezno, established the Bishopric of Wrocław, along with the bishoprics of Kraków and Kołobrzeg and the Archbishopric of Gniezno, as one of the oldest bishoprics of Poland and the first bishopric of Silesia. It was a suffragan of the Archbishopric of Gniezno, the See independent of the German Archbishopric of Magdeburg, which had tried to lay claim to jurisdiction over the Polish church. The city quickly became a commercial centre and expanded rapidly to the neighbouring Wyspa Piaskowa (Sand Island), and then to the left bank of the Odra river. Hugo Weczerka writes that around 1000 the town had approximately 1000 inhabitants.[3] and after an uprising in 1037/38 against the church and probably also against the bishop and the representatives of the Polish king, who were expelled.[4] In 1038 Bohemia captured the city and owned her until 1054 when Poland regained control. In 1138 it became the capital of the Piast-ruled Duchy of Silesia, which slowly detached from Poland.[4] By 1139 two more settlements were built. One belonged to Governor Piotr Włostowic (a.k.a. Piotr Włast Dunin; ca. 1080–1153) and was situated near his residence on the Olbina by the St. Vincent's Benedictine Abbey. The other settlement was founded on the left bank of the Oder River, near the present seat of the university. It was located on the Via Regia that lead from Leipzig and Legnica) and followed through Opole, and Kraków to Kievan Rus'. Polish, Bohemian, Jewish, Walloon[5] and German communities[6] existed in the city.

 
Romanesque St. Giles Church, the oldest unchanged building in Wrocław, built in the early 13th century in the Ostrów Tumski district

In the first half of the 13th-century duke Henry I the Bearded of the Silesian line of the Piast dynasty, managed to reunite much of the divided Polish kingdom. He became the duke of Kraków (Polonia Minor) in 1232, which gave him the title of the senior duke of Poland (see Testament of Bolesław III Krzywousty). Henry started striving for the Polish crown. His activity in this field was continued by his son and successor Henry II the Pious whose work towards this goal was halted by his sudden death in 1241 (Battle of Legnica).[7] Polish territories acquired by the Silesian dukes in this period are called "The monarchy of the Silesian Henries".[8] Wrocław was the centre of the divided Kingdom of Poland.

The city was devastated in 1241 during the first Mongol invasion of Poland. The inhabitants burned down their own city to force the Mongols to a quick withdrawal. The invasion, according to Norman Davies, led German historiography to portray the Mongol attack as an event which eradicated the Polish community. However, in light of historical research this is doubtful, as many Polish settlements remained, even in the 14th century, especially on the right bank of the Oder and Polish names such as Baran or Cebula appear including among Wrocław's ruling elite.[9]

Burial sites of 13th-century Polish monarchs in Wrocław

Georg Thum, Maciej Lagiewski, Halina Okolska and Piotr Oszczanowski write that the decimated population was replenished by many Germans.[10][11] A different thesis is presented by Norman Davies who writes that it is wrong to portray people of that time as "Germans" as their identities were those of Saxons and Bavarians, while historian Norbert Conrads argues that a Polish identity didn't exist either, a view shared by Czech author František R. Kraus.[12][need quotation to verify] While Germanisation started, Norman Davies writes that "Vretslav was a multi-ethnic city in the Middle Ages. Its ethnic composition moved in an endless state of flux, changing with each political and cultural ebb and flow to which it was exposed".[13] German author Georg Thum states that Breslau, the German name of the city, appeared for the first time in written records, and the city council from the beginning used only the Latin and German.[10]

In 1245, in Wrocław, Franciscan friar Benedict of Poland, considered one of the first Polish explorers, joined Italian diplomat Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, on his journey to the seat of the Mongol Khan near Karakorum, the capital of the Mongol Empire.[14] It was the first such journey by Europeans, and they returned with the letter from Güyük Khan to Pope Innocent IV.[14] The new and rebuilt town adopted Magdeburg rights in 1262 and, at the end of the 13th century joined the Hanseatic League. The expanded town was around 60 hectares in size and the new Main Market Square (Rynek), which was covered with timber-framed houses, became the new centre of the town. The original foundation, Ostrów Tumski, was now the religious centre. With the ongoing Ostsiedlung the Polish Piast dynasty[15][disputed ] dukes remained in control of the region, however, their influence declined continuously as the self-administration rights of the city council increased. German historian Norbert Conrads writes that they adopted the German language and culture and became Germanized in the 13th century.[16] Norman Davies writes that German historiography has often tried to present that when the Fragmentation of Poland happened and Silsia was divided, they wanted to leave Poland and join the Holy Roman Empire, this theory however had been debunked. Wrocław – despite the beginnings of Germanization – remained in close union with the Polish church, and local Piasts remained active in Polish politics, while Polish was still used in the court as late as the 14th century. Rather, the Silesian Piasts had a carefully planned Germanization policy, who's aim wasn't necessarily to join the Holy Roman Empire. [17]

During much of the Middle Ages Wrocław was ruled by Dukes of the Piast dynasty. In 1335 the last Piast Duke of Breslau, Henry VI the Good died. As a result, the city passed to John of Luxembourg, who fought a war with Casimir the Great over Silesia.[18][19] John died, while fighting in France, and the war ended inconclusively.[20] The issue was closed only in 1372 between Charles IV of Luxembourg and Louis I of Hungary; and while the city lost political ties to the Polish state, it remained connected to Poland by religious links and the existence of Polish population within it.[21] Jan Długosz described the foreign rule over Breslau as unlawful and expressed hope that it would eventually return to Poland.[22]

 
Wrocław historic City Hall built in a typical 13th-14th century Brick Gothic style

Bishop of Breslau was known as the prince-bishop ever since Bishop Przecław of Pogorzela (1341–1376) bought the Duchy of Grodków from Duke Bolesław III the Generous and added it to the episcopal Duchy of Neisse, after which the Bishops of Breslau had the titles of Prince of Nysa and Dukes of Grottkau, taking precedence over the other Silesian rulers.

Holy Roman Empire and Hungary edit

In 1348, the city was incorporated with almost the entirety of Silesia into the Holy Roman Empire, and a Landeshauptmann (Provincial governor) was appointed to administrate the region. Between 1342 and 1344 two fires destroyed large parts of the city. In 1352 Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, visited the town. His successors Wenceslaus and Sigismund became involved in a long-lasting feud with the city and its magistrate, culminating in the revolt of the guilds in 1418 when local craftsmen killed seven councillors. In a tribunal two years later, when Sigismund was in town, 27 ringleaders were executed. He also called up for a Reichstag in the same year, which discussed the earlier happenings in the city.

In June 1466, in Breslau, Polish diplomat Jan Długosz held a meeting with a papal legate, starting a peace process between Poland and the Teutonic Order, which a few months later culminated in the signing of a peace treaty in Toruń that ended the Thirteen Years' War, the longest of Polish–Teutonic wars.[23]

 
The oldest printed text in Polish in the Statuta synodalia episcoporum Wratislaviensium, printed in Breslau by Kasper Elyan, 1475

When George of Poděbrady was elected as Silesia's overlord, the city opposed him since he was a Hussite and instead sided with his Catholic rival Matthias Corvinus.[24] After Breslau fought alongside Corvinus against George in 1466, the local classes rendered homage to the king on 31 May 1469 in the city, where the king also met the daughter of mayor Krebs, Barbara, whom he took as his mistress. In 1474 the city was besieged by combined Polish-Bohemian forces, however in November 1474 Kings Casimir IV of Poland, his son Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Matthias Corvinus of Hungary met in the nearby village of Groß Mochbern (present-day district of Wrocław) and in December 1474 a ceasefire was signed, according to which the city remained under Hungarian rule.[25] Matthias Corvinus incorporated the city with Silesia in his dominion, which he controlled until his death in 1490.[26] 1475 marks the beginning of movable type printing in the city and in Silesia, when Kasper Elyan [pl] opened his printing shop (Drukarnia Świętokrzyska). That same year he published the Statuta synodalia episcoporum Wratislaviensium [pl], which contains the first-ever text printed in Polish.[27] It was also the first ever printing in Silesia.[28] The first illustration of the city was published in the Nuremberg Chronicle in 1493. Documents of that time referred to the town by many variants of the name including Wratislaw, Bresslau and Presslau.

Habsburg Monarchy edit

The ideas of the Protestant Reformation reached Breslau already in 1518, and in 1519 the writings of Luther, Eck and the opening of the Leipzig Disputation by Mosellanus were published by local printer Adam Dyon. In 1523 the town council unanimously, appointed Johann Heß as the new pastor of St. Maria Magdalena and thus introduced the Reformation in Breslau. In 1524 the town council issued a decree that obliged all clerics to the Protestant sermon and in 1525 another decree banned a number of Catholic customs. Breslau had become dominated by Protestants although a Catholic minority remained. Norman Davies states that as a city it was located on the borderline between Polish and German parts of Silesia, writing that "Vretslav lay astride the dividing line"; it also hosted a Czech community.[29]

After the death of Louis II in the Battle of Mohács in 1526, the Habsburg monarchy of Austria inherited Silesia and the city of Breslau. In 1530 Ferdinand I awarded Breslau its current coat of arms. On 11 October 1609 German emperor Rudolf II granted the Letter of Majesty, which ensured the free exercise of church services for all Silesian Protestants. During Thirty Years' War the city suffered badly, was occupied by Saxon and Swedish troops and lost 18,000 of its 40,000 residents to plague.

The Counter-Reformation had started with Rudolf II and Martin Gerstmann, bishop of Breslau. One of his successors, bishop Charles of Austria, did not accept the letter of the majesty on his territory. At the same time, the emperor encouraged several Catholic orders to settle in Breslau. The Minorites came back in 1610, the Jesuits arrived in 1638, the Capuchins in 1669, the Franciscans in 1684 and the Ursulines in 1687. These orders undertook an unequalled amount of construction which shaped the appearance of the city until 1945. The Jesuits were the main representatives of the Counter-Reformation in Breslau and Silesia. Much more feared were the Liechtensteiner dragoons, which converted people by force and expelled those who refused. At the end of the Thirty Years' War, Breslau was only one of a few Silesian cities which stayed Protestant, and after the Treaty of Altranstädt of 1707 four churches were given back to the local Protestants.

During the Counter-Reformation, the intellectual life of the city, which was shaped by Protestantism and Humanism, flourished, as the Protestant bourgeoisie of the city lost its role as the patron of the arts to the Catholic orders. Breslau and Silesia, which possessed 6 of the 12 leading grammar schools in the Holy Roman Empire, became the centre of German Baroque literature. Poets such as Martin Opitz, Andreas Gryphius, Christian Hoffmann von Hoffmannswaldau, Daniel Casper von Lohenstein and Angelus Silesius formed the so-called First and Second Silesian school of poets which shaped the German literature of that time.

The dominance of the German population under the Habsburg rule in the city became more visible, while the Polish population diminished in numbers, although it did not disappear.[30] Only a few families from the upper and middle classes celebrated their Polish roots, despite having Polish ancestors, and while the Polish population was reinforced by migrants and merchants, many of them became Germanized.[30] Nevertheless, Poles continued to exist in the city, mostly living on the right bank of Oder river also known as "Polish side".[30] The Polish community was led by such priests as Stanislaw Bzowski or Michał Kusz, who fought for the continued existence of Polish schools in the city, and addressed their flock in Polish; Latin masses were interspersed with hymns and prayers in Polish.[30]

In 1702 the Jesuit academy was founded by Leopold I and named after himself, the Leopoldine Academy.

 
Breslau's City Towers in 1736

Prussia edit

During the War of the Austrian Succession in the 1740s, most of Silesia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia. Prussia's claims were derived from the agreement, rejected by the Habsburgs, between the Silesian Piast rulers of the duchy and the Hohenzollerns who secured the Prussian succession after the extinction of the Piasts. The Protestant citizenry didn't fight against the armies of Protestant Prussia and Frederick II of Prussia captured the city without a struggle in January 1741. In the following years, Prussian armies often stayed in the city during the winter month. After three wars Empress Maria Theresa renounced Silesia and Breslau in the Treaty of Hubertusburg in 1763.

The Protestants of the city could now express their faith without limitation, and the new Prussian authorities also allowed the establishment of a Jewish community.

 
Entering the Duke Jerome Bonaparte to Breslau, 7 January 1807

After the demise of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, Breslau was occupied by an army of the Confederation of the Rhine between 6 December 1806 to 7 January 1807. The Continental System disrupted trade almost completely. The fortifications of the city were levelled and almost every monastery and cloister secularized. The Protestant Viadrina university of Frankfurt (Oder) was relocated to Breslau in 1811, united with the local Catholic university of the Jesuits and formed the new Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelm-Universität (Wrocław University).[31]

In 1813 King Frederick William III of Prussia gave a speech in Breslau signalling Prussia's intent to join the Russian Empire against Napoleon during the Napoleonic Wars. He also donated the Iron Cross and issued the proclamation "An mein Volk" (to my people), summoning the Prussian people to war against the French. The city became the centre of the Liberation movement against Napoleon Bonaparte as volunteers from all over Germany gathered in Breslau, among them Theodor Körner, Friedrich Ludwig Jahn and Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow, who set up his Lützow Free Corps in the city.

The Prussian reforms of Stein and Hardenberg led to a sustainable increase in prosperity in Silesia and Breslau. Due to the levelled fortifications, the city could grow beyond her old borders. Breslau became an important railway hub and a major industrial centre, notably of linen and cotton manufacture and the metal industry. Thanks to the unification of the Viadrina and Jesuit universities the city also became the biggest Prussian centre of sciences after Berlin, and the secularization laid the base for a rich museum landscape. In 1836 the Slavonic Literary Society was founded in the city by Czech scholar Jan Evangelista Purkyně with the assistance of Polish scholars Władysław Nehring and Wojciech Cybulski, its aim was to develop studies on Slavic languages and cultures; the Prussian authorities disbanded it in 1886[32] On 15 January 1841, the Chair of Slavistics was formed in the city,[33] and headed by Professor František Čelakovský, it was the first institution of this kind in Germany[34]

In 1854 the Jewish Theological Seminary was created, one of the first modern rabbi seminars in Europe. Its first director, Zecharias Frankel, was the principal founder of conservative Judaism.

German Empire edit

 
Town square and St. Elisabeth's Church

Breslau became part of the German Empire in 1871, which was established at Versailles in defeated France. The early years were characterized by rapid economic growth, the so-called Gründerzeit, although Breslau was hampered by protectionist policies of its natural markets in Austria-Hungary and Russia and had to turn to the German domestic market. Breslau's population grew from 208,000 in 1871 to 512,000 in 1910, yet the city was pushed down from being the third- to the seventh-biggest city in Germany. Among the population were the Polish and Jewish minorities.

The city spread out and incorporated outlying villages, like Kleinburg (Dworek) and Pöpelwitz (Popowice) in 1896, Herdain (Gaj) and Morgentau (Rakowiec) in 1904 and Gräbschen (Grabiszyn) in 1911. With the regulation of the Oder (Odra) modern garden suburbs like Leerbeutel (Zalesie) and Karlowitz (Karlowice) were built.

The official German census of 1905 listed 470,904 residents, thereof 20,536 Jews, 6,020 Poles and 3,752 others. Polish historians point to distortion of that number by German officials, and speak of several thousand more, or even 20,000 Poles living in it.[35][36][37] Estimates however are difficult, since foreign residents were registered by citizenship rather than by nationality.[38] Most of suburbs on right bank of Oder were Polish-speaking communities according to a source from 1874, and many photographs from this period indicate widespread use of Polish names;.[39] As a frontier city on the edge of the Slavonic world, Breslau was more assertively German than other cities of the empire, and Breslau was less friendly to Poles, Czechs or unassimilated Jews than, for example, Berlin was.[40] During his one-year tenure as rector of the university Felix Dahn for instance banned all Polish student associations.[41]

Centennial Hall in Wrocław
UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
The Hall.
CriteriaCultural: (i)(ii)(iv)
Reference1165
Inscription2006 (30th Session)
Area36.69 ha (90.7 acres)
Buffer zone189.68 ha (468.7 acres)
Coordinates51°6′25.01″N 17°4′37.25″E / 51.1069472°N 17.0770139°E / 51.1069472; 17.0770139

Woodworking, brewing, textiles and agriculture, Breslau's traditional industries, flourished, and service and manufacturing sectors were established, which benefited from the nearby heavy industry of Upper Silesia. Linke-Hofmann, specialized in locomotives, became one of the city's largest employers and one of Europe's biggest manufacturers of railway carriages. By the end of the 19th century, Breslau threatened to eclipse Berlin, the capital of Prussia and the German Empire, as the financial centre of the country. The retail sector flourished too, represented by modern stores of Barasch, Molinari, Wertheim or Petersdorff. At the end of the German Empire Breslau had become the economic, cultural and administrative centre of Eastern Germany.

While Breslau itself was mostly Protestant the city also housed the Roman Catholic Diocese of Breslau, the second-largest diocese in the world, and thus became entangled in Bismarcks Kulturkampf. According to Norman Davies, the city had a population divided among 63% Protestants, 32% Catholics and 5% Jews.[42] At the time of the German Empire Although the open conflict between Breslau's Protestant majority and Catholics was avoided, public resentment was notable, most notably in the affairs of the numerous student corporations. Meanwhile, Breslau became the focus of the Old Lutheran Church. In 1883 the Old Lutheran Theological Seminar was opened, which attracted numerous scholars, among them Rudolf Rocholl. By 1905 the community already had 75 pastors and 52,000 members.

The German Jewry of Breslau formed the Einheitsgemeinde (united community) of Orthodox and Reform Jews and thus narrowing the gap between both schools. In 1872 Reformed Rabbi Joel and his Orthodox counterpart Gedaliah Tiktin jointly consecrated Breslau's New Synagogue. From 14,000 in 1871 the Jewish community grew to 20,000 in 1910, thus becoming the third-largest in Germany. Breslau's confident, vibrant and assimilated community, with countless social, charitable, cultural and educational organisations, became a model for others. The first Jewish students' fraternity in the German Empire, the Viadrina, was created in 1886 in Breslau. Polish student organisations included Concordia, Polonia, and a branch of the Sokol association.

While most of Silesia's greats of the 19th century, such as Gustav Freytag, Adolph Menzel or Willibald Alexis, had to leave Silesia to get recognized, the cultural exodus was stopped by the 1890s. In a few decades, Breslau was turned into a cultural centre of international notability. The old Art Academy moved into a bigger home and attracted artists like painter Max Wislicenus, sculptor Theodor von Gosen and future Nobel prize winner Gerhard Hauptmann. The architectural section of the academy rose to prominence under the directorship of Hans Poelzig, who contributed greatly, along with Max Berg, to the Neues Bauen movement, and Breslau gained fame as a centre of modernist architecture.

 
New Market Square in the 1890s

Performing arts in the city received a notable boost too. In 1861 the Orchestral Society (Orchesterverein) was founded, which achieved a good reputation in 1880 when Max Bruch was conductor of the orchestra, and later the Polish musician Rafał Ludwik Maszkowski, who conducted the orchestra till his death in 1901; he along with other Polish artists like Wanda Landowska, Józef Śliwiński, Bronisław Huberman and Władysław Żeleński performed Polish-themed plays as part of the repertoire of the Orchesterverein.[43] The Opera house (Stadttheater), which was reopened in 1871 after two fires, attracted artists like Leo Slezak and Wilhelm Furtwängler. Johannes Brahms paid tribute to the city when he composed the Akademische Festovertüre, Op. 80 upon receiving an honorary doctorate in 1879.

Modern science flourished in the city, with a wide array of achievements in almost every department. During the German Empire, Breslau's scientists received four Nobel Prizes (plus two in literature). Above all, medical sciences were the flagship of academic research, where Breslau not only presented new theories but also new disciplines. Ferdinand Cohn, the director of the Institute of Plant Physiology, is considered a pioneer of bacteriology, while Albert Neisser, director of the Dermatology Clinic, discovered gonorrhoea, and Alois Alzheimer, professor at the university, discovered the Alzheimer disease.

In the 1890s Breslau developed into a centre of Social Democracy in Germany. With one exception at least one member of the Silesian SPD was sent to the Reichstag in Berlin, among them several prominent socialists like Eduard Bernstein, the former secretary of Friedrich Engels.

With the outbreak of World War I, Breslau's VI. Army Corps was sent to the western front to form the pivot of the Schlieffen plan, while the 1st Leibkürassiere saw action at the battle of the Marne before they were moved to the Eastern Front. The end of Germany's western offensive and the absence of the VI. Army Corps left Silesia and Breslau dangerously exposed. In 1914/15 the Russian army stopped only 80 km to the east of Breslau, which led to the evacuation of children and the erection of barbed-wire defenses. The Silesian Landwehr under General Remus von Woyrsch was rapidly deployed to face the Russian army, but German victories at the Masurian lakes and Gorlice soon eliminated this threat.

The population in the city suffered badly during the war. Food was rationed, and prices for potatoes or eggs skyrocketed by more than 200%, resulting in food riots. The "Turnip Winter" of 1916/17 left many on the verge of starvation. Food hoarding was decreed with capital punishment in the city. After four years of war, Breslau's trade had fallen by 66 per cent. More than 8,000 people died of tuberculosis, and the population dropped from 540,000 to 472,000.

The end of World War I was followed by civil unrest and revolution in Germany. The garrison in Breslau mutinied in November, liberated convicts from jail, among them Rosa Luxemburg, looted shops and seized the offices of the Schlesische Zeitung, Breslau's biggest newspaper. When Emperor Wilhelm II left the country the German Empire dissolved.

Weimar Republic edit

 
Announcement of the Socialist provisional government, Breslau 14 November 1918

The end of the German Empire led to workers' and soldiers' councils taking over civilian and military power across Germany with little or no opposition from the former imperial authorities.[44] In Breslau, too, the authorities were deposed without larger tumults. When Lord Mayor Paul Mattig and Archbishop Bertram, among others, called for a continuance of public duty and ordered General Pfeil of the VI Army Corps to release all political prisoners, Pfeil ordered his soldiers to leave the barracks and, as his last military order, allowed a demonstration of Social Democrats in the Jahrhunderthalle. One day later, soldiers' councils in the army and the Committee of Public Safety were formed. On the same day, a Volksrat (people's council) of Social Democrats, Liberals, the Catholic Centre Party and trade unions was founded, led by Social Democrat Paul Löbe. As relations between the Volksrat and Löbe's opponents were mostly consensual, the revolution in Breslau was peaceful.

 
Lack of homes in 1919 Germany: In this home, with only one room and a kitchen, lived 11 people

Despite the largely peaceful transition, Breslau faced several challenges which radicalized the political landscape of the city. Social conditions got worse as 170,000 soldiers and displaced persons were expected to return, with only 47,000 available quarters. The prospect of a Communist government was a major fear. The loss of nearby Posnania to a newly created Poland, the prospect of further losses in Upper Silesia and the transformation of neighbouring Bohemia into a new state called Czechoslovakia spread anxiety among the people,[45] who saw their city turn into an advance post of Germany.[46] The number of Poles in the city dropped from an already low 4–5.000 to 0.5 per cent 20 years later.[clarification needed][47][48]

Riots of the Spartacists in February resulted in the death of five protesters and injured nineteen. A month later the Freikorps revolted,[clarification needed] and Silesia was one of several eastern provinces in which the Kapp Putsch received solid backing.[49] The commander of the military district supported the coup d'état and four Freikorps units peacefully took over large parts of the city. The governor of Silesia, Breslau's Chief of Police and the SPD President of Breslau were immediately purged. Kapp's government, however, collapsed after a week and the Freikorps in Breslau withdrew, killing 18 people and wounding many others. Anti-Semitic propaganda, moreover, culminated in the murder of Bernhard Schottländer, the Jewish editor of the Schlesische Arbeiter-Zeitung. Jewish stores and hotels were attacked by mobs in the city.[50]

 
Church of St. Martin became one of the focal points of social life of the Polish population in the interwar period

After First World War the Polish community started having masses in Polish in the Churches of Saint Ann and since 1921 in St. Martin Church; the Polish consulate was opened on the Main Square, additionally, a Polish School was formed by Helena Adamczewska.[51] Soon after tensions around the Upper Silesian plebiscite sparked violence in Breslau, where widespread rioting was mostly directed against the Inter-Allied Plebiscite Commission, especially the French, but also the Polish. The buildings of the Polish consulate and school were demolished and Polish library was burned along with several thousand volumes[52][53] Problems culminated however in 1923. Hyperinflation ruined many people, and strikes and walk-outs swept all over Germany. 50 large shops in the commercial centre were looted in the city when partly anti-Semitic,[54] riots broke out on 22 July, and six looters were killed.

In 1919, Breslau became the capital of the newly created Province of Lower Silesia, and its first head of government (German: Oberpräsident) was social democrat Felix Philipp. The Social Democrats also won the Lower Silesian elections of 1921 with 51.19%, followed by the Catholic centre with 20.2%, DVP with 11.9%, DDP with 9.5% and the Communists with 3.6%.

The mid-1920s brought political stability, mostly due to the leadership of Gustav Stresemann.[55] In 1 Election result in Lower Silesia and Breslau showed a solid Socialist majority in 1924 and 1928. In 1925 the Silesian NSDAP was founded, the party however garnered only 1 per cent of the votes in 1928, well below the national average of 2,8 per cent.

 
Arrest of 200 Nationalsocialists in Jäschkowitz, 15 km to the south of Breslau, 1930

After the incorporation of 54 communes between 1925 and 1930, the city expanded to 175 km2 and housed 600,000 people. Between 26 and 29 June 1930 it hosted the Deutsche Kampfspiele, a sporting event for German athletes after Germany was excluded from the Olympic Games after World War I.

 
Wohnungs-und Werkraumausstellung (WuWa), a building designed by Hans Scharoun, today Park Hotel

This peaceful period ended with the Wall Street Crash and the following collapse of the German economy. Unemployment rose from 1.3 million in September 1929 to 6 million (1/3 of the working population) in 1933; in Breslau from 6,672 persons in 1925 to 23,978 in 1929, the worst figures in Germany after Chemnitz. The number of families living on welfare support was more than twice as high as in Leipzig or Dresden. Public faith in democratic institutions faded and anti-democratic parties – Communists and Nazis – gained support. The battles of both were played out all over Germany, also in Breslau. In June 1931 the annual rally of the Stahlhelm, marked by violent rhetoric and clashes, took place in the city. The violence in the city spiralled in the summer of 1932. On 23 June a column of SA men was attacked by Communists, with eleven seriously injured, followed by a killed Socialist three days later. On 6 August grenades were thrown during battles between Nazis and Communists. In July 1932 Hitler spoke in Breslau, attracting 16,000 listeners. In the following elections, his party received 43% of the Breslau vote, the third-highest result in Germany. On 30 January 1933, he was appointed Chancellor of Germany.

Despite all turbulences, the cultural scene in the Weimar Republic and in Breslau flourished. The reorganized Academy of Arts reached its creative height under the directorship of Oskar Moll and can be considered a predecessor of the first Bauhaus. Many Bauhaus artists, among them Oskar Schlemmer and Georg Muche, taught in Breslau, while several lecturers and students of the academy became leading protagonists of the main artistic trends in the Weimar Republic, like Alexander Kanoldt, who was co-founder of the Munich New Secession and became one of the stars of the Neue Sachlichkeit, or Hans Scharoun, an important exponent of Organic architecture. In 1929 the Werkbund opened WuWa (German: Wohnungs-und Werkraumausstellung) in Breslau-Scheitnig, an international showcase of modern architecture by architects of the Silesian branch of the Werkbund.

During the inter-war years, the city was also the centre of the Polish national movement radiating towards other groups of Poles in Lower Silesia; it focused on Polish cultural life and organisational efforts.[56]

Nazi period and World War II edit

The city became one of the largest support bases of the NSDAP movement, and in the 1932 elections the Nazi party received in it 43.5% of votes, achieving the third biggest victory in Weimar Germany[57] A reason for the strong NSDAP support may have been that Breslau was the city among the eight largest cities of Germany with the highest rate of unemployment, which the Nazi party promised to tackle.[58]

Before the Holocaust, Breslau was home to the fourth-largest Jewish community in Germany. In 1933 the Gestapo began actions against Jewish and Polish students in the city[59] who were issued special segregationist ID documents like those of Communists, Social Democrats, trade unionists, and other people deemed threats to the state. Laws against Jews came into power, limiting their involvement in all spheres of life. People were arrested and beaten for using Polish in public.[60] The Polish cultural centre (the Polish House) in Breslau was destroyed by the police.[59] In 1938 The New Synagogue, along with many Jewish-owned businesses and properties were destroyed during the Kristallnacht, and many of the city's 23,240 Jews were deported to pre-war Nazi concentration camps; those who remained were also murdered by the Nazi in the Holocaust. In June 1939, Polish students were expelled from the university.[61]

The city's coat of arms was changed by the Nazis in 1938, as it contained the letter W in reference to its original name, and thus was considered "too Slavic"[62] Additionally 88 locations in the city received new German names as part of the campaign of Germanization[63]

During the invasion of Poland, which started World War II, in September 1939, the Germans carried out mass arrests of local Polish activists and banned Polish organizations.[61] The city became the headquarters of the southern district of the Selbstschutz, which task was to commit atrocities against Poles.[64] Most of the Polish elites also left during the 1920s and 1930s while Polish leaders who remained were sent to concentration camps.[59] During the war, 363 Czech and 293 Polish prisoners, as well as resistance members from Western Europe, were executed by guillotine in the city's prison.[65] In total, the German regime killed 896 people in this way. In 1941 the remaining pre-war Polish minority in the city, as well as Polish slave labourers organised a resistance group called Olimp. In 1942 additional Polish resistance groups were reported to be in existence in the city, "Jaszczurka", Siła Zbrojna Polski and Polska Organizacja Polityczna[66]

 
Memorial plaque to Polish forced laborers under Germany in Wrocław

In addition, a network of concentration camps and forced labour camps, or Arbeitslager, was established in the district around Breslau, to serve the city's growing industrial concerns, including FAMO, Junkers and Krupp. The total number of prisoners held at such camps exceeded many tens of thousands.[67] Official Nazi estimates reported 43,950 forced labourers in 1943 and 51,548 in 1944, most of them being Poles.[68] At the end of 1944 between 30,000 and 60,000 captured Poles were sent to Breslau after the defeat of Warsaw uprising.[69] There were four subcamps of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp in the city, in which Nazi Germany imprisoned about 3,400-3,800 men of various nationalities, including Poles, Russians, Italians, Frenchmen, Ukrainians, Czechs, Belgians, Yugoslavs, Chinese, and about 1,500 Jewish women.[70] Many of the prisoners died, and the remaining were evacuated to the main camp of Gross-Rosen in January 1945.[70] The Germans also operated three subcamps of the Stalag VIII-B/344 prisoner-of-war camp,[71] and two Nazi prisons, including a youth prison, both with multiple forced labour subcamps.[72][73]

 
Commemorative plate honouring bombing of the main railway station in 1943 by Polish resistance in the city, placed in 1995

Throughout most of World War II Breslau was not close to the fighting. The city became a haven for refugees, swelling in population to nearly one million. Polish resistance from the group Zagra-Lin[74] successfully attacked a Nazi Germany's troop transport on the main railway station in the city on 23 April 1943, and a commemorative plate honouring their actions was placed after Nazi Germany was defeated in 1945.[75][76][77][78] In February 1945 the Soviet Red Army approached the city. Gauleiter Karl Hanke declared the city a Festung (fortress), i.e. a stronghold to be held at all costs. Concentration camp prisoners were forced to help build new fortifications (see Arbeitseinsatz). In one area, the workers were ordered to construct a military airfield intended for use in resupplying the fortress, while the entire residential district along the Kaiserstraße (now Plac Grunwaldzki) was razed. The authorities threatened to shoot anyone who refused to do their assigned labour. Eyewitnesses estimated that some 13,000 died under enemy fire on the airfield alone. In the end, one of the few planes that ever used it was that of the fleeing Gauleiter Hanke.[79]

After the encirclement of the city by the Red Army, members of the resistance succeeded in making contact with the Russians. In March 1945, twelve Nazi party offices were destroyed, killing 30 Nazi members.[80]

Hanke finally lifted a ban on the evacuation of women and children, when it was almost too late. During his poorly organised evacuation in January and February 1945, around 18,000 people froze to death, mostly children and babies, in icy snowstorms and −20 °C weather. Some 200,000 civilians, less than a third of the pre-war population, remained in the city because the railway connections to the west were damaged or overloaded.

By the end of the Siege of Breslau, 50% of the old town, 90% of the western and southern and 10–30% of the northern and northeastern quarters of the city had been destroyed. 40,000 inhabitants, including forced labourers, lay dead in the ruins of homes and factories. After a siege of nearly three months, "Fortress Breslau" surrendered on 7 May 1945. It was one of the last major cities in Germany to fall.[81][failed verification]

Return to Poland edit

 
Preserved part of Osobowice cemetery with Russian, Serbian and German graves[82][83]

People's Republic of Poland edit

Along with almost all of Lower Silesia, post-war Wrocław became part of Poland under the terms of the Potsdam Conference, pending a final peace conference with Germany.

The town became the biggest city of the so-called Recovered Territories. On 24 May 1945, the surviving members of the Polish pre-war minority from the Nazi German genocide in Wrocław were met by Polish authorities.[84] Bolesław Drobner, the city's newly appointed mayor, welcomed them in "Free Poland" and urged pre-war Poles from Wrocław to stay in the city, expressing his view that the Polish state needs people like them to awake to life after the war; many of the addressed heeded this call, and pre-war Poles became active members of Wrocław's political and cultural life, forming an association called "Klub Ludzi ze znakiem P"("People with the P sign"), remembering those Poles who perished under Nazi German rule in the city.[85]

Franciszek Juszczak, a long-time leader of the Polish community in Wrocław before World War II and resistance member, was nominated by Drobner to the position of vice-president of the Lower Silesian Chamber of Crafts[86] In close cooperation with authorities he formed Związek Polaków Byłych Obywateli Niemieckich(Union of Poles Former German Citizens). The pre-war Polish minority, though officially regarded as heroes, was subject of a "verification process" to determine their Polishness, in a procedure described as an "experience of some unpleasantness".[85] According to German historian Gregor Thum in 1949 2,769 or about 1 per cent of the city's population were pre-war inhabitants of the city, 1,029 of them able to speak Polish fluently.[87]

 
Kozanów tower blocks

In the summer of 1945, the city had a predominately German population[88] who were expelled to one of the two post-war German states between 1945 and 1949. However, as was the case with other Lower Silesian cities, a considerable German presence remained in Wrocław until the late 1950s; the city's last German school closed in 1963. The population of Wrocław was soon increased by the resettlement of Poles forming part of postwar repatriation of Poles (1944–1946) (75%) as well as the forced deportations from Polish lands annexed by the Soviet Union in the east (25%) including from cities such as Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine), Stanisławów (now Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine), Wilno (now Vilnius, Lithuania), and Grodno (now Hrodna, Belarus).

After the destruction during the Siege of Breslau, the city was further destroyed by vandalism, fire, and the razing and dismantling of factories, and material assets by the Soviet Union. The economic potential of the city was decreased to 40% of the prewar situation.[89] Wroclaw was further weakened by the so-called Szaber, which transferred goods to Central Poland, and the campaign "bricks for Warsaw" by the Polish government ten years later, which provided reconstruction material for the levelled Old Town of the Polish capital. This loss of historic structures was irreversible and the consequences are still visible today.[90]

The rebuilding of the town was characterized by a mix of polonization and degermanization, which led to reconstruction and destruction. Gothic architecture was painstakingly restored, while testimonies of later eras were often neglected or destroyed. For example, even as late as in the 1970s, Stucco elements from the Baroque were chiseled off in some of the town's churches according to the ideologically enforced return to the allegedly original Piast state.[91] The process of degermanization also included the removal and destruction of almost all German non-religious monuments,[92] and the elimination of inscriptions, even centuries-old epitaphs and in churches.[93] Between 1970 and 1972 all non-Jewish German cemeteries were destroyed.[94]

Tower blocks were massively constructed both in the city and around it, e.g. Kozanów housing estate.

In 1964, the Monument to the Lwów Professors massacred by the Germans in 1941, was unveiled.

After the fall of communism edit

 
1997 Central European flood in Wrocław

In May 1997 Wrocław was visited by Pope John Paul II.[95] In July 1997, the city was heavily affected by a flood of the Oder River, the worst flooding in post-war Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic. Around one-third of the city's area stood underwater.[96] An earlier equally devastating flood of the river took place in 1903.[97] After the flood big areas of the city were renovated, including Main Market Square with the Town Hall and the Wrocław Palace.[98]

Historical populations edit

Year 1800 1831 1850 1852 1880 1900 1910 1925 1933 1939
Inhabitants 64,500 89,500 114,000 121,100 272,900 422,700 510,000 555,200 625,198 629,565
Year 1946[99] 1956[100] 1960 1967 1970 1975 1980 1990 1999 2009
Inhabitants 171,000 400,000 431,800 487,700 526,000 579,900 617,700 640,577 650,000 632,240

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dariusz Andrzej Sikorski, Wczesnopiastowska architektura sakralna (jako źródło historyczne dla dziejów Kościoła w Polsce), Wydawnictwo Poznańskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauk, Poznań 2012, ISBN 83-7654-224-9
  2. ^ Ziemie polskie w X wieku i ich znaczenie w kształtowaniu się nowej mapy Europy. Henryk Samsonowicz. Kraków: Universitas. 2000. ISBN 83-7052-710-8. OCLC 45809955.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ Weczerka, p. 39
  4. ^ a b Weczerka, p. 40
  5. ^ Norman Davies "Mikrokosmos" page 110-115
  6. ^ Weczerka, p. 41
  7. ^ Benedykt Zientara (1997). Henryk Brodaty i jego czasy (in Polish). Warsaw: Trio. pp. 317–320. ISBN 978-83-85660-46-0.
  8. ^ R. Żerelik [in:] M. Czapliński (red.) Historia Śląska, Wrocław 2007, p. 57, ISBN 978-83-229-2872-1
  9. ^ Microcosm: A Portrait of a Central European City [Paperback] Norman Davies, Roger Moorhouse, page 90, Pimlico; 2003 "Fighting between Poles and Czechs were recorded in 1314. It would be particularly out of place to assume that the Polish element was decimated. The villages on the right bank of the Odra remained solidly Polish, while Polish names such as Baran or Cebula figured regularly, even among the city's patricians"
  10. ^ a b Thum, p. 316
  11. ^ Maciej Lagiewski; Halina Okolska; Piotr Oszczanowski (2009). 1000 Jahre Breslau. Wrocław: Muzeum Miejskie Wrocławia. p. 35. ISBN 978-83-89551-57-3.
  12. ^ Norbert Conrads (1994). Deutsche Geschichte im Osten Europas: Schlesien. Berlin: Siedler Verlag. pp. 55–56. ISBN 978-3-88680-775-8.
  13. ^ Microcosm: A Portrait of a Central European City [Paperback] Norman Davies, Roger Moorhouse, page 134, Pimlico; 2003
  14. ^ a b Adam Maksymowicz. "Niezwykła wyprawa Benedykta Polaka". Niedziela.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
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  22. ^ Długosz, ks. IX, s 153
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  29. ^ Silesia was divided by the River Oder into its two "national halves"-German and Polish. Vretslav lay astride the dividing line.As the second city of the Kingdom of Bohemia Vretslav also supported a considerable Czech community Norman Davies, Microcosm, page 135
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  39. ^ Davies, Microcosm page 305
  40. ^ Microcosm: A Portrait of a Central European City [Paperback] Norman Davies, Roger Moorhouse, page 304, Pimlico; 2003
  41. ^ Norman Davies Microcosm page 305 At the time when rector Felix Dahn had banned all Polish student bodies
  42. ^ Norman Davies, Microcosm, page 304
  43. ^ Official Page of Wrocław Philharmonic Orchestra-History
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  46. ^ Norman Davies, Microcosm page 328
  47. ^ Norman Davies, Microcosm page 360, 361
  48. ^ Harasimowicz, p. 466f
  49. ^ Haffner, Sebastian (2002). Die deutsche Revolution 1918/19 [The German Revolution 1918/19] (in German). Hamburg: Kindler. p. 224. ISBN 3-463-40423-0.
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  52. ^ Norman Davies, Microcosm page 361
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  54. ^ van Rahden, Juden, p. 323-26
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  56. ^ Nauki polityczne,Tom 37, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, 1989, page 157.
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  58. ^ Eduard Mühle, Breslau: Geschichte einer europäischen Metropole (in German), p. 245
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  87. ^ Thum, Gregor (2011). Uprooted: How Breslau became Wroclaw during the century of expulsions. Princeton University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-691-14024-7.
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  95. ^ "14 lat temu Jan Paweł II gościł we Wrocławiu". Gazeta Wrocławska (in Polish). 31 May 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  96. ^ "1997 great flood of Oder River – photo gallery".
  97. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 January 2011.
  98. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2010.
  99. ^ Immediately following Flight and expulsion of Germans from Poland during and after World War II
  100. ^ The surge in population is the result of Repatriation of Poles (1944–1946) and the subsequent forced deportation of Poles living in Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union

Bibliography edit

English edit

Polish edit

  • Dawna Polonia wrocławska Alicja Zawisza Towarzystwo Miłośników Wrocławia, 1984
  • Harasimowicz, Jan (2001). Włodzimierz Suleja (ed.). Encyklopedia Wrocławia. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie. ISBN 978-83-7384-561-9.
  • Historia Wrocławia w datach, Marek Cetwiński, Romuald Gelles
  • Historia Wrocławia: Od twierdzy fryderycjańskiej do twierdzy hitlerowskiej Cezary Buśko, Włodzimierz Suleja, Teresa Kulak.
  • Kulak, Teresa (2006). Wrocław. Przewodnik historyczny (A to Polska właśnie). Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie. ISBN 978-83-7384-472-8.
  • Polacy na studiach lekarskich we Wrocławiu w latach 1811-1918 Jan Smereka, Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich, 1979
  • Sławni Polacy we Wrocławiu w XIX wieku: informator : [wystawa], Muzeum Historyczne we Wrocławiu Oficyna "Gryf", 1987
  • Studenci Polacy na Uniwersytecie Wrocławskim w latach, 1918-1939: katalog zachowanych archiwaliów, Alicja Zawisza, Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Breslau, Breslau. Uniwersytet 1972

German edit

  • Breslauer Urkundenbuch – complete collection of all deeds of the city (in German and Latin)
  • Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T.11 Breslauer Stadtbuch – liber civitatis (town book) of Wroclaw, containing the councilmen since 1287 and documents regarding the constitutional history (in German and Latin)
  • Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T.3: Henricus pauper – account book of Wroclaw, 1299–1358 (in German and Latin)
  • Dorn, Leonard (2016), Regimentskultur und Netzwerk. Dietrich Goswin von Bockum-Dolffs und das Kürassier-Regiment No. 1 in Breslau 1788-1805 (Vereinigte Westfälische Adelsarchive e.V., Veröffentlichung Nr. 20). Münster
  • Scheuermann, Gerhard (1994). Das Breslau-Lexikon (2 vols.). Dülmen: Laumann Verlagsgesellschaft. ISBN 978-3-89960-132-9.
  • Thum, Gregor (2003). Die fremde Stadt. Breslau 1945. Berlin: Siedler. ISBN 978-3-88680-795-6.
  • van Rahden, Till (2000). Juden und andere Breslauer: Die Beziehungen zwischen Juden, Protestanten und Katholiken in einer deutschen Großstadt von 1860 bis 1925. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3-525-35732-3.

history, wrocław, historical, affiliations, silesians, until, duchy, poland, 1025, kingdom, poland, 1025, 1038, duchy, bohemia, 1038, 1054, kingdom, poland, 1054, 1320, duchy, silesia, 1320, 1348, kingdom, bohemia, 1348, 1469, kingdom, hungary, 1469, 1490, kin. Historical affiliations Silesians until 985 Duchy of Poland 985 1025 Kingdom of Poland 1025 1038 Duchy of Bohemia 1038 1054 Kingdom of Poland 1054 1320 Duchy of Silesia 1320 1348 Kingdom of Bohemia 1348 1469 Kingdom of Hungary 1469 1490 Kingdom of Bohemia 1490 1526 Habsburg monarchy 1526 1742 Kingdom of Prussia 1742 1871 German Empire 1871 1918 Weimar Germany 1918 1933 Nazi Germany 1933 1945 People s Republic of Poland 1945 1989 Republic of Poland 1989 present Wroclaw German Breslau has long been the largest and culturally dominant city in Silesia and is today the capital of Poland s Lower Silesian Voivodeship The history of Wroclaw starts at a crossroads in Lower Silesia It was one of the centres of the Duchy and then Kingdom of Poland and briefly in the first half of the 13th century the centre of half of the divided Kingdom of Poland German settlers arrived in increasing numbers after the first Mongol invasion of Poland in 1241 and Wroclaw eventually became part of the Holy Roman Empire after the extinction of local Polish dukes in 1335 It was ruled by Hungary between 1469 and 1490 and after the War of Austrian Succession in the 18th century the city and region were annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia and in 1871 became part of the German Empire In the interwar period and during World War II the city witnessed discrimination and persecution of its Polish and Jewish inhabitants including deportations to forced labour and Nazi concentration camps and in addition tens of thousands of forced labourers and prisoners of war of various nationalities were imprisoned in multiple German labour camps and prisons throughout the city After World War II Wroclaw and most of Silesia were transferred to Poland and the German speaking majority of its population was expelled to Germany Contents 1 Origin 2 Poland 3 Holy Roman Empire and Hungary 4 Habsburg Monarchy 5 Prussia 6 German Empire 7 Weimar Republic 8 Nazi period and World War II 9 Return to Poland 9 1 People s Republic of Poland 9 2 After the fall of communism 10 Historical populations 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 English 13 2 Polish 13 3 GermanOrigin editThe city of Wroclaw originated as a stronghold situated at the intersection of two long existing trading routes the Via Regia and the Amber Road The city was founded in the 10th century possibly by a local duke Wrocislaw who the city might also bear its name after At the time the city was limited to the district of Ostrow Tumski the Cathedral Island 1 and was first mentioned by Thietmar of Merseburg in 1000 as Wrotizlava 2 Poland edit nbsp Monument to King Boleslaw I the Brave in WroclawIn 985 Duke Mieszko I of Poland of the Piast dynasty conquered Silesia and Wroclaw In 1000 Mieszko s son Duke and future King Boleslaw I of Poland in the then capital of Poland Gniezno established the Bishopric of Wroclaw along with the bishoprics of Krakow and Kolobrzeg and the Archbishopric of Gniezno as one of the oldest bishoprics of Poland and the first bishopric of Silesia It was a suffragan of the Archbishopric of Gniezno the See independent of the German Archbishopric of Magdeburg which had tried to lay claim to jurisdiction over the Polish church The city quickly became a commercial centre and expanded rapidly to the neighbouring Wyspa Piaskowa Sand Island and then to the left bank of the Odra river Hugo Weczerka writes that around 1000 the town had approximately 1000 inhabitants 3 and after an uprising in 1037 38 against the church and probably also against the bishop and the representatives of the Polish king who were expelled 4 In 1038 Bohemia captured the city and owned her until 1054 when Poland regained control In 1138 it became the capital of the Piast ruled Duchy of Silesia which slowly detached from Poland 4 By 1139 two more settlements were built One belonged to Governor Piotr Wlostowic a k a Piotr Wlast Dunin ca 1080 1153 and was situated near his residence on the Olbina by the St Vincent s Benedictine Abbey The other settlement was founded on the left bank of the Oder River near the present seat of the university It was located on the Via Regia that lead from Leipzig and Legnica and followed through Opole and Krakow to Kievan Rus Polish Bohemian Jewish Walloon 5 and German communities 6 existed in the city nbsp Romanesque St Giles Church the oldest unchanged building in Wroclaw built in the early 13th century in the Ostrow Tumski districtIn the first half of the 13th century duke Henry I the Bearded of the Silesian line of the Piast dynasty managed to reunite much of the divided Polish kingdom He became the duke of Krakow Polonia Minor in 1232 which gave him the title of the senior duke of Poland see Testament of Boleslaw III Krzywousty Henry started striving for the Polish crown His activity in this field was continued by his son and successor Henry II the Pious whose work towards this goal was halted by his sudden death in 1241 Battle of Legnica 7 Polish territories acquired by the Silesian dukes in this period are called The monarchy of the Silesian Henries 8 Wroclaw was the centre of the divided Kingdom of Poland The city was devastated in 1241 during the first Mongol invasion of Poland The inhabitants burned down their own city to force the Mongols to a quick withdrawal The invasion according to Norman Davies led German historiography to portray the Mongol attack as an event which eradicated the Polish community However in light of historical research this is doubtful as many Polish settlements remained even in the 14th century especially on the right bank of the Oder and Polish names such as Baran or Cebula appear including among Wroclaw s ruling elite 9 Burial sites of 13th century Polish monarchs in Wroclaw nbsp Saint Vincent church nbsp Holy Cross church Georg Thum Maciej Lagiewski Halina Okolska and Piotr Oszczanowski write that the decimated population was replenished by many Germans 10 11 A different thesis is presented by Norman Davies who writes that it is wrong to portray people of that time as Germans as their identities were those of Saxons and Bavarians while historian Norbert Conrads argues that a Polish identity didn t exist either a view shared by Czech author Frantisek R Kraus 12 need quotation to verify While Germanisation started Norman Davies writes that Vretslav was a multi ethnic city in the Middle Ages Its ethnic composition moved in an endless state of flux changing with each political and cultural ebb and flow to which it was exposed 13 German author Georg Thum states that Breslau the German name of the city appeared for the first time in written records and the city council from the beginning used only the Latin and German 10 In 1245 in Wroclaw Franciscan friar Benedict of Poland considered one of the first Polish explorers joined Italian diplomat Giovanni da Pian del Carpine on his journey to the seat of the Mongol Khan near Karakorum the capital of the Mongol Empire 14 It was the first such journey by Europeans and they returned with the letter from Guyuk Khan to Pope Innocent IV 14 The new and rebuilt town adopted Magdeburg rights in 1262 and at the end of the 13th century joined the Hanseatic League The expanded town was around 60 hectares in size and the new Main Market Square Rynek which was covered with timber framed houses became the new centre of the town The original foundation Ostrow Tumski was now the religious centre With the ongoing Ostsiedlung the Polish Piast dynasty 15 disputed discuss dukes remained in control of the region however their influence declined continuously as the self administration rights of the city council increased German historian Norbert Conrads writes that they adopted the German language and culture and became Germanized in the 13th century 16 Norman Davies writes that German historiography has often tried to present that when the Fragmentation of Poland happened and Silsia was divided they wanted to leave Poland and join the Holy Roman Empire this theory however had been debunked Wroclaw despite the beginnings of Germanization remained in close union with the Polish church and local Piasts remained active in Polish politics while Polish was still used in the court as late as the 14th century Rather the Silesian Piasts had a carefully planned Germanization policy who s aim wasn t necessarily to join the Holy Roman Empire 17 During much of the Middle Ages Wroclaw was ruled by Dukes of the Piast dynasty In 1335 the last Piast Duke of Breslau Henry VI the Good died As a result the city passed to John of Luxembourg who fought a war with Casimir the Great over Silesia 18 19 John died while fighting in France and the war ended inconclusively 20 The issue was closed only in 1372 between Charles IV of Luxembourg and Louis I of Hungary and while the city lost political ties to the Polish state it remained connected to Poland by religious links and the existence of Polish population within it 21 Jan Dlugosz described the foreign rule over Breslau as unlawful and expressed hope that it would eventually return to Poland 22 nbsp Wroclaw historic City Hall built in a typical 13th 14th century Brick Gothic styleBishop of Breslau was known as the prince bishop ever since Bishop Przeclaw of Pogorzela 1341 1376 bought the Duchy of Grodkow from Duke Boleslaw III the Generous and added it to the episcopal Duchy of Neisse after which the Bishops of Breslau had the titles of Prince of Nysa and Dukes of Grottkau taking precedence over the other Silesian rulers Holy Roman Empire and Hungary editIn 1348 the city was incorporated with almost the entirety of Silesia into the Holy Roman Empire and a Landeshauptmann Provincial governor was appointed to administrate the region Between 1342 and 1344 two fires destroyed large parts of the city In 1352 Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor visited the town His successors Wenceslaus and Sigismund became involved in a long lasting feud with the city and its magistrate culminating in the revolt of the guilds in 1418 when local craftsmen killed seven councillors In a tribunal two years later when Sigismund was in town 27 ringleaders were executed He also called up for a Reichstag in the same year which discussed the earlier happenings in the city In June 1466 in Breslau Polish diplomat Jan Dlugosz held a meeting with a papal legate starting a peace process between Poland and the Teutonic Order which a few months later culminated in the signing of a peace treaty in Torun that ended the Thirteen Years War the longest of Polish Teutonic wars 23 nbsp The oldest printed text in Polish in the Statuta synodalia episcoporum Wratislaviensium printed in Breslau by Kasper Elyan 1475When George of Podebrady was elected as Silesia s overlord the city opposed him since he was a Hussite and instead sided with his Catholic rival Matthias Corvinus 24 After Breslau fought alongside Corvinus against George in 1466 the local classes rendered homage to the king on 31 May 1469 in the city where the king also met the daughter of mayor Krebs Barbara whom he took as his mistress In 1474 the city was besieged by combined Polish Bohemian forces however in November 1474 Kings Casimir IV of Poland his son Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Matthias Corvinus of Hungary met in the nearby village of Gross Mochbern present day district of Wroclaw and in December 1474 a ceasefire was signed according to which the city remained under Hungarian rule 25 Matthias Corvinus incorporated the city with Silesia in his dominion which he controlled until his death in 1490 26 1475 marks the beginning of movable type printing in the city and in Silesia when Kasper Elyan pl opened his printing shop Drukarnia Swietokrzyska That same year he published the Statuta synodalia episcoporum Wratislaviensium pl which contains the first ever text printed in Polish 27 It was also the first ever printing in Silesia 28 The first illustration of the city was published in the Nuremberg Chronicle in 1493 Documents of that time referred to the town by many variants of the name including Wratislaw Bresslau and Presslau Habsburg Monarchy editThe ideas of the Protestant Reformation reached Breslau already in 1518 and in 1519 the writings of Luther Eck and the opening of the Leipzig Disputation by Mosellanus were published by local printer Adam Dyon In 1523 the town council unanimously appointed Johann Hess as the new pastor of St Maria Magdalena and thus introduced the Reformation in Breslau In 1524 the town council issued a decree that obliged all clerics to the Protestant sermon and in 1525 another decree banned a number of Catholic customs Breslau had become dominated by Protestants although a Catholic minority remained Norman Davies states that as a city it was located on the borderline between Polish and German parts of Silesia writing that Vretslav lay astride the dividing line it also hosted a Czech community 29 After the death of Louis II in the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 the Habsburg monarchy of Austria inherited Silesia and the city of Breslau In 1530 Ferdinand I awarded Breslau its current coat of arms On 11 October 1609 German emperor Rudolf II granted the Letter of Majesty which ensured the free exercise of church services for all Silesian Protestants During Thirty Years War the city suffered badly was occupied by Saxon and Swedish troops and lost 18 000 of its 40 000 residents to plague The Counter Reformation had started with Rudolf II and Martin Gerstmann bishop of Breslau One of his successors bishop Charles of Austria did not accept the letter of the majesty on his territory At the same time the emperor encouraged several Catholic orders to settle in Breslau The Minorites came back in 1610 the Jesuits arrived in 1638 the Capuchins in 1669 the Franciscans in 1684 and the Ursulines in 1687 These orders undertook an unequalled amount of construction which shaped the appearance of the city until 1945 The Jesuits were the main representatives of the Counter Reformation in Breslau and Silesia Much more feared were the Liechtensteiner dragoons which converted people by force and expelled those who refused At the end of the Thirty Years War Breslau was only one of a few Silesian cities which stayed Protestant and after the Treaty of Altranstadt of 1707 four churches were given back to the local Protestants During the Counter Reformation the intellectual life of the city which was shaped by Protestantism and Humanism flourished as the Protestant bourgeoisie of the city lost its role as the patron of the arts to the Catholic orders Breslau and Silesia which possessed 6 of the 12 leading grammar schools in the Holy Roman Empire became the centre of German Baroque literature Poets such as Martin Opitz Andreas Gryphius Christian Hoffmann von Hoffmannswaldau Daniel Casper von Lohenstein and Angelus Silesius formed the so called First and Second Silesian school of poets which shaped the German literature of that time The dominance of the German population under the Habsburg rule in the city became more visible while the Polish population diminished in numbers although it did not disappear 30 Only a few families from the upper and middle classes celebrated their Polish roots despite having Polish ancestors and while the Polish population was reinforced by migrants and merchants many of them became Germanized 30 Nevertheless Poles continued to exist in the city mostly living on the right bank of Oder river also known as Polish side 30 The Polish community was led by such priests as Stanislaw Bzowski or Michal Kusz who fought for the continued existence of Polish schools in the city and addressed their flock in Polish Latin masses were interspersed with hymns and prayers in Polish 30 In 1702 the Jesuit academy was founded by Leopold I and named after himself the Leopoldine Academy nbsp Breslau s City Towers in 1736Prussia editDuring the War of the Austrian Succession in the 1740s most of Silesia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia Prussia s claims were derived from the agreement rejected by the Habsburgs between the Silesian Piast rulers of the duchy and the Hohenzollerns who secured the Prussian succession after the extinction of the Piasts The Protestant citizenry didn t fight against the armies of Protestant Prussia and Frederick II of Prussia captured the city without a struggle in January 1741 In the following years Prussian armies often stayed in the city during the winter month After three wars Empress Maria Theresa renounced Silesia and Breslau in the Treaty of Hubertusburg in 1763 The Protestants of the city could now express their faith without limitation and the new Prussian authorities also allowed the establishment of a Jewish community nbsp Entering the Duke Jerome Bonaparte to Breslau 7 January 1807After the demise of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 Breslau was occupied by an army of the Confederation of the Rhine between 6 December 1806 to 7 January 1807 The Continental System disrupted trade almost completely The fortifications of the city were levelled and almost every monastery and cloister secularized The Protestant Viadrina university of Frankfurt Oder was relocated to Breslau in 1811 united with the local Catholic university of the Jesuits and formed the new Schlesische Friedrich Wilhelm Universitat Wroclaw University 31 In 1813 King Frederick William III of Prussia gave a speech in Breslau signalling Prussia s intent to join the Russian Empire against Napoleon during the Napoleonic Wars He also donated the Iron Cross and issued the proclamation An mein Volk to my people summoning the Prussian people to war against the French The city became the centre of the Liberation movement against Napoleon Bonaparte as volunteers from all over Germany gathered in Breslau among them Theodor Korner Friedrich Ludwig Jahn and Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lutzow who set up his Lutzow Free Corps in the city The Prussian reforms of Stein and Hardenberg led to a sustainable increase in prosperity in Silesia and Breslau Due to the levelled fortifications the city could grow beyond her old borders Breslau became an important railway hub and a major industrial centre notably of linen and cotton manufacture and the metal industry Thanks to the unification of the Viadrina and Jesuit universities the city also became the biggest Prussian centre of sciences after Berlin and the secularization laid the base for a rich museum landscape In 1836 the Slavonic Literary Society was founded in the city by Czech scholar Jan Evangelista Purkyne with the assistance of Polish scholars Wladyslaw Nehring and Wojciech Cybulski its aim was to develop studies on Slavic languages and cultures the Prussian authorities disbanded it in 1886 32 On 15 January 1841 the Chair of Slavistics was formed in the city 33 and headed by Professor Frantisek Celakovsky it was the first institution of this kind in Germany 34 In 1854 the Jewish Theological Seminary was created one of the first modern rabbi seminars in Europe Its first director Zecharias Frankel was the principal founder of conservative Judaism German Empire edit nbsp Town square and St Elisabeth s ChurchBreslau became part of the German Empire in 1871 which was established at Versailles in defeated France The early years were characterized by rapid economic growth the so called Grunderzeit although Breslau was hampered by protectionist policies of its natural markets in Austria Hungary and Russia and had to turn to the German domestic market Breslau s population grew from 208 000 in 1871 to 512 000 in 1910 yet the city was pushed down from being the third to the seventh biggest city in Germany Among the population were the Polish and Jewish minorities The city spread out and incorporated outlying villages like Kleinburg Dworek and Popelwitz Popowice in 1896 Herdain Gaj and Morgentau Rakowiec in 1904 and Grabschen Grabiszyn in 1911 With the regulation of the Oder Odra modern garden suburbs like Leerbeutel Zalesie and Karlowitz Karlowice were built The official German census of 1905 listed 470 904 residents thereof 20 536 Jews 6 020 Poles and 3 752 others Polish historians point to distortion of that number by German officials and speak of several thousand more or even 20 000 Poles living in it 35 36 37 Estimates however are difficult since foreign residents were registered by citizenship rather than by nationality 38 Most of suburbs on right bank of Oder were Polish speaking communities according to a source from 1874 and many photographs from this period indicate widespread use of Polish names 39 As a frontier city on the edge of the Slavonic world Breslau was more assertively German than other cities of the empire and Breslau was less friendly to Poles Czechs or unassimilated Jews than for example Berlin was 40 During his one year tenure as rector of the university Felix Dahn for instance banned all Polish student associations 41 Centennial Hall in WroclawUNESCO World Heritage Site nbsp The Hall CriteriaCultural i ii iv Reference1165Inscription2006 30th Session Area36 69 ha 90 7 acres Buffer zone189 68 ha 468 7 acres Coordinates51 6 25 01 N 17 4 37 25 E 51 1069472 N 17 0770139 E 51 1069472 17 0770139Woodworking brewing textiles and agriculture Breslau s traditional industries flourished and service and manufacturing sectors were established which benefited from the nearby heavy industry of Upper Silesia Linke Hofmann specialized in locomotives became one of the city s largest employers and one of Europe s biggest manufacturers of railway carriages By the end of the 19th century Breslau threatened to eclipse Berlin the capital of Prussia and the German Empire as the financial centre of the country The retail sector flourished too represented by modern stores of Barasch Molinari Wertheim or Petersdorff At the end of the German Empire Breslau had become the economic cultural and administrative centre of Eastern Germany While Breslau itself was mostly Protestant the city also housed the Roman Catholic Diocese of Breslau the second largest diocese in the world and thus became entangled in Bismarcks Kulturkampf According to Norman Davies the city had a population divided among 63 Protestants 32 Catholics and 5 Jews 42 At the time of the German Empire Although the open conflict between Breslau s Protestant majority and Catholics was avoided public resentment was notable most notably in the affairs of the numerous student corporations Meanwhile Breslau became the focus of the Old Lutheran Church In 1883 the Old Lutheran Theological Seminar was opened which attracted numerous scholars among them Rudolf Rocholl By 1905 the community already had 75 pastors and 52 000 members The German Jewry of Breslau formed the Einheitsgemeinde united community of Orthodox and Reform Jews and thus narrowing the gap between both schools In 1872 Reformed Rabbi Joel and his Orthodox counterpart Gedaliah Tiktin jointly consecrated Breslau s New Synagogue From 14 000 in 1871 the Jewish community grew to 20 000 in 1910 thus becoming the third largest in Germany Breslau s confident vibrant and assimilated community with countless social charitable cultural and educational organisations became a model for others The first Jewish students fraternity in the German Empire the Viadrina was created in 1886 in Breslau Polish student organisations included Concordia Polonia and a branch of the Sokol association While most of Silesia s greats of the 19th century such as Gustav Freytag Adolph Menzel or Willibald Alexis had to leave Silesia to get recognized the cultural exodus was stopped by the 1890s In a few decades Breslau was turned into a cultural centre of international notability The old Art Academy moved into a bigger home and attracted artists like painter Max Wislicenus sculptor Theodor von Gosen and future Nobel prize winner Gerhard Hauptmann The architectural section of the academy rose to prominence under the directorship of Hans Poelzig who contributed greatly along with Max Berg to the Neues Bauen movement and Breslau gained fame as a centre of modernist architecture nbsp New Market Square in the 1890sPerforming arts in the city received a notable boost too In 1861 the Orchestral Society Orchesterverein was founded which achieved a good reputation in 1880 when Max Bruch was conductor of the orchestra and later the Polish musician Rafal Ludwik Maszkowski who conducted the orchestra till his death in 1901 he along with other Polish artists like Wanda Landowska Jozef Sliwinski Bronislaw Huberman and Wladyslaw Zelenski performed Polish themed plays as part of the repertoire of the Orchesterverein 43 The Opera house Stadttheater which was reopened in 1871 after two fires attracted artists like Leo Slezak and Wilhelm Furtwangler Johannes Brahms paid tribute to the city when he composed the Akademische Festoverture Op 80 upon receiving an honorary doctorate in 1879 Modern science flourished in the city with a wide array of achievements in almost every department During the German Empire Breslau s scientists received four Nobel Prizes plus two in literature Above all medical sciences were the flagship of academic research where Breslau not only presented new theories but also new disciplines Ferdinand Cohn the director of the Institute of Plant Physiology is considered a pioneer of bacteriology while Albert Neisser director of the Dermatology Clinic discovered gonorrhoea and Alois Alzheimer professor at the university discovered the Alzheimer disease In the 1890s Breslau developed into a centre of Social Democracy in Germany With one exception at least one member of the Silesian SPD was sent to the Reichstag in Berlin among them several prominent socialists like Eduard Bernstein the former secretary of Friedrich Engels With the outbreak of World War I Breslau s VI Army Corps was sent to the western front to form the pivot of the Schlieffen plan while the 1st Leibkurassiere saw action at the battle of the Marne before they were moved to the Eastern Front The end of Germany s western offensive and the absence of the VI Army Corps left Silesia and Breslau dangerously exposed In 1914 15 the Russian army stopped only 80 km to the east of Breslau which led to the evacuation of children and the erection of barbed wire defenses The Silesian Landwehr under General Remus von Woyrsch was rapidly deployed to face the Russian army but German victories at the Masurian lakes and Gorlice soon eliminated this threat The population in the city suffered badly during the war Food was rationed and prices for potatoes or eggs skyrocketed by more than 200 resulting in food riots The Turnip Winter of 1916 17 left many on the verge of starvation Food hoarding was decreed with capital punishment in the city After four years of war Breslau s trade had fallen by 66 per cent More than 8 000 people died of tuberculosis and the population dropped from 540 000 to 472 000 The end of World War I was followed by civil unrest and revolution in Germany The garrison in Breslau mutinied in November liberated convicts from jail among them Rosa Luxemburg looted shops and seized the offices of the Schlesische Zeitung Breslau s biggest newspaper When Emperor Wilhelm II left the country the German Empire dissolved Weimar Republic edit nbsp Announcement of the Socialist provisional government Breslau 14 November 1918The end of the German Empire led to workers and soldiers councils taking over civilian and military power across Germany with little or no opposition from the former imperial authorities 44 In Breslau too the authorities were deposed without larger tumults When Lord Mayor Paul Mattig and Archbishop Bertram among others called for a continuance of public duty and ordered General Pfeil of the VI Army Corps to release all political prisoners Pfeil ordered his soldiers to leave the barracks and as his last military order allowed a demonstration of Social Democrats in the Jahrhunderthalle One day later soldiers councils in the army and the Committee of Public Safety were formed On the same day a Volksrat people s council of Social Democrats Liberals the Catholic Centre Party and trade unions was founded led by Social Democrat Paul Lobe As relations between the Volksrat and Lobe s opponents were mostly consensual the revolution in Breslau was peaceful nbsp Lack of homes in 1919 Germany In this home with only one room and a kitchen lived 11 peopleDespite the largely peaceful transition Breslau faced several challenges which radicalized the political landscape of the city Social conditions got worse as 170 000 soldiers and displaced persons were expected to return with only 47 000 available quarters The prospect of a Communist government was a major fear The loss of nearby Posnania to a newly created Poland the prospect of further losses in Upper Silesia and the transformation of neighbouring Bohemia into a new state called Czechoslovakia spread anxiety among the people 45 who saw their city turn into an advance post of Germany 46 The number of Poles in the city dropped from an already low 4 5 000 to 0 5 per cent 20 years later clarification needed 47 48 Riots of the Spartacists in February resulted in the death of five protesters and injured nineteen A month later the Freikorps revolted clarification needed and Silesia was one of several eastern provinces in which the Kapp Putsch received solid backing 49 The commander of the military district supported the coup d etat and four Freikorps units peacefully took over large parts of the city The governor of Silesia Breslau s Chief of Police and the SPD President of Breslau were immediately purged Kapp s government however collapsed after a week and the Freikorps in Breslau withdrew killing 18 people and wounding many others Anti Semitic propaganda moreover culminated in the murder of Bernhard Schottlander the Jewish editor of the Schlesische Arbeiter Zeitung Jewish stores and hotels were attacked by mobs in the city 50 nbsp Church of St Martin became one of the focal points of social life of the Polish population in the interwar periodAfter First World War the Polish community started having masses in Polish in the Churches of Saint Ann and since 1921 in St Martin Church the Polish consulate was opened on the Main Square additionally a Polish School was formed by Helena Adamczewska 51 Soon after tensions around the Upper Silesian plebiscite sparked violence in Breslau where widespread rioting was mostly directed against the Inter Allied Plebiscite Commission especially the French but also the Polish The buildings of the Polish consulate and school were demolished and Polish library was burned along with several thousand volumes 52 53 Problems culminated however in 1923 Hyperinflation ruined many people and strikes and walk outs swept all over Germany 50 large shops in the commercial centre were looted in the city when partly anti Semitic 54 riots broke out on 22 July and six looters were killed In 1919 Breslau became the capital of the newly created Province of Lower Silesia and its first head of government German Oberprasident was social democrat Felix Philipp The Social Democrats also won the Lower Silesian elections of 1921 with 51 19 followed by the Catholic centre with 20 2 DVP with 11 9 DDP with 9 5 and the Communists with 3 6 The mid 1920s brought political stability mostly due to the leadership of Gustav Stresemann 55 In 1 Election result in Lower Silesia and Breslau showed a solid Socialist majority in 1924 and 1928 In 1925 the Silesian NSDAP was founded the party however garnered only 1 per cent of the votes in 1928 well below the national average of 2 8 per cent nbsp Arrest of 200 Nationalsocialists in Jaschkowitz 15 km to the south of Breslau 1930After the incorporation of 54 communes between 1925 and 1930 the city expanded to 175 km2 and housed 600 000 people Between 26 and 29 June 1930 it hosted the Deutsche Kampfspiele a sporting event for German athletes after Germany was excluded from the Olympic Games after World War I nbsp Wohnungs und Werkraumausstellung WuWa a building designed by Hans Scharoun today Park HotelThis peaceful period ended with the Wall Street Crash and the following collapse of the German economy Unemployment rose from 1 3 million in September 1929 to 6 million 1 3 of the working population in 1933 in Breslau from 6 672 persons in 1925 to 23 978 in 1929 the worst figures in Germany after Chemnitz The number of families living on welfare support was more than twice as high as in Leipzig or Dresden Public faith in democratic institutions faded and anti democratic parties Communists and Nazis gained support The battles of both were played out all over Germany also in Breslau In June 1931 the annual rally of the Stahlhelm marked by violent rhetoric and clashes took place in the city The violence in the city spiralled in the summer of 1932 On 23 June a column of SA men was attacked by Communists with eleven seriously injured followed by a killed Socialist three days later On 6 August grenades were thrown during battles between Nazis and Communists In July 1932 Hitler spoke in Breslau attracting 16 000 listeners In the following elections his party received 43 of the Breslau vote the third highest result in Germany On 30 January 1933 he was appointed Chancellor of Germany Despite all turbulences the cultural scene in the Weimar Republic and in Breslau flourished The reorganized Academy of Arts reached its creative height under the directorship of Oskar Moll and can be considered a predecessor of the first Bauhaus Many Bauhaus artists among them Oskar Schlemmer and Georg Muche taught in Breslau while several lecturers and students of the academy became leading protagonists of the main artistic trends in the Weimar Republic like Alexander Kanoldt who was co founder of the Munich New Secession and became one of the stars of the Neue Sachlichkeit or Hans Scharoun an important exponent of Organic architecture In 1929 the Werkbund opened WuWa German Wohnungs und Werkraumausstellung in Breslau Scheitnig an international showcase of modern architecture by architects of the Silesian branch of the Werkbund During the inter war years the city was also the centre of the Polish national movement radiating towards other groups of Poles in Lower Silesia it focused on Polish cultural life and organisational efforts 56 Nazi period and World War II editThe city became one of the largest support bases of the NSDAP movement and in the 1932 elections the Nazi party received in it 43 5 of votes achieving the third biggest victory in Weimar Germany 57 A reason for the strong NSDAP support may have been that Breslau was the city among the eight largest cities of Germany with the highest rate of unemployment which the Nazi party promised to tackle 58 Before the Holocaust Breslau was home to the fourth largest Jewish community in Germany In 1933 the Gestapo began actions against Jewish and Polish students in the city 59 who were issued special segregationist ID documents like those of Communists Social Democrats trade unionists and other people deemed threats to the state Laws against Jews came into power limiting their involvement in all spheres of life People were arrested and beaten for using Polish in public 60 The Polish cultural centre the Polish House in Breslau was destroyed by the police 59 In 1938 The New Synagogue along with many Jewish owned businesses and properties were destroyed during the Kristallnacht and many of the city s 23 240 Jews were deported to pre war Nazi concentration camps those who remained were also murdered by the Nazi in the Holocaust In June 1939 Polish students were expelled from the university 61 The city s coat of arms was changed by the Nazis in 1938 as it contained the letter W in reference to its original name and thus was considered too Slavic 62 Additionally 88 locations in the city received new German names as part of the campaign of Germanization 63 During the invasion of Poland which started World War II in September 1939 the Germans carried out mass arrests of local Polish activists and banned Polish organizations 61 The city became the headquarters of the southern district of the Selbstschutz which task was to commit atrocities against Poles 64 Most of the Polish elites also left during the 1920s and 1930s while Polish leaders who remained were sent to concentration camps 59 During the war 363 Czech and 293 Polish prisoners as well as resistance members from Western Europe were executed by guillotine in the city s prison 65 In total the German regime killed 896 people in this way In 1941 the remaining pre war Polish minority in the city as well as Polish slave labourers organised a resistance group called Olimp In 1942 additional Polish resistance groups were reported to be in existence in the city Jaszczurka Sila Zbrojna Polski and Polska Organizacja Polityczna 66 nbsp Memorial plaque to Polish forced laborers under Germany in WroclawIn addition a network of concentration camps and forced labour camps or Arbeitslager was established in the district around Breslau to serve the city s growing industrial concerns including FAMO Junkers and Krupp The total number of prisoners held at such camps exceeded many tens of thousands 67 Official Nazi estimates reported 43 950 forced labourers in 1943 and 51 548 in 1944 most of them being Poles 68 At the end of 1944 between 30 000 and 60 000 captured Poles were sent to Breslau after the defeat of Warsaw uprising 69 There were four subcamps of the Gross Rosen concentration camp in the city in which Nazi Germany imprisoned about 3 400 3 800 men of various nationalities including Poles Russians Italians Frenchmen Ukrainians Czechs Belgians Yugoslavs Chinese and about 1 500 Jewish women 70 Many of the prisoners died and the remaining were evacuated to the main camp of Gross Rosen in January 1945 70 The Germans also operated three subcamps of the Stalag VIII B 344 prisoner of war camp 71 and two Nazi prisons including a youth prison both with multiple forced labour subcamps 72 73 nbsp Commemorative plate honouring bombing of the main railway station in 1943 by Polish resistance in the city placed in 1995Throughout most of World War II Breslau was not close to the fighting The city became a haven for refugees swelling in population to nearly one million Polish resistance from the group Zagra Lin 74 successfully attacked a Nazi Germany s troop transport on the main railway station in the city on 23 April 1943 and a commemorative plate honouring their actions was placed after Nazi Germany was defeated in 1945 75 76 77 78 In February 1945 the Soviet Red Army approached the city Gauleiter Karl Hanke declared the city a Festung fortress i e a stronghold to be held at all costs Concentration camp prisoners were forced to help build new fortifications see Arbeitseinsatz In one area the workers were ordered to construct a military airfield intended for use in resupplying the fortress while the entire residential district along the Kaiserstrasse now Plac Grunwaldzki was razed The authorities threatened to shoot anyone who refused to do their assigned labour Eyewitnesses estimated that some 13 000 died under enemy fire on the airfield alone In the end one of the few planes that ever used it was that of the fleeing Gauleiter Hanke 79 After the encirclement of the city by the Red Army members of the resistance succeeded in making contact with the Russians In March 1945 twelve Nazi party offices were destroyed killing 30 Nazi members 80 Hanke finally lifted a ban on the evacuation of women and children when it was almost too late During his poorly organised evacuation in January and February 1945 around 18 000 people froze to death mostly children and babies in icy snowstorms and 20 C weather Some 200 000 civilians less than a third of the pre war population remained in the city because the railway connections to the west were damaged or overloaded By the end of the Siege of Breslau 50 of the old town 90 of the western and southern and 10 30 of the northern and northeastern quarters of the city had been destroyed 40 000 inhabitants including forced labourers lay dead in the ruins of homes and factories After a siege of nearly three months Fortress Breslau surrendered on 7 May 1945 It was one of the last major cities in Germany to fall 81 failed verification Return to Poland edit nbsp Preserved part of Osobowice cemetery with Russian Serbian and German graves 82 83 People s Republic of Poland edit Along with almost all of Lower Silesia post war Wroclaw became part of Poland under the terms of the Potsdam Conference pending a final peace conference with Germany The town became the biggest city of the so called Recovered Territories On 24 May 1945 the surviving members of the Polish pre war minority from the Nazi German genocide in Wroclaw were met by Polish authorities 84 Boleslaw Drobner the city s newly appointed mayor welcomed them in Free Poland and urged pre war Poles from Wroclaw to stay in the city expressing his view that the Polish state needs people like them to awake to life after the war many of the addressed heeded this call and pre war Poles became active members of Wroclaw s political and cultural life forming an association called Klub Ludzi ze znakiem P People with the P sign remembering those Poles who perished under Nazi German rule in the city 85 Franciszek Juszczak a long time leader of the Polish community in Wroclaw before World War II and resistance member was nominated by Drobner to the position of vice president of the Lower Silesian Chamber of Crafts 86 In close cooperation with authorities he formed Zwiazek Polakow Bylych Obywateli Niemieckich Union of Poles Former German Citizens The pre war Polish minority though officially regarded as heroes was subject of a verification process to determine their Polishness in a procedure described as an experience of some unpleasantness 85 According to German historian Gregor Thum in 1949 2 769 or about 1 per cent of the city s population were pre war inhabitants of the city 1 029 of them able to speak Polish fluently 87 nbsp Kozanow tower blocksIn the summer of 1945 the city had a predominately German population 88 who were expelled to one of the two post war German states between 1945 and 1949 However as was the case with other Lower Silesian cities a considerable German presence remained in Wroclaw until the late 1950s the city s last German school closed in 1963 The population of Wroclaw was soon increased by the resettlement of Poles forming part of postwar repatriation of Poles 1944 1946 75 as well as the forced deportations from Polish lands annexed by the Soviet Union in the east 25 including from cities such as Lwow now Lviv Ukraine Stanislawow now Ivano Frankivsk Ukraine Wilno now Vilnius Lithuania and Grodno now Hrodna Belarus After the destruction during the Siege of Breslau the city was further destroyed by vandalism fire and the razing and dismantling of factories and material assets by the Soviet Union The economic potential of the city was decreased to 40 of the prewar situation 89 Wroclaw was further weakened by the so called Szaber which transferred goods to Central Poland and the campaign bricks for Warsaw by the Polish government ten years later which provided reconstruction material for the levelled Old Town of the Polish capital This loss of historic structures was irreversible and the consequences are still visible today 90 The rebuilding of the town was characterized by a mix of polonization and degermanization which led to reconstruction and destruction Gothic architecture was painstakingly restored while testimonies of later eras were often neglected or destroyed For example even as late as in the 1970s Stucco elements from the Baroque were chiseled off in some of the town s churches according to the ideologically enforced return to the allegedly original Piast state 91 The process of degermanization also included the removal and destruction of almost all German non religious monuments 92 and the elimination of inscriptions even centuries old epitaphs and in churches 93 Between 1970 and 1972 all non Jewish German cemeteries were destroyed 94 Tower blocks were massively constructed both in the city and around it e g Kozanow housing estate In 1964 the Monument to the Lwow Professors massacred by the Germans in 1941 was unveiled After the fall of communism edit nbsp 1997 Central European flood in WroclawIn May 1997 Wroclaw was visited by Pope John Paul II 95 In July 1997 the city was heavily affected by a flood of the Oder River the worst flooding in post war Poland Germany and the Czech Republic Around one third of the city s area stood underwater 96 An earlier equally devastating flood of the river took place in 1903 97 After the flood big areas of the city were renovated including Main Market Square with the Town Hall and the Wroclaw Palace 98 Historical populations editYear 1800 1831 1850 1852 1880 1900 1910 1925 1933 1939Inhabitants 64 500 89 500 114 000 121 100 272 900 422 700 510 000 555 200 625 198 629 565Year 1946 99 1956 100 1960 1967 1970 1975 1980 1990 1999 2009Inhabitants 171 000 400 000 431 800 487 700 526 000 579 900 617 700 640 577 650 000 632 240See also editJewish art collectors in Breslau Timeline of Wroclaw historyReferences edit Dariusz Andrzej Sikorski Wczesnopiastowska architektura sakralna jako zrodlo historyczne dla dziejow Kosciola w Polsce Wydawnictwo Poznanskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciol Nauk Poznan 2012 ISBN 83 7654 224 9 Ziemie polskie w X wieku i ich znaczenie w ksztaltowaniu sie nowej mapy Europy Henryk Samsonowicz Krakow Universitas 2000 ISBN 83 7052 710 8 OCLC 45809955 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Weczerka p 39 a b Weczerka p 40 Norman Davies Mikrokosmos page 110 115 Weczerka p 41 Benedykt Zientara 1997 Henryk Brodaty i jego czasy in Polish Warsaw Trio pp 317 320 ISBN 978 83 85660 46 0 R Zerelik in M Czaplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 57 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 Microcosm A Portrait of a Central European City Paperback Norman Davies Roger Moorhouse page 90 Pimlico 2003 Fighting between Poles and Czechs were recorded in 1314 It would be particularly out of place to assume that the Polish element was decimated The villages on the right bank of the Odra remained solidly Polish while Polish names such as Baran or Cebula figured regularly even among the city s patricians a b Thum p 316 Maciej Lagiewski Halina Okolska Piotr Oszczanowski 2009 1000 Jahre Breslau Wroclaw Muzeum Miejskie Wroclawia p 35 ISBN 978 83 89551 57 3 Norbert Conrads 1994 Deutsche Geschichte im Osten Europas Schlesien Berlin Siedler Verlag pp 55 56 ISBN 978 3 88680 775 8 Microcosm A Portrait of a Central European City Paperback Norman Davies Roger Moorhouse page 134 Pimlico 2003 a b Adam Maksymowicz Niezwykla wyprawa Benedykta Polaka Niedziela pl in Polish Retrieved 15 May 2020 Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN Warsaw 1975 vol III page 505 Conrads p 100 Microcosm A Portrait of a Central European City Paperback Norman Davies Roger Moorhouse page 88 89 Pimlico 2003 Silesia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 16 March 2023 Marek Cetwinski 1996 Historia Wroclawia w datach in Polish Wroclaw TMW Wratislawia Norman Davies Roger Moorhouse 2002 Znak ed Mikrokosmos in Polish Krakow p 127 ISBN 978 83 240 0172 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Microcosm page 103 Dlugosz ks IX s 153 Karol Gorski Zwiazek Pruski i poddanie sie Prus Polsce zbior tekstow zrodlowych Instytut Zachodni Poznan 1949 p LXXII in Polish W Korta Historia Slaska do 1763 roku Warszawa 2003 s 185 Maciej Lagiewski 11 September 2017 Spotkanie krolow Gazeta Wroclawska in Polish Retrieved 15 May 2020 R Zerelik Dzieje Slaska do 1526 roku w Historia Slaska red P Klint Wroclaw 2007 Hieronim Szczegola Kasper Elyan z Glogowa pierwszy polski drukarz Muzeum Ziemi Lubuskiej Zielona Gora 1968 p 4 6 in Polish Szczegola p 6 Silesia was divided by the River Oder into its two national halves German and Polish Vretslav lay astride the dividing line As the second city of the Kingdom of Bohemia Vretslav also supported a considerable Czech community Norman Davies Microcosm page 135 a b c d Microcosm page 182 Marek Czaplinski Historia Slaska Wyd II Wroclaw Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego 2007 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 Towarzystwo Literacko Slowianskie http encyklopedia pwn pl haslo php id 3988415 Encyklopedia PWN Prace literackie Tome 35 page 10 Uniwersytet Wroclawski im Boleslawa Bieruta Uniwersytet Wroclawski Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe Norman Davies Microcosm page 239 Nauki polityczne Tom 37 Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego 1989 page 157 Zycie i mysl Tom 36 Wydania 7 12 Instytut Zachodni Pax page 16 1987 Slaski kwartalnik historyczny Sobotka Tom 54 Wroclawskie Towarzystwo Milosnikow Historii Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 1999 page 293Liczba Polakow zyjacych na przelomie XIX i XX w we Wroclawiu nie jest znana szacunki mowia o 20 tys wedlug spisu z 1905 r polskosc zadeklarowalo 8927 osob Davies Microcosm page 304 Davies Microcosm page 305 Microcosm A Portrait of a Central European City Paperback Norman Davies Roger Moorhouse page 304 Pimlico 2003 Norman Davies Microcosm page 305 At the time when rector Felix Dahn had banned all Polish student bodies Norman Davies Microcosm page 304 Official Page of Wroclaw Philharmonic Orchestra History The November revolution 1918 1919 PDF Deutscher Bundestag March 2006 Retrieved 18 May 2023 Norman Davies Microcosm page 329 Norman Davies Microcosm page 328 Norman Davies Microcosm page 360 361 Harasimowicz p 466f Haffner Sebastian 2002 Die deutsche Revolution 1918 19 The German Revolution 1918 19 in German Hamburg Kindler p 224 ISBN 3 463 40423 0 Norman Davies Microcosm page 363 Microcosm page 361 Norman Davies Microcosm page 361 Norman Davies Microcosm page 362 van Rahden Juden p 323 26 Norman Davies Microcosm page 333 Nauki polityczne Tom 37 Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego 1989 page 157 Norman Davies Mikrokosmos page 369 Eduard Muhle Breslau Geschichte einer europaischen Metropole in German p 245 a b c Davies Moorhouse p 395 Kulak p 252 a b Cyganski Miroslaw 1984 Hitlerowskie przesladowania przywodcow i aktywu Zwiazkow Polakow w Niemczech w latach 1939 1945 Przeglad Zachodni in Polish 4 37 Wroclawskie skandale z herbem miasta w tle Gazeta Wyborcza Wroclaw Interview with Professor Roscislaw Zerelik 12 March 2010 Stare i nowe osiedla Zygmunt Antkowiak Zaklad Narodowy imienia Ossolinskich page 8 1973 Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN p 63 Ogolnopolski Portal Sluzby Wieziennej Archived from the original on 19 September 2008 Retrieved 21 September 2008 Microcosm page 403 Account Suspended Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Microcosm page 389 390 Microcosm page 390 a b Subcamps of KL Gross Rosen Gross Rosen Museum in Rogoznica Retrieved 2 January 2021 Working Parties Lamsdorf Stalag VIIIB 344 Prisoner of War Camp 1940 1945 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Strafgefangnis und Jugendgefangnis Breslau Bundesarchiv de in German Retrieved 2 January 2021 Untersuchungsgefangnis Breslau Bundesarchiv de in German Retrieved 2 January 2021 pl Zagra Lin Wywiad sabotaz dywersja polski ruch oporu w Berlinie 1939 1945 Juliusz Pollack page 141 Ludowa Spoldzielnia Wydawnicza 1991 Jak Polacy zolnierzy w Breslau zabili Gazeta Wroclawska 21 May 2010 Wojskowy przeglad historyczny Volume 40 Issues 3 4 1995 page 264 Historia Wroclawia Od twierdzy fryderycjanskiej do twierdzy hitlerowskiej Cezary Busko Wlodzimierz Suleja Teresa Kulak Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie 2001 page 334 Davies Moorhouse p 31 Willy Brandt 2007 Verbrecher und andere Deutsche ein Bericht aus Deutschland 1946 Dietz p 149 Festung Breslau 1945 wratislavia net Retrieved 16 March 2023 Cmentarz Osobowicki wroclaw gazeta pl Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Zarzad Cmentarzy Komunalnych Cmentarz Komunalny Oddzial Osobowice Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2010 Do nich przyszla Polska wspomnienia Polakow mieszkajacych we Wroclawiu od konca XIX w do 1939r Alicja Zawisza Wydawnictwo Wratislavia 19932 a b Historia Wroclawia Od twierdzy fryderycjanskiej do twierdzy hitlerowskiej Cezary Busko Wlodzimierz Suleja Teresa Kulak Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie 2001 page 343 Archived copy Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Thum Gregor 2011 Uprooted How Breslau became Wroclaw during the century of expulsions Princeton University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 691 14024 7 Mazower M 2008 Hitler s Empire How the Nazis Ruled Europe Penguin Press P544 Thum p 183 Thum p 200 Marek Zybura 2005 Der Umgang mit dem deutschen Kulturerbe in Schlesien nach 1945 Senfkorn Verlag Theisen p 22 Thum p 382 Thum p 377 Thum p 390 14 lat temu Jan Pawel II goscil we Wroclawiu Gazeta Wroclawska in Polish 31 May 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2020 1997 great flood of Oder River photo gallery 1903 great flood of the Oder river photo gallery Archived from the original on 1 January 2011 Muzeum Historyczne Archived from the original on 1 September 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2010 Immediately following Flight and expulsion of Germans from Poland during and after World War II The surge in population is the result of Repatriation of Poles 1944 1946 and the subsequent forced deportation of Poles living in Polish areas annexed by the Soviet UnionBibliography editSee also Timeline of Wroclaw Bibliography English edit Davies Norman Roger Moorhouse 2002 Microcosm Portrait of a Central European City London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 06243 5 Thum Gregor 2011 Uprooted How Breslau Became Wroclaw During the Century of Expulsions Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14024 7 Polish edit Dawna Polonia wroclawska Alicja Zawisza Towarzystwo Milosnikow Wroclawia 1984 Harasimowicz Jan 2001 Wlodzimierz Suleja ed Encyklopedia Wroclawia Wroclaw Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie ISBN 978 83 7384 561 9 Historia Wroclawia w datach Marek Cetwinski Romuald Gelles Historia Wroclawia Od twierdzy fryderycjanskiej do twierdzy hitlerowskiej Cezary Busko Wlodzimierz Suleja Teresa Kulak Kulak Teresa 2006 Wroclaw Przewodnik historyczny A to Polska wlasnie Wroclaw Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie ISBN 978 83 7384 472 8 Polacy na studiach lekarskich we Wroclawiu w latach 1811 1918 Jan Smereka Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 1979 Slawni Polacy we Wroclawiu w XIX wieku informator wystawa Muzeum Historyczne we Wroclawiu Oficyna Gryf 1987 Studenci Polacy na Uniwersytecie Wroclawskim w latach 1918 1939 katalog zachowanych archiwaliow Alicja Zawisza Schlesische Friedrich Wilhelms Universitat zu Breslau Breslau Uniwersytet 1972German edit Breslauer Urkundenbuch complete collection of all deeds of the city in German and Latin Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T 11 Breslauer Stadtbuch liber civitatis town book of Wroclaw containing the councilmen since 1287 and documents regarding the constitutional history in German and Latin Codex Diplomaticus Silesiae T 3 Henricus pauper account book of Wroclaw 1299 1358 in German and Latin Dorn Leonard 2016 Regimentskultur und Netzwerk Dietrich Goswin von Bockum Dolffs und das Kurassier Regiment No 1 in Breslau 1788 1805 Vereinigte Westfalische Adelsarchive e V Veroffentlichung Nr 20 Munster Scheuermann Gerhard 1994 Das Breslau Lexikon 2 vols Dulmen Laumann Verlagsgesellschaft ISBN 978 3 89960 132 9 Thum Gregor 2003 Die fremde Stadt Breslau 1945 Berlin Siedler ISBN 978 3 88680 795 6 van Rahden Till 2000 Juden und andere Breslauer Die Beziehungen zwischen Juden Protestanten und Katholiken in einer deutschen Grossstadt von 1860 bis 1925 Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 525 35732 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Wroclaw amp oldid 1166442053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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