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Jarosław

Jarosław (Polish: [jaˈrɔswaf] ; Ukrainian: Ярослав, romanizedYaroslav, IPA: [jɐroˈslɑu̯]; Yiddish: יאַרעסלאָוו, romanizedYareslov; German: Jaroslau) is a town in southeastern Poland, situated on the San River. The town had 37,479 inhabitants in 2019.[1] It is the capital of Jarosław County in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship.

Jarosław
Town Hall
Jarosław
Coordinates: 50°1′7″N 22°40′47″E / 50.01861°N 22.67972°E / 50.01861; 22.67972
Country Poland
Voivodeship Subcarpathian
CountyJarosław
GminaJarosław (urban gmina)
First mentioned1152
Town rights1375
Government
 • MayorWaldemar Paluch
Area
 • Total34.46 km2 (13.31 sq mi)
Population
 (2014)
 • Total37,479
 • Density1,100/km2 (2,800/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
37-500
Car platesRJA
Websitehttp://www.jaroslaw.pl

History edit

Jarosław is located in the territory of the old Polish tribe of the Lendians. According to tradition, the town was established in 1031 by Yaroslav the Wise, after the area was annexed from Poland by the Kievan Rus', although the first confirmed mention of the town comes from 1152. The region was eventually regained by Poland, and the settlement was granted Magdeburg town rights by Polish Duke Władysław Opolczyk in 1375.

The city quickly developed as an important trade centre and port on the San River, reaching the period of its greatest prosperity in the 16th and 17th centuries. It had trade routes linking Silesia with Ruthenia, Gdańsk, and Hungary. Merchants from such distant countries as Spain, England, Finland, Armenia and Persia arrived for the annual three-week-long fair on the feast of the Assumption. In 1574 a Jesuit college was established in Jarosław.

 
A historical view of Jarosław on a mural in the town center

Jarosław was a private town of Polish nobility, including the Tarnowski, Jarosławski, Odrowąż, Kostka, Sieniawski, Zamoyski, Wiśniowiecki, Koniecpolski, Sobieski, Sanguszko and Czartoryski families. The Jarosławski family of Leliwa coat of arms hailed from the town.

In the 1590s Tatars from the Ottoman Empire pillaged the surrounding countryside. (See Moldavian Magnate Wars, The Magnate Wars (1593–1617), Causes.) They were unable to overcome the city's fortifications, but their raids started to diminish the city's economic strength and importance. Outbreaks of bubonic plague in the 1620s, and the invasion known as the Swedish Deluge in 1655–60 further undermined the city's prominence. In March 1656, led by Polish national hero Stefan Czarniecki, the Poles defeated the invading Swedes under King Charles X Gustav in the Battle of Jarosław. In the Great Northern War of 1700-21, the region was repeatedly pillaged by Russian, Saxon, and Swedish armies, causing the city to decline further.

After the fall of the Rákóczi's War of Independence against Austria in 1711, Hungarian leader Francis II Rákóczi and his court, including essayist Kelemen Mikes, found refuge in Jarosław.[2] In 1711, Rákóczi and some Hungarians left for Gdańsk, while some stayed, and later on, several Hungarians were buried in the local Corpus Christi Collegiate Church, before their exhumation and burial in Hungary in 1907.[3]

In the mid-eighteenth century, Roman Catholics constituted 53.7% of the population, members of the Greek Catholic Church 23.9%, and Jews 22.3%.[4]

Jarosław was annexed by Austria in the First Partition of Poland in 1772. It was part of newly formed Galicia (Austrian Partition) until Poland regained independence in 1918 following World War I. In the interbellum the city was administratively located in the Polish Lwów Voivodeship.

During the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, which started World War II, this was the site of the Battle of Jarosław. Germany defeated the Poles and captured the town. Shortly afterwards the German Einsatzgruppe I entered the town to commit various atrocities against the population.[5] Under German occupation, the town was part of the Kraków District of the General Government.[6] The Polish resistance movement was active in the town, and from May 1940, the underground Polish newspaper Odwet was distributed in Jarosław.[7]

In 1944, the town was captured by the Red Army of the Soviet Union and restored to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which remained in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s. Some local Polish resistance officers were arrested by the Soviets and imprisoned in a Soviet camp in Trzebuska.[8] The communists expelled most of Jarosław's Ukrainian population, at first to Soviet territories and later to territories regained from Germany.

It was administratively located in the Rzeszów Voivodeship (1945–1974) and Przemyśl Voivodeship (1975–1998).

Jewish Jarosław edit

The first Jews reportedly arrived in Jarosław in 1464. The first rabbi of Jarosław was Rabbi Nathan Neta Ashkenazi, in 1590. A year later, the new Council of Four Lands (Vaad Arba Aratzot) began convening in Jarosław, rotating the meetings with the city of Lwów (Lviv).

Until 1608 with a small Jewish community, religious facilities were not allowed. Still, Rabbi Solomon Efraim of Lontschitz (the author of "Kli Yakar"), a prominent and well known rabbi, lived here. By 1670 there was a large "government" synagogue created, although protested by the Christian community of the city. During attacks on the city by Tatars and Swedes, Jewish merchandise and sometimes homes were set on fire. In 1765, there were 1,884 Jews in the city and towns around it. A Jewish school was established sometime later. The famous rabbi Levi Isaac of Berdyczów (Berdychiv) studied in Jarosław circa 1760 and was called "the genius of Yeruslav". A fire in 1805 burnt down the old synagogue and a new one was established more according to tradition to replace it. The new synagogue was completed in 1811. A census taken in 1901 notes that Jews were 25% of the population: 5701 Jewish families.

 
Great Synagogue

In a story about Jacob Kranc told by Rabbi Jacob Orenstein around 1850, about the appointment of the Jarosław rabbi, Rabbi Orenstein had refused the appointment of Rabbi of Jarosław because it would be against his old uncle's appointment. The city council had already written his appointment and wished to express their sorrow for its cancellation. The Dubner Magid had just entered the city on a snowy winter day, and was taken directly to Orenstein's house, together with the city council, who happened to pass by him. But the walk up the steps was enough to create a moving speech, remembered years later, and accounted for in the book.

In 1921 the last rabbi was appointed, Rabbi Shmaiya HaLevi Steinberg. He wrote a book about the Jews of his town, and in the 1930s sent two copies to the National Hebrew Library in Jerusalem. These copies are the only surviving copies of the book after the Holocaust.

In September 1939, Jarosław was captured by Germans. Most of the Jews crossed the San river to the Soviet-occupied part of Poland and hid in the Carpathian mountains, including the elder rabbi and his family. Those that stayed were shot and killed by the German soldiers.

Sights edit

Landmarks edit

  • Kraków Gate and old fortifications
  • Main Square
  • City Hall
  • Municipal Cultural Centre, former seat of the "Sokół" Polish Gymnastic Society
  • Old trade centre
  • Pełkinie Palace
  • Rydzikowska house
  • Renaissance Orsetti Museum
  • Attavanti House, now the Center for Culture and City Promotion
  • Gruszewiczowska House
  • Queen Marie's House
  • Renaissance Collegiate Church of Corpus Christi, the oldest former Jesuit church in Poland
  • Benedictine Abbey
  • Baroque Basilica of Our Lady of Sorrows
  • Dominican Monastery
  • Baroque Church of the Holy Trinity
  • Baroque Church of the Holy Spirit
  • Old Synagogue
  • Small Synagogue

Sports edit

 
Footballers of JKS 1909 Jarosław in 1909

Jarosław is a town with a long sports history. In 1889, a branch of the "Sokół" Polish Gymnastic Society was founded in Jarosław. Nowadays, the town's most notable sports club are:

Notable people edit

Twin towns - sister cities edit

Jarosław is twinned with:[10]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Jarosław w liczbach". polskawliczbach.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  2. ^ Z Bogiem za ojczyznę i wolność – o Franciszku II Rakoczym bohaterze Węgier (in Polish). Warszawa: Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie. 2016. p. 30. ISBN 978-83-62235-88-9.
  3. ^ Z Bogiem za ojczyznę i wolność – o Franciszku II Rakoczym bohaterze Węgier, p. 31
  4. ^ J. Motylkiewicz. "Ethnic Communities in the Towns of the Polish-Ukrainian Borderland in the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries". C. M. Hann, P. R. Magocsi ed. Galicia: A Multicultured Land. University of Toronto Press. 2005. p. 37.
  5. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. pp. 58–59.
  6. ^ Wardzyńska, p. 238
  7. ^ Gruszczyński, Włodzimierz (2011). Odwet i Jędrusie (in Polish). Zagnańsk. p. 21.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Kalisz, Michał (2009). "Rzeszowska Golgota". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 4 (99). IPN. p. 85. ISSN 1641-9561.
  9. ^ "Joseph Wilf, 'visionary' benefactor, dies at 91". New Jersey Jewish News - NJJN. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Jarosław Official website - Partner Cities".  (in Polish) © 2008 Urząd Miasta Jarosław. Ul. Rynek 1, 37-500 Jarosław. Retrieved 23 October 2008.

External links edit

  • Jarosław city portal
  • Jarosław (Yaruslav) Hassidim in Modern day Israel

jarosław, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, yaroslavl, inhabited, locality, polish, jaˈrɔswaf, ukrainian, Ярослав, romanized, yaroslav, jɐroˈslɑu, yiddish, יא, רעסלא, וו, romanized, yareslov, german, jaroslau, town, southeastern, poland, situated, r. For other uses see Jaroslaw disambiguation Not to be confused with Yaroslavl inhabited locality Jaroslaw Polish jaˈrɔswaf Ukrainian Yaroslav romanized Yaroslav IPA jɐroˈslɑu Yiddish יא רעסלא וו romanized Yareslov German Jaroslau is a town in southeastern Poland situated on the San River The town had 37 479 inhabitants in 2019 1 It is the capital of Jaroslaw County in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship JaroslawTown HallFlagCoat of armsJaroslawCoordinates 50 1 7 N 22 40 47 E 50 01861 N 22 67972 E 50 01861 22 67972Country PolandVoivodeship SubcarpathianCountyJaroslawGminaJaroslaw urban gmina First mentioned1152Town rights1375Government MayorWaldemar PaluchArea Total34 46 km2 13 31 sq mi Population 2014 Total37 479 Density1 100 km2 2 800 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code37 500Car platesRJAWebsitehttp www jaroslaw pl Contents 1 History 2 Jewish Jaroslaw 3 Sights 3 1 Landmarks 4 Sports 5 Notable people 6 Twin towns sister cities 7 Gallery 8 References 9 External linksHistory editJaroslaw is located in the territory of the old Polish tribe of the Lendians According to tradition the town was established in 1031 by Yaroslav the Wise after the area was annexed from Poland by the Kievan Rus although the first confirmed mention of the town comes from 1152 The region was eventually regained by Poland and the settlement was granted Magdeburg town rights by Polish Duke Wladyslaw Opolczyk in 1375 The city quickly developed as an important trade centre and port on the San River reaching the period of its greatest prosperity in the 16th and 17th centuries It had trade routes linking Silesia with Ruthenia Gdansk and Hungary Merchants from such distant countries as Spain England Finland Armenia and Persia arrived for the annual three week long fair on the feast of the Assumption In 1574 a Jesuit college was established in Jaroslaw nbsp A historical view of Jaroslaw on a mural in the town centerJaroslaw was a private town of Polish nobility including the Tarnowski Jaroslawski Odrowaz Kostka Sieniawski Zamoyski Wisniowiecki Koniecpolski Sobieski Sanguszko and Czartoryski families The Jaroslawski family of Leliwa coat of arms hailed from the town In the 1590s Tatars from the Ottoman Empire pillaged the surrounding countryside See Moldavian Magnate Wars The Magnate Wars 1593 1617 Causes They were unable to overcome the city s fortifications but their raids started to diminish the city s economic strength and importance Outbreaks of bubonic plague in the 1620s and the invasion known as the Swedish Deluge in 1655 60 further undermined the city s prominence In March 1656 led by Polish national hero Stefan Czarniecki the Poles defeated the invading Swedes under King Charles X Gustav in the Battle of Jaroslaw In the Great Northern War of 1700 21 the region was repeatedly pillaged by Russian Saxon and Swedish armies causing the city to decline further After the fall of the Rakoczi s War of Independence against Austria in 1711 Hungarian leader Francis II Rakoczi and his court including essayist Kelemen Mikes found refuge in Jaroslaw 2 In 1711 Rakoczi and some Hungarians left for Gdansk while some stayed and later on several Hungarians were buried in the local Corpus Christi Collegiate Church before their exhumation and burial in Hungary in 1907 3 In the mid eighteenth century Roman Catholics constituted 53 7 of the population members of the Greek Catholic Church 23 9 and Jews 22 3 4 Jaroslaw was annexed by Austria in the First Partition of Poland in 1772 It was part of newly formed Galicia Austrian Partition until Poland regained independence in 1918 following World War I In the interbellum the city was administratively located in the Polish Lwow Voivodeship During the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 which started World War II this was the site of the Battle of Jaroslaw Germany defeated the Poles and captured the town Shortly afterwards the German Einsatzgruppe I entered the town to commit various atrocities against the population 5 Under German occupation the town was part of the Krakow District of the General Government 6 The Polish resistance movement was active in the town and from May 1940 the underground Polish newspaper Odwet was distributed in Jaroslaw 7 In 1944 the town was captured by the Red Army of the Soviet Union and restored to Poland although with a Soviet installed communist regime which remained in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s Some local Polish resistance officers were arrested by the Soviets and imprisoned in a Soviet camp in Trzebuska 8 The communists expelled most of Jaroslaw s Ukrainian population at first to Soviet territories and later to territories regained from Germany It was administratively located in the Rzeszow Voivodeship 1945 1974 and Przemysl Voivodeship 1975 1998 Jewish Jaroslaw editThe first Jews reportedly arrived in Jaroslaw in 1464 The first rabbi of Jaroslaw was Rabbi Nathan Neta Ashkenazi in 1590 A year later the new Council of Four Lands Vaad Arba Aratzot began convening in Jaroslaw rotating the meetings with the city of Lwow Lviv Until 1608 with a small Jewish community religious facilities were not allowed Still Rabbi Solomon Efraim of Lontschitz the author of Kli Yakar a prominent and well known rabbi lived here By 1670 there was a large government synagogue created although protested by the Christian community of the city During attacks on the city by Tatars and Swedes Jewish merchandise and sometimes homes were set on fire In 1765 there were 1 884 Jews in the city and towns around it A Jewish school was established sometime later The famous rabbi Levi Isaac of Berdyczow Berdychiv studied in Jaroslaw circa 1760 and was called the genius of Yeruslav A fire in 1805 burnt down the old synagogue and a new one was established more according to tradition to replace it The new synagogue was completed in 1811 A census taken in 1901 notes that Jews were 25 of the population 5701 Jewish families nbsp Great SynagogueIn a story about Jacob Kranc told by Rabbi Jacob Orenstein around 1850 about the appointment of the Jaroslaw rabbi Rabbi Orenstein had refused the appointment of Rabbi of Jaroslaw because it would be against his old uncle s appointment The city council had already written his appointment and wished to express their sorrow for its cancellation The Dubner Magid had just entered the city on a snowy winter day and was taken directly to Orenstein s house together with the city council who happened to pass by him But the walk up the steps was enough to create a moving speech remembered years later and accounted for in the book In 1921 the last rabbi was appointed Rabbi Shmaiya HaLevi Steinberg He wrote a book about the Jews of his town and in the 1930s sent two copies to the National Hebrew Library in Jerusalem These copies are the only surviving copies of the book after the Holocaust In September 1939 Jaroslaw was captured by Germans Most of the Jews crossed the San river to the Soviet occupied part of Poland and hid in the Carpathian mountains including the elder rabbi and his family Those that stayed were shot and killed by the German soldiers Sights editLandmarks edit Krakow Gate and old fortifications Main Square City Hall Municipal Cultural Centre former seat of the Sokol Polish Gymnastic Society Old trade centre Pelkinie Palace Rydzikowska house Renaissance Orsetti Museum Attavanti House now the Center for Culture and City Promotion Gruszewiczowska House Queen Marie s House Renaissance Collegiate Church of Corpus Christi the oldest former Jesuit church in Poland Benedictine Abbey Baroque Basilica of Our Lady of Sorrows Dominican Monastery Baroque Church of the Holy Trinity Baroque Church of the Holy Spirit Old Synagogue Small SynagogueSports edit nbsp Footballers of JKS 1909 Jaroslaw in 1909Jaroslaw is a town with a long sports history In 1889 a branch of the Sokol Polish Gymnastic Society was founded in Jaroslaw Nowadays the town s most notable sports club are JKS 1909 Jaroslaw one of the region s oldest football teams which competes in the lower leagues Znicz Jaroslaw men s basketball team which competed in the Polish Basketball League country s top division in the past most recently in the 2009 10 season JKS Jaroslaw women s handball team which competes in the Polish Women s Superliga country s top division Notable people editSee also Category People from Jaroslaw Harry Abend 1937 2021 Polish born Venezuelan sculptor and architect Arkadiusz Baran born 1979 Polish football player Stanislaw Marcin Badeni 1850 1912 Polish politician and a statesman of Austro Hungarian Galicia Michal Boym 1612 1659 Polish Jesuit missionary to China Wiktor Brillant 1877 1942 Polish pharmacist Edmond Wilhelm Brillant 1916 2004 Polish born Israeli naval architect Salomon Buber 1827 1906 Jewish Galician scholar Antoni Chrusciel 1895 1960 Polish military officer commander of all the armed forces of the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Stefan Czarniecki 1599 1665 Polish nobleman general and military commander Simon Dubnow 1860 1941 Jewish born Russian historian writer and activist Aleksander Fredro 1793 1876 Polish poet playwright and author of the Romantic Era Mieczyslaw Gebarowicz 1893 1984 Polish art historian soldier dissident museum director and custodian of cultural heritage Mieczyslaw Golba born 1966 Polish politician Jerzy Hordynski 1919 1998 Polish poet and writer Mieczyslaw Kasprzak born 1953 Polish politician Bohdan Khmelnytsky 1595 1657 Ukrainian Hetman of the Zaporozhian Host national hero of Ukraine Roman Kudlyk 1941 2019 Ukrainian poet and writing critic Dov Lior born 1933 Israeli Orthodox rabbi Siegfried Lipiner 1856 1911 Austrian writer and poet Hieronim Augustyn Lubomirski 1648 1706 Polish noble magnate politician and military commander Konstanty Jacek Lubomirski 1620 1663 was a Polish nobleman Stanyslav Lyudkevych 1879 1979 Ukrainian composer theorist teacher and musical activist Stanislaw Maczek 1892 1994 Polish general tank commander of World War II whose division was instrumental in the Allied liberation of France Jakub Mareczko born 1994 Italian cyclist of Polish descent Rostislav Mikhailovich 1225 1262 Rus prince Jerzy Mniszech c 1548 1613 Polish nobleman and diplomat Zofia Odrowaz 1537 1580 Polish noblewoman Anna Alojza Ostrogska 1600 1654 Polish Lithuanian noblewoman Josef Pomiankowski 1866 1929 Austro Hungarian Marshal and later General of Polish Army Lionel S Reiss 1894 1988 Polish American Jewish painter Wilhelm Ritter von Thoma 1891 1948 German army officer Moses Schorr 1874 1941 rabbi Polish historian politician Bible scholar assyriologist and orientalist Arieh Sharon 1900 1984 Israeli architect Franciszek Siarczynski 1758 1829 Polish Roman Catholic priest Piotr Skarga 1536 1612 Polish Jesuit preacher hagiographer polemicist Sam Spiegel 1901 1985 Austro Polish born American independent film producer Joseph Wilf 1925 2016 Polish born American businessman 9 Yaroslav I the Wise 978 1054 Grand Prince of Veliky Novgorod and Kiev Mordecai Yoffe 1530 1612 a Rabbi Bogdan Zajac born 1972 Polish footballer Andrzej Tomasz Zapalowski born 1966 Polish politicianTwin towns sister cities editJaroslaw is twinned with 10 nbsp Michalovce in Slovakia since 1998 10 nbsp Orange in France since 2000 10 nbsp Dingelstadt in Germany since 2001 10 nbsp Vyskov in Czech Republic since 2001 10 nbsp Uzhhorod in Ukraine since 2002 10 nbsp Humenne in Slovakia since 2005 10 nbsp Yavoriv in Ukraine since 2006 10 nbsp Schonebeck in Germany pending ratification 10 nbsp Kobanya in Hungary since 2012 10 nbsp Svidnik in Slovakia since 2013 10 Gallery edit nbsp Baroque Dominican church nbsp Rynek Market Square filled with colourful historic architecture nbsp The Jaroslaw Museum nbsp Renaissance Corpus Christi Church nbsp Municipal Cultural Centre nbsp St Nicholas church and Benedictine abbey nbsp Juliusz Slowacki Street nbsp Nicolaus Copernicus High School nbsp Greek Catholic Church of the Transfiguration nbsp Center for Culture and City Promotion nbsp Baroque Church of the Holy Spirit nbsp Monuments to Polish Hungarian friendship and Major Leon CzechowskiReferences edit Jaroslaw w liczbach polskawliczbach pl in Polish Retrieved 10 September 2023 Z Bogiem za ojczyzne i wolnosc o Franciszku II Rakoczym bohaterze Wegier in Polish Warszawa Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie 2016 p 30 ISBN 978 83 62235 88 9 Z Bogiem za ojczyzne i wolnosc o Franciszku II Rakoczym bohaterze Wegier p 31 J Motylkiewicz Ethnic Communities in the Towns of the Polish Ukrainian Borderland in the Sixteenth Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries C M Hann P R Magocsi ed Galicia A Multicultured Land University of Toronto Press 2005 p 37 Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN pp 58 59 Wardzynska p 238 Gruszczynski Wlodzimierz 2011 Odwet i Jedrusie in Polish Zagnansk p 21 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kalisz Michal 2009 Rzeszowska Golgota Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej in Polish No 4 99 IPN p 85 ISSN 1641 9561 Joseph Wilf visionary benefactor dies at 91 New Jersey Jewish News NJJN Retrieved 23 December 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k Jaroslaw Official website Partner Cities nbsp in Polish c 2008 Urzad Miasta Jaroslaw Ul Rynek 1 37 500 Jaroslaw Retrieved 23 October 2008 External links editJaroslaw city portal Jewish Jaroslaw Hebrew Jaroslaw Yaruslav Hassidim in Modern day Israel nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jaroslaw Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jaroslaw amp oldid 1189845570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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