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Mińsk Mazowiecki

Mińsk Mazowiecki (Polish pronunciation: [ˈmij̃sk mazɔˈvjɛtskʲi] "Masovian Minsk") is a town in eastern Poland with 40,999 inhabitants (2020). It is situated in the Masovian Voivodeship and is a part of the Warsaw metropolitan area. It is the capital of Mińsk County. Located 20 kilometers from the city limits of Warsaw and 38 kilometers from Warsaw's center.

Mińsk Mazowiecki
Aerial view of Mińsk Mazowiecki
Mińsk Mazowiecki
Coordinates: 52°11′N 21°34′E / 52.183°N 21.567°E / 52.183; 21.567
Country Poland
Voivodeship Masovian
CountyMińsk
GminaMińsk Mazowiecki (urban gmina)
Established14th century
Town rights1421, 29 May
Government
 • MayorMarcin Jakubowski
Area
 • Total13.12 km2 (5.07 sq mi)
Elevation
147 m (482 ft)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total40,999
 • Density3,100/km2 (8,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
05-300, 301, 303
Area code+48 025
Car platesWM
Websitehttp://www.minsk-maz.pl

Name edit

The source of town name - Mińsk - is the Mienia River, which in turn derives from the verb 'mienić', which means 'to shine'. The postnominal adjective 'Mazowiecki' shows the historical connection to Mazovia and distinguishes Mińsk Mazowiecki from the Belarusian capital of Minsk.

Location edit

Mińsk Mazowiecki is located historically in the region of Mazovia and administratively in the eastern part of Masovian Voivodeship, 37 kilometres (23 miles) east from Warsaw's Center and 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Warsaw's border.

History edit

The first mention of a settlement with commercial function comes from the 14th century. On 29 May 1421, Duke Janusz I of Warsaw from the Piast dynasty granted Mińsk town privileges. The first wooden church was built in 1422, however, it was not preserved. In 1549, the town of Sendomierz was located on the other side of Srebrna River. In 1629, the present church was opened. In 1695, Sendomierz was merged with Mińsk. The 18th century was a time of gradual decline of Mińsk connected with gradual decline of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Following the Third Partition of Poland, in 1795, the town was annexed by Austria. After the Polish victory in the Austro-Polish War of 1809, it became part of the short-lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw. After the duchy's dissolution, in 1815, it became part of Russian-controlled Congress Poland. During the November Uprising, it was the site of two battles between Polish insurgents and Russian troops, fought on 26 April and 14 July 1831.[1]

In 1866, the Mińsk County was established, and the first train arrived to Mińsk (Warsaw–Terespol Railway). In 1867, the name of the town was changed to Nowomińsk (Novominsk). In 1870, the Dernałowicz Family became the last owners of the town (up to the Second World War). In 1886, the first bookstore in east Mazovia was founded in the town.

In 1910 or 1912, the Maria Grochowska's School was opened (present-day Polska Macierz Szkolna High School). In 1914, the old church was reopened after reconstruction, and the following year the present hospital was opened.

 
Garrison of the 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment in 1935

During World War I, it was occupied by Germany from 1915 to 1918. In 1916, the town was renamed to Mińsk Mazowiecki. In 1918, Poland regained independence and control of Mińsk. During the Polish–Soviet War, it was briefly occupied by the Russians on 16 August 1920, and then recaptured by the Poles the next day.[2] On 18 August 1920 Marshal Józef Piłsudski stayed in the town.[2] In the interbellum, the town enjoyed great development, and in 1937 the first electric train arrived. The 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment was stationed in Mińsk Mazowiecki in the interbellum, and nowadays there is a museum dedicated to the unit in the town.

On 13 September 1939, it was the site of the Battle of Mińsk Mazowiecki between Poles led by General Władysław Anders and the invading German army. Afterwards it fell under German occupation. In 1939, some expelled Poles from Barcin, Kępno, Ostrzeszów, Rychtal and Szubin were deported to Mińsk Mazowiecki.[3][4] In October 1940, the occupiers established the Mińsk Mazowiecki Ghetto, which was eventually liquidated on 21 July 1942, with most of the Jewish residents murdered at the Treblinka extermination camp in one of the first episodes of the Holocaust. Two Poles who were held by the Germans in the local prison for rescuing Jews were liberated by the Polish resistance.[5] On 30 July 1944, Mińsk Mazowiecki was liberated by the Polish underground Home Army (prelude to the Warsaw Uprising), however, the Soviets occupied the town the next day. On 2–3 March 1945, the Soviets carried out executions of the local Polish elite, including Mayor Hipolit Konopka. After the war, the town was restored to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s.

 
ZNTK Mińsk Mazowiecki between 1954 and 1974

In 1952, the ZNTK Mińsk Mazowiecki train construction factory was founded. In 1957, Mińsk Mazowiecki became a military garrison. A new train station was opened in 1979. Solidarity events took place in 1985. In 1990, Zbigniew Grzesiak was elected Mayor in first post-WWII free elections. In 1999, the Mińsk County was established.

Jewish history edit

 
Memorial to the local Holocaust victims

In 1768, the restrictions on permanent residence for Jewish people in Mińsk had been lifted.[6] From the 19th century to the 1930s, it became very popular. Before the Second World War, there were thousands of Jews living in Mińsk, and they had a general synagogue and smaller temples. The Novominsk hasidic dynasty was founded here in the late 19th century by Rabbi Yaakov Perlow, a descendant of the Baal Shem Tov.

Soon after the war began, the Germans created the Mińsk Ghetto. It was liquidated on 21 July 1942. Most of the Jews were murdered in Treblinka extermination camp sent in Holocaust trains by the thousands. The remaining Jewish population were murdered in Mińsk on 10 January 1943 (500 people) and 5 June (the last 150 people).

Monuments edit

Historic churches in Mińsk Mazowiecki
 
Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary
  • layout of medieval settlement and later city
  • Palace of Doria Dernałowicz Family – built probably in the 17th century (in place of 16th century residence), converted to classicism
    • park
  • Church of the Nativity of The Blessed Virgin Mary – built in the 17th century, converted to neo-baroque in the early 20th century
    • internal furnishing
    • cemetery
  • county hall (former), 19th century, classicism
  • county hall, 19th century
  • post office, 19th century, empire
  • church of Mariavite Church, 1911
  • residential areas, 19th and early 20th century
  • Jewish cemetery
  • some school buildings (early 20th century)

Economy edit

 
Stylowa Hotel and Restaurant

Trade:

Service:

  • 10 banks
  • fast-foods, pubs and restaurants
  • 3 hotels
  • construction industry
  • car service
  • satellite communication

Industry:

  • ZNTK "Mińsk Mazowiecki" (since 2008 a subsidiary PESA SA) – maintenance and repair of railway rolling stock
  • Fabryka Urządzeń Dźwigowych – production of cranes and other heavy machinery
  • cotton products
  • yachts
  • shoes
  • foil

Population edit

Age / Gender Number Total
Male 0–18 3,978 7,618
Female 0–18 3,640
Men 18–65 12,283
Women 18–60 12,496
Work-age 24,779
Retired men 1,572
Retired women 3,560
Retired-age 5,132
All 37,529
      
Year Number Year Number
16th century
(second half)
3,5-4,000 1660 1,000
1777 456 1827 750
1880 2,940 early 20th 4,771
1910 5,794 1921 10,689
1939 15,103 1945 10,500
1971 24,700 1992 34,000
1995 35,068 2000 35,761
2006 37,529  [citation needed]

Education edit

 
Art school
  • Józef Majka College of Social Science (catholic)
  • Stanisław Staszic Lifelong Learning Center
  • University of Third Age
  • Polska Macierz Szkolna Gymnasium and High School
  • Salesian Elementary, Gymnasium and High School (catholic)
  • Kazimierz Wielki Professional High School
  • Powstańcy Warszawy Professional High School
  • High School of Economy
  • Maria Skłodowska-Curie High School
  • 3 public gymnasiums
  • 4 public elementary schools
  • over 10 preschools (6 public)
  • special school (for kids with problems)
  • clinic of psychological and pedagogical help

Bureaus edit

 
19th-century County Hall
  • Regional Bureau of Environmental Protection Inspection
  • Point of Conscription
  • Above Forester Bureau (Nadleśnictwo Mińsk)
  • County, city and commune bureaus

Safety edit

  • Police Departament of Mińsk County – 2 building in Mińsk, dozens of cars (including sport cars and off-road cars)
  • Fire Departament of Mińsk County – quite new fire engines (well equipped after big fire in industry area a few years ago)
  • Public Hospital of Mińsk County

Culture and sports edit

 
Dernałowicz Palace, now housing the Culture Center
 
Museum of the 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment
 
Municipal Public Library

Culture:

  • House of Culture
  • School of Art
  • 2 libraries
  • 2 museums
  • Cinema
  • Magazines (2 public and 3 commercial are published in Mińsk)

Sport:

  • Miejski Ośrodek Sportu i Rekreacji (public sport and recreation departament)
    • 2 stadiums
    • Ice rink
    • Other
  • Mazovia-ZNTK
    • Football team in local amateur league
    • Other sports
  • other clubs

Religions edit

 
St. Anthony Church

Public transport edit

  • Train station
    • Regular service (39 trains in one way daily) to Warsaw
    • Direct connections with many cities in Poland, and with Moscow
  • 2 regular bus services to Warsaw

Lands edit

Overall: 13.12 square kilometres (5.07 sq mi)

  • Residential: 30%
  • Industrial: 6%
  • Communication (roads, railroads etc.): 15%
  • Agricultural: 29%
  • Parks: 5%
  • Other: 15%

Historical parts of city edit

 
 
Anielina

Cities:

  • Mińsk – old town
  • Sendomierz (found 1549, joined 1695)

Estates built as part of Mińsk:

  • Nowe Miasto – Miasto Ogród – New Town – Garden Town (found 1936)
  • Concrete estates built in socialist realism (about 1945–1990) without names
  • Modern estates without names

Villages:

  • Over railroad part of city (all existed in 1839 and earlier)
    • Kędzierak (joined partly in 1954 and fully in 1984)
    • Stankowizna (joined in 19th or 20th century)
    • Anielina (joined in similar time as Kędzierak)
  • Other
    • Górki (joined in the 18th century)
    • Goździk (joined during First War War)
    • Kolonia Stasinów (joined in 1936)
    • Pohulanka (joined partly in 1936)
    • Sewerynów (joined in similar time as Kędzierak)

Military edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Mińsk Mazowiecki is twinned with:[7]

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dmowski, Rafał (2015). "Powstanie listopadowe na południowym Podlasiu i wschodnim Mazowszu w historiografii". In Skoczek, Tadeusz (ed.). Powstanie listopadowe 1830–1831. Dzieje – historiografia – pamięć (in Polish). Warszawa: Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie. p. 267. ISBN 978-83-62235-66-7.
  2. ^ a b Kowalski, Andrzej (1995). "Miejsca pamięci związane z Bitwą Warszawską 1920 r.". Niepodległość i Pamięć (in Polish). Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie (2/2 (3)): 142. ISSN 1427-1443.
  3. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2017). Wysiedlenia ludności polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich włączonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939-1945 (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. pp. 178, 184. ISBN 978-83-8098-174-4.
  4. ^ Graf, Władysław (1992). "Ostrzeszów: obozy jenieckie okresu 1939–1940. Część 2". Zeszyty Ostrzeszowskie (in Polish). No. 16. Ostrzeszowskie Centrum Kultury. p. 30.
  5. ^ Datner, Szymon (1968). Las sprawiedliwych (in Polish). Warszawa: Książka i Wiedza. p. 100.
  6. ^ Mińsk Mazowiecki: The beginning of the Jewish settlement. 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Virtual Shtetl.
  7. ^ "Współpraca zagraniczna". minsk-maz.pl (in Polish). Mińsk Mazowiecki. Retrieved 25 February 2021.

Books edit

  • 585 lat Mińska Mazowieckiego, red. Janusz Kuligowski, Mińsk Mazowiecki, 2006, ISBN 8390693674

External links edit

  • Co słychać? – weekly magazine, ISSN 1425-6185
  • Web page of City Hall (English)
  • Web page of County Hall Powiat Minski.pl
  • Web page: virtual tour. Panoramas.
  • Jewish cemetery
  • Historical placards
  • Mińsk Mazowiecki, Poland at JewishGen

mińsk, mazowiecki, polish, pronunciation, ˈmij, mazɔˈvjɛtskʲi, masovian, minsk, town, eastern, poland, with, inhabitants, 2020, situated, masovian, voivodeship, part, warsaw, metropolitan, area, capital, mińsk, county, located, kilometers, from, city, limits, . Minsk Mazowiecki Polish pronunciation ˈmij sk mazɔˈvjɛtskʲi Masovian Minsk is a town in eastern Poland with 40 999 inhabitants 2020 It is situated in the Masovian Voivodeship and is a part of the Warsaw metropolitan area It is the capital of Minsk County Located 20 kilometers from the city limits of Warsaw and 38 kilometers from Warsaw s center Minsk MazowieckiAerial view of Minsk MazowieckiFlagCoat of armsMinsk MazowieckiCoordinates 52 11 N 21 34 E 52 183 N 21 567 E 52 183 21 567Country PolandVoivodeship MasovianCountyMinskGminaMinsk Mazowiecki urban gmina Established14th centuryTown rights1421 29 MayGovernment MayorMarcin JakubowskiArea Total13 12 km2 5 07 sq mi Elevation147 m 482 ft Population 2020 Total40 999 Density3 100 km2 8 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code05 300 301 303Area code 48 025Car platesWMWebsitehttp www minsk maz plWikimedia Commons has media related to Minsk Mazowiecki Contents 1 Name 2 Location 3 History 3 1 Jewish history 4 Monuments 5 Economy 6 Population 7 Education 8 Bureaus 9 Safety 10 Culture and sports 11 Religions 12 Public transport 13 Lands 14 Historical parts of city 15 Military 16 Twin towns sister cities 17 Notable people 18 References 18 1 Books 19 External linksName editThe source of town name Minsk is the Mienia River which in turn derives from the verb mienic which means to shine The postnominal adjective Mazowiecki shows the historical connection to Mazovia and distinguishes Minsk Mazowiecki from the Belarusian capital of Minsk Location editMinsk Mazowiecki is located historically in the region of Mazovia and administratively in the eastern part of Masovian Voivodeship 37 kilometres 23 miles east from Warsaw s Center and 20 kilometres 12 miles from Warsaw s border History editThe first mention of a settlement with commercial function comes from the 14th century On 29 May 1421 Duke Janusz I of Warsaw from the Piast dynasty granted Minsk town privileges The first wooden church was built in 1422 however it was not preserved In 1549 the town of Sendomierz was located on the other side of Srebrna River In 1629 the present church was opened In 1695 Sendomierz was merged with Minsk The 18th century was a time of gradual decline of Minsk connected with gradual decline of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Following the Third Partition of Poland in 1795 the town was annexed by Austria After the Polish victory in the Austro Polish War of 1809 it became part of the short lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw After the duchy s dissolution in 1815 it became part of Russian controlled Congress Poland During the November Uprising it was the site of two battles between Polish insurgents and Russian troops fought on 26 April and 14 July 1831 1 In 1866 the Minsk County was established and the first train arrived to Minsk Warsaw Terespol Railway In 1867 the name of the town was changed to Nowominsk Novominsk In 1870 the Dernalowicz Family became the last owners of the town up to the Second World War In 1886 the first bookstore in east Mazovia was founded in the town In 1910 or 1912 the Maria Grochowska s School was opened present day Polska Macierz Szkolna High School In 1914 the old church was reopened after reconstruction and the following year the present hospital was opened nbsp Garrison of the 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment in 1935During World War I it was occupied by Germany from 1915 to 1918 In 1916 the town was renamed to Minsk Mazowiecki In 1918 Poland regained independence and control of Minsk During the Polish Soviet War it was briefly occupied by the Russians on 16 August 1920 and then recaptured by the Poles the next day 2 On 18 August 1920 Marshal Jozef Pilsudski stayed in the town 2 In the interbellum the town enjoyed great development and in 1937 the first electric train arrived The 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment was stationed in Minsk Mazowiecki in the interbellum and nowadays there is a museum dedicated to the unit in the town On 13 September 1939 it was the site of the Battle of Minsk Mazowiecki between Poles led by General Wladyslaw Anders and the invading German army Afterwards it fell under German occupation In 1939 some expelled Poles from Barcin Kepno Ostrzeszow Rychtal and Szubin were deported to Minsk Mazowiecki 3 4 In October 1940 the occupiers established the Minsk Mazowiecki Ghetto which was eventually liquidated on 21 July 1942 with most of the Jewish residents murdered at the Treblinka extermination camp in one of the first episodes of the Holocaust Two Poles who were held by the Germans in the local prison for rescuing Jews were liberated by the Polish resistance 5 On 30 July 1944 Minsk Mazowiecki was liberated by the Polish underground Home Army prelude to the Warsaw Uprising however the Soviets occupied the town the next day On 2 3 March 1945 the Soviets carried out executions of the local Polish elite including Mayor Hipolit Konopka After the war the town was restored to Poland although with a Soviet installed communist regime which stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s nbsp ZNTK Minsk Mazowiecki between 1954 and 1974In 1952 the ZNTK Minsk Mazowiecki train construction factory was founded In 1957 Minsk Mazowiecki became a military garrison A new train station was opened in 1979 Solidarity events took place in 1985 In 1990 Zbigniew Grzesiak was elected Mayor in first post WWII free elections In 1999 the Minsk County was established Jewish history edit nbsp Memorial to the local Holocaust victimsIn 1768 the restrictions on permanent residence for Jewish people in Minsk had been lifted 6 From the 19th century to the 1930s it became very popular Before the Second World War there were thousands of Jews living in Minsk and they had a general synagogue and smaller temples The Novominsk hasidic dynasty was founded here in the late 19th century by Rabbi Yaakov Perlow a descendant of the Baal Shem Tov Soon after the war began the Germans created the Minsk Ghetto It was liquidated on 21 July 1942 Most of the Jews were murdered in Treblinka extermination camp sent in Holocaust trains by the thousands The remaining Jewish population were murdered in Minsk on 10 January 1943 500 people and 5 June the last 150 people Monuments editHistoric churches in Minsk Mazowiecki nbsp Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary nbsp Mariavite Church layout of medieval settlement and later city Palace of Doria Dernalowicz Family built probably in the 17th century in place of 16th century residence converted to classicism park Church of the Nativity of The Blessed Virgin Mary built in the 17th century converted to neo baroque in the early 20th century internal furnishing cemetery county hall former 19th century classicism county hall 19th century post office 19th century empire church of Mariavite Church 1911 residential areas 19th and early 20th century Jewish cemetery some school buildings early 20th century Economy edit nbsp Stylowa Hotel and RestaurantTrade hypermarket Carrefour supermarkets about 10 many other shops market developersService 10 banks fast foods pubs and restaurants 3 hotels construction industry car service satellite communicationIndustry ZNTK Minsk Mazowiecki since 2008 a subsidiary PESA SA maintenance and repair of railway rolling stock Fabryka Urzadzen Dzwigowych production of cranes and other heavy machinery cotton products yachts shoes foilPopulation editAge Gender Number TotalMale 0 18 3 978 7 618Female 0 18 3 640Men 18 65 12 283Women 18 60 12 496Work age 24 779Retired men 1 572Retired women 3 560Retired age 5 132All 37 529 Year Number Year Number16th century second half 3 5 4 000 1660 1 0001777 456 1827 7501880 2 940 early 20th 4 7711910 5 794 1921 10 6891939 15 103 1945 10 5001971 24 700 1992 34 0001995 35 068 2000 35 7612006 37 529 citation needed Education edit nbsp Art schoolJozef Majka College of Social Science catholic Stanislaw Staszic Lifelong Learning Center University of Third Age Polska Macierz Szkolna Gymnasium and High School Salesian Elementary Gymnasium and High School catholic Kazimierz Wielki Professional High School Powstancy Warszawy Professional High School High School of Economy Maria Sklodowska Curie High School 3 public gymnasiums 4 public elementary schools over 10 preschools 6 public special school for kids with problems clinic of psychological and pedagogical helpBureaus edit nbsp 19th century County HallRegional Bureau of Environmental Protection Inspection Point of Conscription Above Forester Bureau Nadlesnictwo Minsk County city and commune bureausSafety editPolice Departament of Minsk County 2 building in Minsk dozens of cars including sport cars and off road cars Fire Departament of Minsk County quite new fire engines well equipped after big fire in industry area a few years ago Public Hospital of Minsk CountyCulture and sports edit nbsp Dernalowicz Palace now housing the Culture Center nbsp Museum of the 7th Lublin Uhlan Regiment nbsp Municipal Public LibraryCulture House of Culture School of Art 2 libraries 2 museums Cinema Magazines 2 public and 3 commercial are published in Minsk Sport Miejski Osrodek Sportu i Rekreacji public sport and recreation departament 2 stadiums Ice rink Other Mazovia ZNTK Football team in local amateur league Other sports other clubsReligions edit nbsp St Anthony ChurchRoman Catholic Church 4 parishes and other structures Mariavite Church 1 parish Baptist 1 congregation Mennonite 1 congregation Public transport editTrain station Regular service 39 trains in one way daily to Warsaw Direct connections with many cities in Poland and with Moscow 2 regular bus services to WarsawLands editOverall 13 12 square kilometres 5 07 sq mi Residential 30 Industrial 6 Communication roads railroads etc 15 Agricultural 29 Parks 5 Other 15 Historical parts of city edit nbsp nbsp AnielinaCities Minsk old town Sendomierz found 1549 joined 1695 Estates built as part of Minsk Nowe Miasto Miasto Ogrod New Town Garden Town found 1936 Concrete estates built in socialist realism about 1945 1990 without names Modern estates without namesVillages Over railroad part of city all existed in 1839 and earlier Kedzierak joined partly in 1954 and fully in 1984 Stankowizna joined in 19th or 20th century Anielina joined in similar time as Kedzierak Other Gorki joined in the 18th century Gozdzik joined during First War War Kolonia Stasinow joined in 1936 Pohulanka joined partly in 1936 Sewerynow joined in similar time as Kedzierak Military editMilitary police 23rd Air Base with MIG 29 aircraftTwin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Minsk Mazowiecki is twinned with 7 nbsp Borodianka Ukraine nbsp Krnov Czech Republic nbsp Lacey United States nbsp Pefki Greece nbsp Saint Egreve France nbsp Telsiai LithuaniaNotable people editJulian Grobelny Righteous Among the Nations Louis B Mayer Hollywood film producer and studio executive Czeslaw Mroczek posel Teresa Wargocka posel Moshe Carmel politician in Israel Stefan Zeromski writer Jan Himilsbach actor and author Leyb Rokhman Yiddish writer in Israel Hanna Dunowska actor Victor Prus architect in Canada Yeshurun Keshet Israeli poet essayist translator and literary critic Jacques Kalisz architect in France Stanislav Redens secret police officer in the Soviet Union Hermann Birnbach subject of a Stolperstein in Nordhausen Marek Piotrowski World Champion in Kickboxing Rafal Jackiewicz boxerReferences edit Dmowski Rafal 2015 Powstanie listopadowe na poludniowym Podlasiu i wschodnim Mazowszu w historiografii In Skoczek Tadeusz ed Powstanie listopadowe 1830 1831 Dzieje historiografia pamiec in Polish Warszawa Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie p 267 ISBN 978 83 62235 66 7 a b Kowalski Andrzej 1995 Miejsca pamieci zwiazane z Bitwa Warszawska 1920 r Niepodleglosc i Pamiec in Polish Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie 2 2 3 142 ISSN 1427 1443 Wardzynska Maria 2017 Wysiedlenia ludnosci polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich wlaczonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939 1945 in Polish Warszawa IPN pp 178 184 ISBN 978 83 8098 174 4 Graf Wladyslaw 1992 Ostrzeszow obozy jenieckie okresu 1939 1940 Czesc 2 Zeszyty Ostrzeszowskie in Polish No 16 Ostrzeszowskie Centrum Kultury p 30 Datner Szymon 1968 Las sprawiedliwych in Polish Warszawa Ksiazka i Wiedza p 100 Minsk Mazowiecki The beginning of the Jewish settlement Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Museum of the History of Polish Jews Virtual Shtetl Wspolpraca zagraniczna minsk maz pl in Polish Minsk Mazowiecki Retrieved 25 February 2021 Books edit 585 lat Minska Mazowieckiego red Janusz Kuligowski Minsk Mazowiecki 2006 ISBN 8390693674External links editCo slychac weekly magazine ISSN 1425 6185 Web page of City Hall Minsk Maz pl English Web page of County Hall Powiat Minski pl Web page virtual tour Panoramas Jewish cemetery Historical placards Minsk Mazowiecki Poland at JewishGen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minsk Mazowiecki amp oldid 1187120320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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