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Piła

Piła [ˈpʲiwa] (German: Schneidemühl) is a city in northwestern Poland and the capital of Piła County, situated in the Greater Poland Voivodeship. Its population as of 2021 was 71,846,[1] making it the third-largest city in the voivodeship after Poznań and Kalisz and the largest city in the northern part of Greater Poland. The city is located on the Gwda river and is famous for its green areas, parks and dense forests nearby. It is an important road and railway hub, located at the intersection of two main lines: PoznańSzczecin and BydgoszczKrzyż Wielkopolski.

Piła
  • From top, left to right: Former officers' mess
  • Birthplace and Museum of Stanisław Staszic
  • Holy Family church
  • Park Pension
  • Piła Główna
Piła
Piła
Coordinates: 53°9′N 16°44′E / 53.150°N 16.733°E / 53.150; 16.733Coordinates: 53°9′N 16°44′E / 53.150°N 16.733°E / 53.150; 16.733
Country Poland
Voivodeship Greater Poland
CountyPiła County
GminaPiła (urban gmina)
Established14th century
Town rightsbefore 1449
Government
 • MayorPiotr Głowski
Area
 • Total102.68 km2 (39.64 sq mi)
Highest elevation
134 m (440 ft)
Lowest elevation
50 m (160 ft)
Population
 (31 December 2021)
 • Total71,846 [1]
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
64-900, 64-920, 64-931, 64-933 to 64-935, 64-970
Area code+48 067
Car platesPP
ClimateDfb
Websitehttp://www.pila.pl

City name

Piła is a Polish word meaning "saw". This was a typical name denoting a village of woodcutters belonging to a local noble. The German name Schneidemühl means "sawmill".

History

In the Kingdom of Poland

Overview

Piła traces its origins to an old fishing village.[2] Following the German colonist movement of the 13th century, and particularly after the end of the first Mongol invasion of Poland of 1241, many German colonizers came to this densely wooded area of Poland. General immigration of German settlers diminished, however, when Poland, under King Casimir IV Jagiellon (1447–1492), finally defeated the Teutonic Order in 1466.

Early history

A Slavic settlement of woodcutters in the fishing village Piła may have existed before any of the later villages and surrounding towns of the area were established. Thus, in the 14th century Piła grew to some extent because of its position on the Gwda a mere 11 kilometres (7 miles) from where it joins the river Notec. Yet, the settlement developed less than others that were on such major water routes as the rivers Warta or Vistula. Piła's simple layout of unpaved streets and primitive clay and timber houses gave little protection to its inhabitants and was still far from becoming a commercially interesting locale. If one were to credit a Privilegium (charter) of the early 1380s as evidence, a document associated with the building of a church in Piła and ascribed to the very young Polish Queen Jadwiga of Poland—a copied document that still existed in the archives of the town before 1834—then that period could well be regarded as the time when the village of Piła/Snydemole was elevated to the status of town. The recurring double naming Piła-Snydemole may be because two originally separate localities took their name from the water-powered sawmill that had been part of the town's raison d’être from the beginning.

Documented references to Snydemole and Piła are reportedly found in parish church sources of 1449, where there is mention of a sawmill and of the name of the current wojewoda (governor) Paul. Evidence also exists of a letter from 1456 by the Brandenburg Friedrich II Hohenzollern who had bought the Neumark region from the Teutonic Order in 1455. The letter is addressed to bishop Andrzej of Poznań and to Łukasz Górka, the local Starosta, the royal constable of Wielkopolska. The elector complained that in prevailing peace times some burghers of Snydemole and Piła were making raids on his lands. This accusation may tend to give additional credence to the earlier claim that Queen Jadwiga in the 1380s was indeed the founder of the town of Piła.

City rights

 
During the reign of King Casimir IV Jagiellon Piła became a royal city of the Kingdom of Poland

Until 1480 Piła was a town owned by the nobility, belonging to Maciej Opaliński who later presented his holdings to King Casimir IV Jagiellon, at which time Piła became a royal town. Administratively it was located in the Poznań County in the Poznań Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland.[3] It is known that ten years later the burghers of the town were accused and penalized for tax evasion that had been occurring over a period of five years. However, King Sigismund I the Old—during whose reign immigration of numerous Jews from the Iberian peninsula, Bohemia and German states was encouraged—bestowed municipal rights upon the town of Piła on 4 March 1513, a landmark decision. This was an important achievement for Piła since it gave the burghers not only status, but also the rights to self-administration and its own judiciary. The administration of the town's affairs was now in the hands of three legislative bodies, elected from among the burghers. They were the council with the mayor, jury court and the elders of the guilds. Only the position of the Wójt remained in the hands of the crown or its deputy, the Starosta. The sovereign, however, remained the ultimate judge, warlord and owner of the land. Being free from the arbitrariness of a Castellan or of Wojewoda (governor of the province)—Piła's town folk took advantage of the town's privileges by owning property, carrying on any trade and enjoying the right to hold much needed market fairs.

16th century

Economic circumstances or personal feuds may have been responsible for the frequent changes of ownership of the town, as Piła was ‘purchased’ in 1518 by Hieronymus von Bnin; the document outlining the deed and ownership during his lifetime was given to him by King Sigismund I in 1525. Following the demise of Bnin, the town became the property of the dynasty of the mighty Gorka family. This family, secretly leaning toward Protestantism and in power until the 17th century, included some of the wealthiest landowners and most influential nobles of Poland and was known to be benevolent to their town's folk.

In 1548 Piła obtained a privilege that banned any foreign potter from the town's markets, and in 1561 a fishing privilege was obtained. Piła was part of the Poznań Voivodeship, the region divided into the four starostwa (land holdings) of Poznań, Kościan, Wschowa and Wałcz, the latter encompassing the Starosty Ujscie-Piła, the area between the rivers Gwda, Notec and Drage. Stara Piła, the old Piła, a town that never had walls, was slow to grow.

 
King Stephen Báthory confirmed old privileges of Piła in 1576 and moved the weekly market from Thursdays to Mondays

By the middle of the 16th century, many German Protestant craftsmen and traders, driven out of Bohemia by religious persecution during the Reformation, settled in numerous towns in the region. Some may have settled in Piła too, yet in 1563 the small town had no more than 750 inhabitants. They are known to have lived in 153 houses, primitively built, primarily with timber and clay, covered with straw and grouped mainly around the Old Market. When King Stephen Báthory of Poland confirmed two of the town's privileges on 3 September 1576, the burghers were granted the right to hold their weekly market on a Monday (instead of Thursday),[4] an important feat. Over the following 150 years, numerous privileges and charters were re-issued by the Polish crown, mainly as a result of loss by fire. By 1591 a statute allowing apprenticeships in various trades was obtained. In 1593 King Sigismund III Vasa confirmed old privileges of Piła.[4]

17th century: Queen Constance reshaping the town

When the widowed Sigismund III Vasa married princess Constance, an Austrian archduchess from the House of Habsburg, in 1605, he presented the town of Piła, together with the lands of the domain of Ujście, as a wedding gift to his new bride. She became responsible for changing Piła in several ways over the next few decades. Acting in concert with the tenets of the prevailing Catholic Counter Reformation, the queen first attended to what seemed closest to her heart. She saw to it that numerous Protestant churches in the region of Wałcz, the most German of areas where seventeen Protestant villages existed, be handed over to the Roman Catholic clergy, hounding many a German Protestant burgher in the process.

After one of the town's frequent fires in 1619, the queen—in a benevolent gesture and as her ‘present’ to the burghers of Piła—appropriated funds from the large estate to have the old burnt-out wooden Catholic Church rebuilt. Alas, given the random, close proximity of houses to one another, town fires occurred with such regularity in numerous communities during that period that in 1626 another devastating fire broke out in Piła. This time the entire town was laid to ashes, including the newly built church. Constance subsequently charged her secretary Samuel Targowski on 15 July 1626 to survey what was left of the town. His proposal for a new layout was to be drastic for Christian burghers; to the developing Jewish community it was most consequential and of particular detriment. Constance also decided on a distinct segregation of Jews and Christians. The Jewish community was to resettle in a ghetto, what was to become a virtual town within a town. The new site, from thereon often referred to as Judenstadt, the Jews’ town. To demarcate the newly created ghetto, the decree called for a sizable trench to be dug to surround the Jewish quarters where feasible; otherwise a tall wooden fence had to serve to close in the area completely.

 
Birthplace of Stanisław Staszic, a leading figure of Polish Enlightenment

A new church arose in 1628. Unlike most other buildings in town, the choir room section of this edifice was to remain intact in its original form until 1945. New houses were constructed of brick and stone and the town was reconstructed in plain Renaissance style. Polish Kings confirmed old privileges of Piła again in 1633 and 1650, and granted new privileges in 1660, 1670 and 1688, which were then confirmed in 1716.[5] On 24 July 1655, during the Deluge, Swedish troops captured the predominantly Lutheran town and destroyed most of its buildings and infrastructure. During October 1656, a Polish troupe of Stefan Czarniecki's army sought retribution upon the largely German and Protestant burghers of Piła, accusing them of collusion with the Swedes. During the consecutive Great Northern and Seven Years' Wars similar havoc was visited upon the remaining inhabitants. To add to the plight, it was discovered that the plague had been carried in.

In the Kingdom of Prussia and the Duchy of Warsaw

With the signing of the definitive treaty to divide Poland between Prussia, Austria and Russia in 1772, the First Partition of Poland was accomplished. Piła became part of the Kingdom of Prussia and was officially renamed Schneidemühl. After Frederick II of Prussia signed the Ownership Protocol of his Polish lands on 13 September 1772, he created out of the northern parts of Greater Poland and Kuyavia the Département Westpreussen. Part of that area was later also known as the Netzedistrikt, a governmental administrative district consisting of a wide strip of land both sides of the river Noteć (Netze), stretching from it source north of Września (Wreschen) to the border of the Neumark. Frederick II initiated new German Protestant colonization in opposition to Polish Catholics.[6]

In the year 1781, another huge fire occurred, which devastated half the town. Although Prussian authorities had brought in chimney sweeps and regulations that spelled out fire emergency tasks, hardly anyone in the town was prepared for a major conflagration. 44 houses, 37 stables and 17 barns burned down.

In 1793 Piła was recaptured for a short period by a Polish army led by Colonel Wyganowski. Following Prussia's defeat in the battle of Jena and Greater Poland uprising (1806), and after signing the Peace of Tilsit of 7 July 1807, Piła became part of the semi-independent Polish Duchy of Warsaw.

19th century: industrialization and railway hub

 
19th-century lithograph of the city

After the Congress of Vienna of 1815, Prussia regained the town once again. Under the Prussian administrative reforms of 1816–18, the town became part of the Kolmar District within the Bromberg Region of the Grand Duchy of Posen. On 1 January 1818 Kreis Kolmar was established, with its seat in Piła / Schneidemühl, which in 1821 was moved to Chodzież. One of the main escape routes for insurgents of the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising from partitioned Poland to the Great Emigration led through the city.[7]

The Polish language was restricted from offices and education and the city saw a significant influx of German settlers. By 1834 Schneidemühl had barely recovered from the worst outbreak of cholera of 1831, an epidemic that affected the town's burghers to such an extent that a special Protestant cholera cemetery had to be laid out in the town's suburb Berliner Vorstadt. In the summer of 1834 the city was again struck by a fire that destroyed a large part of the city centre and the city archives. The city was rebuilt shortly afterwards.

In 1851 the city was connected to Berlin and Bydgoszcz (Bromberg) by the Prussian Eastern Railway. An architectural artifact which remains from the railway development period is a historical roundhouse.

The Germanisation policy of the Prussian and Imperial German government replaced its Polish identity with a German one. By the end of the 19th century the city had become one of the most important railway centers of the region and one of the biggest towns in the Province of Posen. It was turned into a Prussian military garrison town. Schneidemühl was revisited by a catastrophe, known as the Brunnenunglück, or the ‘calamity of the well’ that made national headlines. The drilling of an artesian well in August 1892 went horribly wrong and led to unexpected widespread flooding of many of the streets laid out in 1834, causing numerous houses to simply collapse and leaving more than eighty families without shelter. The worst was that this disaster came only a few years on the heels of unexpected flooding caused by the spring thaw of March 1888 that had turned the Küddow into a raging river, when many people were forced to use rowboats to navigate the streets.

First World War and Imperial German military aviation technology

 
Barracks in Piła in 1915

On 1 April 1914 Schneidemühl was disentangled from the Kolmar District and became an independent city (or urban district; Stadtkreis) within the Bromberg Region. In the months before the outbreak of World War I, in April 1914 the Albatros Flugzeugwerke established the so-called Ostdeutsche Albatros-Werke (East German Albatros Works, abbreviated "O.A.W.") in Schneidemühl for construction of military aircraft for the Fliegertruppe air service of the German Army throughout the war — it later undertook license production of Fokker's famous Fokker D.VII fighter during the last year of World War I.

During the First World War, the Germans operated a prisoner-of-war camp in the city, initially taking mainly Russian POWs (including Poles and Latvians conscripted into the Russian Army) but later including prisoners from most Allied nations including Britain and Australia. A telling account of life in the town during that period survives in the form of the diary of Piete Kuhr, then a young girl whose grandmother worked at the Red Cross canteen at the railway station.

As a provincial capital within the Weimar Republic

 
Pre-war Polish Consulate, today a museum

After World War I, in 1918, Poland regained independence, and the Greater Poland Uprising broke out, which aim was to reintegrate the region with Poland. Local Poles were persecuted for their pro-Polish stance by the Germans, who also held Polish insurgents in the local prison.[8] After the signing of the Treaty of Versailles, and after much protest by the German majority of its population, Schneidemühl was not included in the Polish Second Republic. After the Greater Poland Uprising, the new Polish-German border ran five kilometres (3.1 miles) south of the city.

On 21 July 1922 Schneidemühl became the administrative centre of the new Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia Province, a body of self-rule encompassing those three disconnected parts of the former Province of Posen and the westernmost parts of the Province of West Prussia, which were not ceded to Poland and of the Posen-West Prussian Schneidemühl Region, a body of central government supervision comprising the same provincial area. In 1925, with the sudden influx of the Optanten, inhabitants of areas annexed by Poland who opted not to become Polish citizens and left for the reduced German Reich. Schneidemühl's population swelled by about 10,000 to 37,518, creating considerable publicity in Germany.

In 1930 Schneidemühl replaced Tütz (Tuczno) as seat of the Catholic jurisdiction, which was promoted from Apostolic administration to Territorial Prelature of Schneidemühl within the Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province. The city experienced a short period of growth followed by a period of decline in the early 1930s. High unemployment and the ineffectiveness of local administration led to rising support for the NSDAP.

Nazi rule and Second World War

With the onset of the Nazi period and the beginning of the Gestapo's harassment of political and racial undesirables, the climate for Schneidemühl's shrinking Jewish community (which had reached over 1,000 members during the mid-19th century) changed irreversibly — institutionalized antisemitism had arrived in Schneidemühl.[citation needed]

In March and September 1938, a Verwaltungsgliederung, or administrative reform, merged the three territorially unconnected parts of the Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia province into the respective neighbouring Prussian provinces of Brandenburg, Silesia and Pomerania — placing the bulk of former Posen-West Prussia with the districts of Deutsch Krone, Flatow, Netzekreis, Schlochau and Schneidemühl into Pomerania. Schneidemühl remained the headquarters of the government region, reduced by the districts ceded to Brandenburg and Silesia, but enlarged by four previously Brandenburgian and Pomeranian districts and renamed as Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia Region (Regierungsbezirk Grenzmark Posen-Westpreußen) for reasons of tradition, as of 1 October 1938.

 
A monument commemorating Poles imprisoned in the German Nazi camp Albatros in 1939

During the pogrom of 9/10 November 1938 the freestanding structure of Schneidemühl's 100-year-old synagogue became a prime target for the Nazis who set fire to it. In 1939, in the city and the region, the Germans carried out mass arrests of Polish activists,[9] who then were imprisoned in a temporary camp in the city before deportation to Nazi concentration camps, some were even tortured.[10] In October 1939, a German camp for Sinti and Romani people was established.[11] The city's 300-year-old Jewish community was destroyed when on 21 March 1940, on the order of Gauleiter Schwede-Coburg, the last remaining Jews, together with more than 500 Jews of the surrounding area within an 80 km (50 mi) radius, were arrested and held prisoner in various locations in the city. A large number of them were subsequently taken to the forced labour camp Radinkendorf and the Glowno prisoner camp outside of Poznań and held there in detention under inhuman conditions. Over the following two years they were taken to various labour camps, hospices, hospitals in Pomerania, Bielefeld and Berlin. Those who had not committed suicide or had perished during that period were deported to concentration camps, the last in 1943.[12] During World War II a camp for civil prisoners-of-war named "Albatros" was established. Poles expelled from Gmina Dziemiany in Gdańsk Pomerania were used as forced labour in the local aviation industry.[13] Also seven forced labour subcamps of the Stalag II-B prisoner-of-war camp[14] and a forced labour camp, which was subordinate to the local prison, were operated in the city.[15] Several British POWs escaped, and then the Polish resistance facilitated their further escape through the port of Gdynia by sea to Sweden.[16] The local Home Army also maintained contact with Polish POWs held in the Oflag II-C camp.[17]

The city became part of the Pomeranian Wall line of fortifications. In 1945 the town was declared a fortress by Adolf Hitler. During the East Pomeranian offensive it was captured by the joint Polish and Red Army forces after two weeks of heavy fighting on 14 February 1945.[18] 75% of the city was destroyed and almost 90% of the historic city centre was in ruins.

Post-war Poland

As a result of the border changes agreed at the Potsdam Conference in 1945, the city became again part of Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s. The city's historic Polish name Piła was restored. The remaining local German population was expelled by Polish and Soviet troops from 1945 to 1948 in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement,[citation needed] while Polish expelees from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and settlers from areas of central Poland, which were destroyed during the war, were resettled in the city. The historical city centre was only partially restored.

In 1972 the Territorial Prelature of Piła was suppressed, its territory being reassigned to establish the Diocese of Koszalin–Kołobrzeg and Diocese of Gorzów.

In August 1980, employees of local factories joined the nationwide anti-communist strikes,[19] which led to the foundation of the Solidarity organization, which played a central role in the end of communist rule in Poland.

In 1975 Piła became the capital of the newly established Piła Voivodeship (province), which started a period of fast development of industry in the area as one of the most important cities of the region. It remained a voivodeship capital until the administrative reform of 1999. It is known for its green areas and parks, as well as for its speedway club Polonia Piła.

Historical population

Year Inhabitants
1774 1,322
1816 1,992
1843 4,111
1856 6,060
1867 7,516
1875 9,724
Year Inhabitants
1880 11,610
1900 19,655
1910 26,126
1925 37,518
1933 43,180
1939 45,791
Year Inhabitants
1948 10,700
1960 33,800
1970 43,700
1980 58,900
1990 71,100
1995 75,700
Year Inhabitants
2001 77,000
2005 74,600
2006 75,144
2016 74,102

Geography

Climate

Climate in this area has mild differences between highs and lows, and there is adequate rainfall year-round. The Köppen Climate Classification subtype for this climate is "Cfb". (Marine West Coast Climate).

Climate data for Piła (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1970–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 13.9
(57.0)
18.3
(64.9)
22.3
(72.1)
29.9
(85.8)
31.6
(88.9)
37.4
(99.3)
37.4
(99.3)
37.2
(99.0)
34.7
(94.5)
25.2
(77.4)
17.7
(63.9)
14.1
(57.4)
37.4
(99.3)
Average high °C (°F) 1.8
(35.2)
3.4
(38.1)
7.8
(46.0)
14.6
(58.3)
19.4
(66.9)
22.6
(72.7)
24.8
(76.6)
24.4
(75.9)
19.0
(66.2)
12.9
(55.2)
6.5
(43.7)
2.9
(37.2)
13.3
(55.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) −0.8
(30.6)
0.2
(32.4)
3.2
(37.8)
8.7
(47.7)
13.5
(56.3)
16.8
(62.2)
19.0
(66.2)
18.4
(65.1)
13.6
(56.5)
8.5
(47.3)
3.9
(39.0)
0.6
(33.1)
8.8
(47.8)
Average low °C (°F) −3.5
(25.7)
−2.9
(26.8)
−0.9
(30.4)
2.9
(37.2)
7.4
(45.3)
10.9
(51.6)
13.2
(55.8)
12.7
(54.9)
8.7
(47.7)
4.7
(40.5)
1.3
(34.3)
−1.9
(28.6)
4.4
(39.9)
Record low °C (°F) −30.0
(−22.0)
−24.9
(−12.8)
−20.3
(−4.5)
−9.8
(14.4)
−5.3
(22.5)
−1.6
(29.1)
1.7
(35.1)
1.2
(34.2)
−4.0
(24.8)
−9.6
(14.7)
−13.1
(8.4)
−20.4
(−4.7)
−30.0
(−22.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 39.4
(1.55)
29.0
(1.14)
39.5
(1.56)
27.7
(1.09)
57.1
(2.25)
56.0
(2.20)
72.6
(2.86)
65.5
(2.58)
49.2
(1.94)
38.5
(1.52)
35.1
(1.38)
40.4
(1.59)
549.9
(21.65)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 4.7
(1.9)
4.8
(1.9)
2.9
(1.1)
0.7
(0.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.0)
1.4
(0.6)
4.1
(1.6)
4.8
(1.9)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 19.00 15.17 14.50 11.67 13.47 13.50 13.87 13.57 12.77 15.00 17.20 18.93 178.63
Average snowy days (≥ 0 cm) 13.1 11.7 5.0 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.8 7.5 40.5
Average relative humidity (%) 88.8 84.7 77.9 68.4 68.2 69.0 70.1 72.5 79.5 84.9 90.9 90.7 78.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 45.1 68.8 127.7 205.0 255.7 252.4 259.2 240.2 164.6 108.0 46.0 32.7 1,805.4
Source 1: Institute of Meteorology and Water Management[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]
Source 2: Meteomodel.pl (records, relative humidity 1991–2020)[28][29][30]

Economy

Major corporations

  • Philips Lighting Poland, Piła
  • Quad/Graphics Europe, Piła (in the past known as Winkowski sp. z o.o.)

Attractions

 
Holy Family Church
  • Museum of Stanisław Staszic in his former house
  • 19th-century building of the former arsenal
  • St. Stanislaus Kostka's church, built in Neo-Gothic style
  • Holy Family's church, built in Neo-baroque style, formerly concathedral of the Prałatura Pilska
  • St. Anthony's Church with the biggest wooden figure of Jesus in Europe, seven metres (23 feet) tall (church built in 1930)
  • Two war cemeteries (Allied POWs from World War I and Polish and Soviet soldiers killed during the battle of the Pomeranian Wall during World War II); cemeteries are in uptown Piła, in Leszków.
  • Modern two-level shopping center "Atrium Kasztanowa"
  • Modern shopping center "Vivo!" (Piła), located next to railway station "Dworzec PKP - Piła Główna (en. Station PKP - Piła Main)
  • "Aqua Park" - water park
  • "Park na wyspie" - big park located on island (wyspa) with open-air gym, playground, square and fountains

Politics

 
Police School in Piła

Piła constituency

Members of Parliament (Sejm) elected from Piła constituency:

Members of Polish Senate elected from Piła constituency:

Municipal politics

 
Town Hall
  • The president of the Town of Piła: Piotr Głowski
  • Vicepresidents: Krzysztof Szewc, Beata Dudzińska
  • Town council chairman: Rafał Zdzierela
  • Town council vicechairmans: Paweł Jarczak, Janusz Kubiak

Sports

 
Players of PTPS Piła in the 2015–2016 seasons
  • Polonia Piłaspeedway team, 1999 Polish Champions
  • PTPS Piła – women's volleyball team playing in the TAURON Liga (Polish top division): Polish champions in 1998–1999, 1999–2000, 2000–2001, 2001–2002 seasons, 2nd place in 2005–2006, 2006–2007 and 2007–2008 seasons and 3rd place in 2004–2005 and 2008–2009 seasons.
  • Joker Piła – men's volleyball team playing in the lower leagues, which also played in the top division in the past (most recently in season 2005–06)
  • Basket Piła – men's basketball team playing in the lower leagues
  • Gwda Piła – athletics club[31]
  • Gwardia Piła – athletics club

Notable people

 
Stanisław Staszic monument in Piła

International relations

Twin towns — Sister cities

Piła is twinned with:

Former twin towns

On 1 March 2022, Piła suspended its partnership with the Russian city of Kronsdadt as a reaction to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[32]

References

  1. ^ a b "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved 14 August 2022. Data for territorial unit 3019011.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-09-06. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  3. ^ Atlas historyczny Polski. Wielkopolska w drugiej połowie XVI wieku. Część I. Mapy, plany (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Historii Polskiej Akademii Nauk. 2017. p. 1a.
  4. ^ a b Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom VIII (in Polish). Warszawa. 1887. p. 152.
  5. ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom VIII, pp. 152–153 (in Polish)
  6. ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom VIII, p. 153
  7. ^ Umiński, Janusz (1998). "Losy internowanych na Pomorzu żołnierzy powstania listopadowego". Jantarowe Szlaki (in Polish). No. 4 (250). p. 16.
  8. ^ "Piła (miasto powiatowe)". Instytut Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  9. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. p. 80.
  10. ^ Cygański, Mirosław (1984). "Hitlerowskie prześladowania przywódców i aktywu Związków Polaków w Niemczech w latach 1939-1945". Przegląd Zachodni (in Polish) (4): 49, 60.
  11. ^ "Lager für Sinti und Roma Schneidemühl". Bundesarchiv.de (in German). Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  12. ^ Cullman, Peter Simonstein, 'History of the Jewish Community of Schneidemühl: 1641 to the Holocaust,' Bergenfield, NJ : Avotaynu, 2006; DS135.P62P4728 2006.
  13. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2017). Wysiedlenia ludności polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich włączonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939-1945 (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. p. 129. ISBN 978-83-8098-174-4.
  14. ^ "Les Kommandos". Stalag IIB Hammerstein, Czarne en Pologne (in French). Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  15. ^ "Außenkommando des Haftanstalt Schneidemühl in Schneidemühl bei der "Maschinenfabrik HA Schneidemühl"". Bundesarchiv.de (in German). Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  16. ^ Chrzanowski, Bogdan. "Organizacja sieci przerzutów drogą morską z Polski do Szwecji w latach okupacji hitlerowskiej (1939–1945)". Stutthof. Zeszyty Muzeum (in Polish). 5: 29. ISSN 0137-5377.
  17. ^ Chrzanowski, Bogdan (2022). Polskie Państwo Podziemne na Pomorzu w latach 1939–1945 (in Polish). Gdańsk: IPN. p. 57. ISBN 978-83-8229-411-8.
  18. ^ Beevor, A (2002) Berlin: The Downfall 1945 Penguin Books P91
  19. ^ Zwiernik, Przemysław (2011). "Opór społeczny i opozycja w epoce Gierka". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 5–6 (126–127). IPN. p. 131. ISSN 1641-9561.
  20. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 3 December 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  21. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  22. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  23. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 9 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  24. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  25. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  26. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  27. ^ . Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  28. ^ "Piła Absolutna temperatura maksymalna" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. 6 April 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  29. ^ "Piła Absolutna temperatura minimalna" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. 6 April 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  30. ^ "Piła Średnia wilgotność" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. 6 April 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  31. ^ "PLKS Gwda Piła" (in Polish). Retrieved 11 February 2023.
  32. ^ "Miasto Piła zawiesza współpracę z rosyjskimi miastami partnerskimi. Co na to poseł Marcin Porzucek?" (in Polish). March 2022. Retrieved 5 March 2022.

External links

  • Internet portal of Piła
  • Our city - Piła (in Polish)
  • (in Polish)
  • Historical information about Piła (in Polish)
  • Życie Piły - daily news from Piła (in Polish)

piła, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, ˈpʲiwa, german, schneidemühl, city, northwestern, poland, capital, county, situated, greater, poland, voivodeship, population, 2021, update, making, third, largest, city, voivodeship, after, poznań, kalisz. For other places with the same name see Pila disambiguation Pila ˈpʲiwa German Schneidemuhl is a city in northwestern Poland and the capital of Pila County situated in the Greater Poland Voivodeship Its population as of 2021 update was 71 846 1 making it the third largest city in the voivodeship after Poznan and Kalisz and the largest city in the northern part of Greater Poland The city is located on the Gwda river and is famous for its green areas parks and dense forests nearby It is an important road and railway hub located at the intersection of two main lines Poznan Szczecin and Bydgoszcz Krzyz Wielkopolski PilaFrom top left to right Former officers messBirthplace and Museum of Stanislaw StaszicHoly Family churchPark PensionPila GlownaFlagCoat of armsPilaShow map of Greater Poland VoivodeshipPilaShow map of PolandCoordinates 53 9 N 16 44 E 53 150 N 16 733 E 53 150 16 733 Coordinates 53 9 N 16 44 E 53 150 N 16 733 E 53 150 16 733Country PolandVoivodeship Greater PolandCountyPila CountyGminaPila urban gmina Established14th centuryTown rightsbefore 1449Government MayorPiotr GlowskiArea Total102 68 km2 39 64 sq mi Highest elevation134 m 440 ft Lowest elevation50 m 160 ft Population 31 December 2021 Total71 846 1 Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code64 900 64 920 64 931 64 933 to 64 935 64 970Area code 48 067Car platesPPClimateDfbWebsitehttp www pila pl Contents 1 City name 2 History 2 1 In the Kingdom of Poland 2 1 1 Overview 2 1 2 Early history 2 1 3 City rights 2 1 4 16th century 2 1 5 17th century Queen Constance reshaping the town 2 2 In the Kingdom of Prussia and the Duchy of Warsaw 2 3 19th century industrialization and railway hub 2 3 1 First World War and Imperial German military aviation technology 2 4 As a provincial capital within the Weimar Republic 2 5 Nazi rule and Second World War 2 6 Post war Poland 2 7 Historical population 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Economy 4 1 Major corporations 5 Attractions 6 Politics 6 1 Pila constituency 6 2 Municipal politics 7 Sports 8 Notable people 9 International relations 9 1 Twin towns Sister cities 9 2 Former twin towns 10 References 11 External linksCity name EditPila is a Polish word meaning saw This was a typical name denoting a village of woodcutters belonging to a local noble The German name Schneidemuhl means sawmill History EditIn the Kingdom of Poland Edit Overview Edit Pila traces its origins to an old fishing village 2 Following the German colonist movement of the 13th century and particularly after the end of the first Mongol invasion of Poland of 1241 many German colonizers came to this densely wooded area of Poland General immigration of German settlers diminished however when Poland under King Casimir IV Jagiellon 1447 1492 finally defeated the Teutonic Order in 1466 Early history Edit A Slavic settlement of woodcutters in the fishing village Pila may have existed before any of the later villages and surrounding towns of the area were established Thus in the 14th century Pila grew to some extent because of its position on the Gwda a mere 11 kilometres 7 miles from where it joins the river Notec Yet the settlement developed less than others that were on such major water routes as the rivers Warta or Vistula Pila s simple layout of unpaved streets and primitive clay and timber houses gave little protection to its inhabitants and was still far from becoming a commercially interesting locale If one were to credit a Privilegium charter of the early 1380s as evidence a document associated with the building of a church in Pila and ascribed to the very young Polish Queen Jadwiga of Poland a copied document that still existed in the archives of the town before 1834 then that period could well be regarded as the time when the village of Pila Snydemole was elevated to the status of town The recurring double naming Pila Snydemole may be because two originally separate localities took their name from the water powered sawmill that had been part of the town s raison d etre from the beginning Documented references to Snydemole and Pila are reportedly found in parish church sources of 1449 where there is mention of a sawmill and of the name of the current wojewoda governor Paul Evidence also exists of a letter from 1456 by the Brandenburg Friedrich II Hohenzollern who had bought the Neumark region from the Teutonic Order in 1455 The letter is addressed to bishop Andrzej of Poznan and to Lukasz Gorka the local Starosta the royal constable of Wielkopolska The elector complained that in prevailing peace times some burghers of Snydemole and Pila were making raids on his lands This accusation may tend to give additional credence to the earlier claim that Queen Jadwiga in the 1380s was indeed the founder of the town of Pila City rights Edit During the reign of King Casimir IV Jagiellon Pila became a royal city of the Kingdom of Poland Until 1480 Pila was a town owned by the nobility belonging to Maciej Opalinski who later presented his holdings to King Casimir IV Jagiellon at which time Pila became a royal town Administratively it was located in the Poznan County in the Poznan Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland 3 It is known that ten years later the burghers of the town were accused and penalized for tax evasion that had been occurring over a period of five years However King Sigismund I the Old during whose reign immigration of numerous Jews from the Iberian peninsula Bohemia and German states was encouraged bestowed municipal rights upon the town of Pila on 4 March 1513 a landmark decision This was an important achievement for Pila since it gave the burghers not only status but also the rights to self administration and its own judiciary The administration of the town s affairs was now in the hands of three legislative bodies elected from among the burghers They were the council with the mayor jury court and the elders of the guilds Only the position of the Wojt remained in the hands of the crown or its deputy the Starosta The sovereign however remained the ultimate judge warlord and owner of the land Being free from the arbitrariness of a Castellan or of Wojewoda governor of the province Pila s town folk took advantage of the town s privileges by owning property carrying on any trade and enjoying the right to hold much needed market fairs 16th century Edit Economic circumstances or personal feuds may have been responsible for the frequent changes of ownership of the town as Pila was purchased in 1518 by Hieronymus von Bnin the document outlining the deed and ownership during his lifetime was given to him by King Sigismund I in 1525 Following the demise of Bnin the town became the property of the dynasty of the mighty Gorka family This family secretly leaning toward Protestantism and in power until the 17th century included some of the wealthiest landowners and most influential nobles of Poland and was known to be benevolent to their town s folk In 1548 Pila obtained a privilege that banned any foreign potter from the town s markets and in 1561 a fishing privilege was obtained Pila was part of the Poznan Voivodeship the region divided into the four starostwa land holdings of Poznan Koscian Wschowa and Walcz the latter encompassing the Starosty Ujscie Pila the area between the rivers Gwda Notec and Drage Stara Pila the old Pila a town that never had walls was slow to grow King Stephen Bathory confirmed old privileges of Pila in 1576 and moved the weekly market from Thursdays to Mondays By the middle of the 16th century many German Protestant craftsmen and traders driven out of Bohemia by religious persecution during the Reformation settled in numerous towns in the region Some may have settled in Pila too yet in 1563 the small town had no more than 750 inhabitants They are known to have lived in 153 houses primitively built primarily with timber and clay covered with straw and grouped mainly around the Old Market When King Stephen Bathory of Poland confirmed two of the town s privileges on 3 September 1576 the burghers were granted the right to hold their weekly market on a Monday instead of Thursday 4 an important feat Over the following 150 years numerous privileges and charters were re issued by the Polish crown mainly as a result of loss by fire By 1591 a statute allowing apprenticeships in various trades was obtained In 1593 King Sigismund III Vasa confirmed old privileges of Pila 4 17th century Queen Constance reshaping the town Edit When the widowed Sigismund III Vasa married princess Constance an Austrian archduchess from the House of Habsburg in 1605 he presented the town of Pila together with the lands of the domain of Ujscie as a wedding gift to his new bride She became responsible for changing Pila in several ways over the next few decades Acting in concert with the tenets of the prevailing Catholic Counter Reformation the queen first attended to what seemed closest to her heart She saw to it that numerous Protestant churches in the region of Walcz the most German of areas where seventeen Protestant villages existed be handed over to the Roman Catholic clergy hounding many a German Protestant burgher in the process After one of the town s frequent fires in 1619 the queen in a benevolent gesture and as her present to the burghers of Pila appropriated funds from the large estate to have the old burnt out wooden Catholic Church rebuilt Alas given the random close proximity of houses to one another town fires occurred with such regularity in numerous communities during that period that in 1626 another devastating fire broke out in Pila This time the entire town was laid to ashes including the newly built church Constance subsequently charged her secretary Samuel Targowski on 15 July 1626 to survey what was left of the town His proposal for a new layout was to be drastic for Christian burghers to the developing Jewish community it was most consequential and of particular detriment Constance also decided on a distinct segregation of Jews and Christians The Jewish community was to resettle in a ghetto what was to become a virtual town within a town The new site from thereon often referred to as Judenstadt the Jews town To demarcate the newly created ghetto the decree called for a sizable trench to be dug to surround the Jewish quarters where feasible otherwise a tall wooden fence had to serve to close in the area completely Birthplace of Stanislaw Staszic a leading figure of Polish Enlightenment A new church arose in 1628 Unlike most other buildings in town the choir room section of this edifice was to remain intact in its original form until 1945 New houses were constructed of brick and stone and the town was reconstructed in plain Renaissance style Polish Kings confirmed old privileges of Pila again in 1633 and 1650 and granted new privileges in 1660 1670 and 1688 which were then confirmed in 1716 5 On 24 July 1655 during the Deluge Swedish troops captured the predominantly Lutheran town and destroyed most of its buildings and infrastructure During October 1656 a Polish troupe of Stefan Czarniecki s army sought retribution upon the largely German and Protestant burghers of Pila accusing them of collusion with the Swedes During the consecutive Great Northern and Seven Years Wars similar havoc was visited upon the remaining inhabitants To add to the plight it was discovered that the plague had been carried in In the Kingdom of Prussia and the Duchy of Warsaw Edit With the signing of the definitive treaty to divide Poland between Prussia Austria and Russia in 1772 the First Partition of Poland was accomplished Pila became part of the Kingdom of Prussia and was officially renamed Schneidemuhl After Frederick II of Prussia signed the Ownership Protocol of his Polish lands on 13 September 1772 he created out of the northern parts of Greater Poland and Kuyavia the Departement Westpreussen Part of that area was later also known as the Netzedistrikt a governmental administrative district consisting of a wide strip of land both sides of the river Notec Netze stretching from it source north of Wrzesnia Wreschen to the border of the Neumark Frederick II initiated new German Protestant colonization in opposition to Polish Catholics 6 In the year 1781 another huge fire occurred which devastated half the town Although Prussian authorities had brought in chimney sweeps and regulations that spelled out fire emergency tasks hardly anyone in the town was prepared for a major conflagration 44 houses 37 stables and 17 barns burned down In 1793 Pila was recaptured for a short period by a Polish army led by Colonel Wyganowski Following Prussia s defeat in the battle of Jena and Greater Poland uprising 1806 and after signing the Peace of Tilsit of 7 July 1807 Pila became part of the semi independent Polish Duchy of Warsaw 19th century industrialization and railway hub Edit 19th century lithograph of the city After the Congress of Vienna of 1815 Prussia regained the town once again Under the Prussian administrative reforms of 1816 18 the town became part of the Kolmar District within the Bromberg Region of the Grand Duchy of Posen On 1 January 1818 Kreis Kolmar was established with its seat in Pila Schneidemuhl which in 1821 was moved to Chodziez One of the main escape routes for insurgents of the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising from partitioned Poland to the Great Emigration led through the city 7 The Polish language was restricted from offices and education and the city saw a significant influx of German settlers By 1834 Schneidemuhl had barely recovered from the worst outbreak of cholera of 1831 an epidemic that affected the town s burghers to such an extent that a special Protestant cholera cemetery had to be laid out in the town s suburb Berliner Vorstadt In the summer of 1834 the city was again struck by a fire that destroyed a large part of the city centre and the city archives The city was rebuilt shortly afterwards In 1851 the city was connected to Berlin and Bydgoszcz Bromberg by the Prussian Eastern Railway An architectural artifact which remains from the railway development period is a historical roundhouse The Germanisation policy of the Prussian and Imperial German government replaced its Polish identity with a German one By the end of the 19th century the city had become one of the most important railway centers of the region and one of the biggest towns in the Province of Posen It was turned into a Prussian military garrison town Schneidemuhl was revisited by a catastrophe known as the Brunnenungluck or the calamity of the well that made national headlines The drilling of an artesian well in August 1892 went horribly wrong and led to unexpected widespread flooding of many of the streets laid out in 1834 causing numerous houses to simply collapse and leaving more than eighty families without shelter The worst was that this disaster came only a few years on the heels of unexpected flooding caused by the spring thaw of March 1888 that had turned the Kuddow into a raging river when many people were forced to use rowboats to navigate the streets First World War and Imperial German military aviation technology Edit Barracks in Pila in 1915 On 1 April 1914 Schneidemuhl was disentangled from the Kolmar District and became an independent city or urban district Stadtkreis within the Bromberg Region In the months before the outbreak of World War I in April 1914 the Albatros Flugzeugwerke established the so called Ostdeutsche Albatros Werke East German Albatros Works abbreviated O A W in Schneidemuhl for construction of military aircraft for the Fliegertruppe air service of the German Army throughout the war it later undertook license production of Fokker s famous Fokker D VII fighter during the last year of World War I During the First World War the Germans operated a prisoner of war camp in the city initially taking mainly Russian POWs including Poles and Latvians conscripted into the Russian Army but later including prisoners from most Allied nations including Britain and Australia A telling account of life in the town during that period survives in the form of the diary of Piete Kuhr then a young girl whose grandmother worked at the Red Cross canteen at the railway station As a provincial capital within the Weimar Republic Edit Pre war Polish Consulate today a museum After World War I in 1918 Poland regained independence and the Greater Poland Uprising broke out which aim was to reintegrate the region with Poland Local Poles were persecuted for their pro Polish stance by the Germans who also held Polish insurgents in the local prison 8 After the signing of the Treaty of Versailles and after much protest by the German majority of its population Schneidemuhl was not included in the Polish Second Republic After the Greater Poland Uprising the new Polish German border ran five kilometres 3 1 miles south of the city On 21 July 1922 Schneidemuhl became the administrative centre of the new Frontier March of Posen West Prussia Province a body of self rule encompassing those three disconnected parts of the former Province of Posen and the westernmost parts of the Province of West Prussia which were not ceded to Poland and of the Posen West Prussian Schneidemuhl Region a body of central government supervision comprising the same provincial area In 1925 with the sudden influx of the Optanten inhabitants of areas annexed by Poland who opted not to become Polish citizens and left for the reduced German Reich Schneidemuhl s population swelled by about 10 000 to 37 518 creating considerable publicity in Germany In 1930 Schneidemuhl replaced Tutz Tuczno as seat of the Catholic jurisdiction which was promoted from Apostolic administration to Territorial Prelature of Schneidemuhl within the Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province The city experienced a short period of growth followed by a period of decline in the early 1930s High unemployment and the ineffectiveness of local administration led to rising support for the NSDAP Nazi rule and Second World War Edit With the onset of the Nazi period and the beginning of the Gestapo s harassment of political and racial undesirables the climate for Schneidemuhl s shrinking Jewish community which had reached over 1 000 members during the mid 19th century changed irreversibly institutionalized antisemitism had arrived in Schneidemuhl citation needed In March and September 1938 a Verwaltungsgliederung or administrative reform merged the three territorially unconnected parts of the Frontier March of Posen West Prussia province into the respective neighbouring Prussian provinces of Brandenburg Silesia and Pomerania placing the bulk of former Posen West Prussia with the districts of Deutsch Krone Flatow Netzekreis Schlochau and Schneidemuhl into Pomerania Schneidemuhl remained the headquarters of the government region reduced by the districts ceded to Brandenburg and Silesia but enlarged by four previously Brandenburgian and Pomeranian districts and renamed as Frontier March of Posen West Prussia Region Regierungsbezirk Grenzmark Posen Westpreussen for reasons of tradition as of 1 October 1938 A monument commemorating Poles imprisoned in the German Nazi camp Albatros in 1939 During the pogrom of 9 10 November 1938 the freestanding structure of Schneidemuhl s 100 year old synagogue became a prime target for the Nazis who set fire to it In 1939 in the city and the region the Germans carried out mass arrests of Polish activists 9 who then were imprisoned in a temporary camp in the city before deportation to Nazi concentration camps some were even tortured 10 In October 1939 a German camp for Sinti and Romani people was established 11 The city s 300 year old Jewish community was destroyed when on 21 March 1940 on the order of Gauleiter Schwede Coburg the last remaining Jews together with more than 500 Jews of the surrounding area within an 80 km 50 mi radius were arrested and held prisoner in various locations in the city A large number of them were subsequently taken to the forced labour camp Radinkendorf and the Glowno prisoner camp outside of Poznan and held there in detention under inhuman conditions Over the following two years they were taken to various labour camps hospices hospitals in Pomerania Bielefeld and Berlin Those who had not committed suicide or had perished during that period were deported to concentration camps the last in 1943 12 During World War II a camp for civil prisoners of war named Albatros was established Poles expelled from Gmina Dziemiany in Gdansk Pomerania were used as forced labour in the local aviation industry 13 Also seven forced labour subcamps of the Stalag II B prisoner of war camp 14 and a forced labour camp which was subordinate to the local prison were operated in the city 15 Several British POWs escaped and then the Polish resistance facilitated their further escape through the port of Gdynia by sea to Sweden 16 The local Home Army also maintained contact with Polish POWs held in the Oflag II C camp 17 The city became part of the Pomeranian Wall line of fortifications In 1945 the town was declared a fortress by Adolf Hitler During the East Pomeranian offensive it was captured by the joint Polish and Red Army forces after two weeks of heavy fighting on 14 February 1945 18 75 of the city was destroyed and almost 90 of the historic city centre was in ruins Post war Poland Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message As a result of the border changes agreed at the Potsdam Conference in 1945 the city became again part of Poland although with a Soviet installed communist regime which stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s The city s historic Polish name Pila was restored The remaining local German population was expelled by Polish and Soviet troops from 1945 to 1948 in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement citation needed while Polish expelees from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and settlers from areas of central Poland which were destroyed during the war were resettled in the city The historical city centre was only partially restored Pila Glowna railway station In 1972 the Territorial Prelature of Pila was suppressed its territory being reassigned to establish the Diocese of Koszalin Kolobrzeg and Diocese of Gorzow In August 1980 employees of local factories joined the nationwide anti communist strikes 19 which led to the foundation of the Solidarity organization which played a central role in the end of communist rule in Poland In 1975 Pila became the capital of the newly established Pila Voivodeship province which started a period of fast development of industry in the area as one of the most important cities of the region It remained a voivodeship capital until the administrative reform of 1999 It is known for its green areas and parks as well as for its speedway club Polonia Pila Historical population Edit Year Inhabitants1774 1 3221816 1 9921843 4 1111856 6 0601867 7 5161875 9 724 Year Inhabitants1880 11 6101900 19 6551910 26 1261925 37 5181933 43 1801939 45 791 Year Inhabitants1948 10 7001960 33 8001970 43 7001980 58 9001990 71 1001995 75 700 Year Inhabitants2001 77 0002005 74 6002006 75 1442016 74 102Geography EditClimate Edit Climate in this area has mild differences between highs and lows and there is adequate rainfall year round The Koppen Climate Classification subtype for this climate is Cfb Marine West Coast Climate Climate data for Pila 1991 2020 normals extremes 1970 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 13 9 57 0 18 3 64 9 22 3 72 1 29 9 85 8 31 6 88 9 37 4 99 3 37 4 99 3 37 2 99 0 34 7 94 5 25 2 77 4 17 7 63 9 14 1 57 4 37 4 99 3 Average high C F 1 8 35 2 3 4 38 1 7 8 46 0 14 6 58 3 19 4 66 9 22 6 72 7 24 8 76 6 24 4 75 9 19 0 66 2 12 9 55 2 6 5 43 7 2 9 37 2 13 3 55 9 Daily mean C F 0 8 30 6 0 2 32 4 3 2 37 8 8 7 47 7 13 5 56 3 16 8 62 2 19 0 66 2 18 4 65 1 13 6 56 5 8 5 47 3 3 9 39 0 0 6 33 1 8 8 47 8 Average low C F 3 5 25 7 2 9 26 8 0 9 30 4 2 9 37 2 7 4 45 3 10 9 51 6 13 2 55 8 12 7 54 9 8 7 47 7 4 7 40 5 1 3 34 3 1 9 28 6 4 4 39 9 Record low C F 30 0 22 0 24 9 12 8 20 3 4 5 9 8 14 4 5 3 22 5 1 6 29 1 1 7 35 1 1 2 34 2 4 0 24 8 9 6 14 7 13 1 8 4 20 4 4 7 30 0 22 0 Average precipitation mm inches 39 4 1 55 29 0 1 14 39 5 1 56 27 7 1 09 57 1 2 25 56 0 2 20 72 6 2 86 65 5 2 58 49 2 1 94 38 5 1 52 35 1 1 38 40 4 1 59 549 9 21 65 Average extreme snow depth cm inches 4 7 1 9 4 8 1 9 2 9 1 1 0 7 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4 0 6 4 1 1 6 4 8 1 9 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 19 00 15 17 14 50 11 67 13 47 13 50 13 87 13 57 12 77 15 00 17 20 18 93 178 63Average snowy days 0 cm 13 1 11 7 5 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 8 7 5 40 5Average relative humidity 88 8 84 7 77 9 68 4 68 2 69 0 70 1 72 5 79 5 84 9 90 9 90 7 78 8Mean monthly sunshine hours 45 1 68 8 127 7 205 0 255 7 252 4 259 2 240 2 164 6 108 0 46 0 32 7 1 805 4Source 1 Institute of Meteorology and Water Management 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Source 2 Meteomodel pl records relative humidity 1991 2020 28 29 30 Economy EditMajor corporations Edit Philips Lighting Poland Pila Quad Graphics Europe Pila in the past known as Winkowski sp z o o Attractions Edit Holy Family Church Museum of Stanislaw Staszic in his former house 19th century building of the former arsenal St Stanislaus Kostka s church built in Neo Gothic style Holy Family s church built in Neo baroque style formerly concathedral of the Pralatura Pilska St Anthony s Church with the biggest wooden figure of Jesus in Europe seven metres 23 feet tall church built in 1930 Two war cemeteries Allied POWs from World War I and Polish and Soviet soldiers killed during the battle of the Pomeranian Wall during World War II cemeteries are in uptown Pila in Leszkow Modern two level shopping center Atrium Kasztanowa Modern shopping center Vivo Pila located next to railway station Dworzec PKP Pila Glowna en Station PKP Pila Main Aqua Park water park Park na wyspie big park located on island wyspa with open air gym playground square and fountainsPolitics Edit Police School in Pila Pila constituency Edit Members of Parliament Sejm elected from Pila constituency Adam Szejnfeld Civic Platform Jakub Rutnicki Civic Platform Stanislaw Chmielewski Civic Platform Piotr Wasko Civic Platform Maks Kraczkowski Law and Justice Tomasz Gorski Law and Justice Romuald Ajchler Left and Democrats Stanislaw Stec Left and Democrats Stanislaw Kalemba Polish People s PartyMembers of Polish Senate elected from Pila constituency Mieczyslaw Augustyn Civic Platform Piotr Glowski Civic PlatformMunicipal politics Edit Town Hall The president of the Town of Pila Piotr Glowski Vicepresidents Krzysztof Szewc Beata Dudzinska Town council chairman Rafal Zdzierela Town council vicechairmans Pawel Jarczak Janusz KubiakSports Edit Players of PTPS Pila in the 2015 2016 seasons Polonia Pila speedway team 1999 Polish Champions PTPS Pila women s volleyball team playing in the TAURON Liga Polish top division Polish champions in 1998 1999 1999 2000 2000 2001 2001 2002 seasons 2nd place in 2005 2006 2006 2007 and 2007 2008 seasons and 3rd place in 2004 2005 and 2008 2009 seasons Joker Pila men s volleyball team playing in the lower leagues which also played in the top division in the past most recently in season 2005 06 Basket Pila men s basketball team playing in the lower leagues Gwda Pila athletics club 31 Gwardia Pila athletics clubNotable people Edit Stanislaw Staszic monument in Pila Wolfgang Altenburg born 1928 former Chief of Staff Bundeswehr Dirk Galuba born 1940 German actor Carl Friedrich Goerdeler 1884 1945 German politician and anti Nazi Fritz Goerdeler 1886 1945 German jurist and resistance fighter Andrzej Gronowicz born 1951 Polish athlete Jerzy Stanislaw Janicki born 1956 physicist Maximilian Kaller 1880 1947 first Roman Catholic church administrator of the town Hein Kotz born 1935 German jurist Erwin Kramer 1902 1979 German politician Ben Mendelsohn born 1969 Australian actor whose ancestors lived in Pila Jo Mihaly born Elfriede Alice Kuhr 1902 1989 German dancer and writer Daria Pajak born 1993 Polish bowling player Karl Retzlaw 1896 1979 German politician Eberhard Schenk born 1929 German athlete Bernard Schultze 1915 2005 German painter Kasia Smutniak born 1979 Polish actress Stanislaw Staszic 1755 1826 philosopher leading figure in Polish Enlightenment Wolfgang Thonke 1938 2019 East German general Johanna Topfer 1929 1990 German politicianInternational relations EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Twin towns Sister cities Edit Pila is twinned with Chatellerault France Schwerin GermanyFormer twin towns Edit Kronstadt RussiaOn 1 March 2022 Pila suspended its partnership with the Russian city of Kronsdadt as a reaction to the Russian invasion of Ukraine 32 References Edit a b Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved 14 August 2022 Data for territorial unit 3019011 Pila Oficjalny Serwis Miasta Historia Archived from the original on 2011 09 06 Retrieved 2011 11 03 Atlas historyczny Polski Wielkopolska w drugiej polowie XVI wieku Czesc I Mapy plany in Polish Warszawa Instytut Historii Polskiej Akademii Nauk 2017 p 1a a b Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich Tom VIII in Polish Warszawa 1887 p 152 Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich Tom VIII pp 152 153 in Polish Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich Tom VIII p 153 Uminski Janusz 1998 Losy internowanych na Pomorzu zolnierzy powstania listopadowego Jantarowe Szlaki in Polish No 4 250 p 16 Pila miasto powiatowe Instytut Pamieci Narodowej in Polish Retrieved 25 October 2020 Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN p 80 Cyganski Miroslaw 1984 Hitlerowskie przesladowania przywodcow i aktywu Zwiazkow Polakow w Niemczech w latach 1939 1945 Przeglad Zachodni in Polish 4 49 60 Lager fur Sinti und Roma Schneidemuhl Bundesarchiv de in German Retrieved 25 October 2020 Cullman Peter Simonstein History of the Jewish Community of Schneidemuhl 1641 to the Holocaust Bergenfield NJ Avotaynu 2006 DS135 P62P4728 2006 Wardzynska Maria 2017 Wysiedlenia ludnosci polskiej z okupowanych ziem polskich wlaczonych do III Rzeszy w latach 1939 1945 in Polish Warszawa IPN p 129 ISBN 978 83 8098 174 4 Les Kommandos Stalag IIB Hammerstein Czarne en Pologne in French Retrieved 25 October 2020 Aussenkommando des Haftanstalt Schneidemuhl in Schneidemuhl bei der Maschinenfabrik HA Schneidemuhl Bundesarchiv de in German Retrieved 25 October 2020 Chrzanowski Bogdan Organizacja sieci przerzutow droga morska z Polski do Szwecji w latach okupacji hitlerowskiej 1939 1945 Stutthof Zeszyty Muzeum in Polish 5 29 ISSN 0137 5377 Chrzanowski Bogdan 2022 Polskie Panstwo Podziemne na Pomorzu w latach 1939 1945 in Polish Gdansk IPN p 57 ISBN 978 83 8229 411 8 Beevor A 2002 Berlin The Downfall 1945 Penguin Books P91 Zwiernik Przemyslaw 2011 Opor spoleczny i opozycja w epoce Gierka Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej in Polish No 5 6 126 127 IPN p 131 ISSN 1641 9561 Srednia dobowa temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 3 December 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Srednia minimalna temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Srednia maksymalna temperatura powietrza Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Miesieczna suma opadu Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 9 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Liczba dni z opadem gt 0 1 mm Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Srednia grubosc pokrywy snieznej Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Liczba dni z pokrywa sniezna gt 0 cm Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Srednia suma uslonecznienia h Normy klimatyczne 1991 2020 in Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Pila Absolutna temperatura maksymalna in Polish Meteomodel pl 6 April 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Pila Absolutna temperatura minimalna in Polish Meteomodel pl 6 April 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Pila Srednia wilgotnosc in Polish Meteomodel pl 6 April 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2022 PLKS Gwda Pila in Polish Retrieved 11 February 2023 Miasto Pila zawiesza wspolprace z rosyjskimi miastami partnerskimi Co na to posel Marcin Porzucek in Polish March 2022 Retrieved 5 March 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pila Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Schneidemuhl Internet portal of Pila Our city Pila in Polish Forum Dyskusyjne Pilskiej Spolecznosci Internetowej in Polish Historical information about Pila in Polish Zycie Pily daily news from Pila in Polish History of the former Jewish community of Schneidemuhl Pila Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pila amp oldid 1143601265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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