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Lesser Poland

Lesser Poland, often known by its Polish name Małopolska (pronounced [mawɔˈpɔlska] ; Latin: Polonia Minor), is a historical region situated in southern and south-eastern Poland. Its capital and largest city is Kraków. Throughout centuries, Lesser Poland developed a separate culture featuring diverse architecture, folk costumes, dances, cuisine, traditions and a rare Lesser Polish dialect. The region is rich in historical landmarks, monuments, castles, natural scenery and UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Lesser Poland
Małopolska

Sandomierz, Kraków and Lublin lands
Location of Lesser Poland (shown in darker pink) in Poland
Country Poland
SeatKraków
Area
 • Total60,000 km2 (20,000 sq mi)
Population
 • Totalc. 9,000,000
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Lesser Poland (Małopolska) and other historical lands of Poland against the background of modern administrative borders (names in Polish)
Wawel Castle in Kraków
Old Town in Lublin

The region should not be confused with the modern Lesser Poland Voivodeship, which covers only the southwestern part of Lesser Poland.[1] Historical Lesser Poland was much larger than the current voivodeship that bears its name. It reached from Bielsko-Biała in the southwest as far as to Siedlce in the northeast.[2] It consisted of the three voivodeships of Kraków, Sandomierz and Lublin.

It comprised almost 60,000 km2 in area; today's population in this area is about 9,000,000 inhabitants. Its landscape is mainly hilly, with the Carpathian Mountains and Tatra Mountain Range in the south; it is located in the basin of the upper Vistula river. It has been noted for its mighty aristocracy (magnateria) and wealthy nobility (szlachta).[3]

Between the 14th and 18th century, the Lesser Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland also encompassed the historical regions of Podlachia, Volhynia, Podolia and Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities. In the era of partitions, the southern part of Lesser Poland became known as Galicia, which was under Austrian control until Poland regained its independence in 1918. As a result of this long-lasting division, many inhabitants of the northern part of Lesser Poland (including those in such cities as Lublin, Radom, Kielce and Częstochowa) do not recognize their Lesser Polish identity.[4] However, while Lublin (Lubelskie) was declared an independent Voivodeship as early as 1474,[5] it still has speakers of the Lesser Polish dialect.

Across history, many ethnic and religious minorities existed in Lesser Poland as they fled persecution from other areas or countries. Poland's once tolerant policy towards these minorities allowed them to flourish and create separate self-governing communities. Some minorities still remain, but are on the verge of extinction, most notably Wymysorys-speaking Vilamovians, Halcnovians, Gorals, Lemkos, and once Polish Jews and Walddeutsche Germans.

Geography and boundaries edit

 
The Lesser Poland Province in the widest sense – with Podlachia, Podolia, Red Ruthenia, Volhynia and Kiev

Lesser Poland lies in the area of the upper confluence of the Vistula river and covers a large upland, including the Świętokrzyskie Mountains with the Kraków-Częstochowa Upland further west, Małopolska Upland, Sandomierz Basin, and Lublin Upland. Unlike other historical parts of the country, such as Kujawy, Mazovia, Podlachia, Pomerania, or Greater Poland, Lesser Poland is mainly hilly, with Poland's highest peak, Rysy, located within the borders of the province. Flat are northern and central areas of the province – around Tarnobrzeg, Stalowa Wola, Radom and Siedlce, also valleys of the main rivers – the Vistula, the Pilica, and the San. Apart from Rysy, there are several other peaks located in the province – Pilsko, Babia Góra, Turbacz, as well as Łysica in the Świętokrzyskie Mountains. The southern part of the province is covered by the Carpathian Mountains, which are made of smaller ranges, such as Pieniny, Tatry, and Beskidy.

 
Palm Sunday in Lipnica Murowana.
 
The 1507 Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia Map (Polonia Minor, Russia) by Martin Waldseemüller[6]

Almost the whole area is located in the Vistula Basin, with the exception of the western and southern parts, belonging to the Odra and Dunaj Basins. The main rivers of the province are the Vistula, upper Warta, Soła, Skawa, Raba, Dunajec, Wisłok, Wisłoka, San, Wieprz, Przemsza, Nida, Kamienna, Radomka, and Pilica. The major lakes of the province are Lake Rożnów, Lake Czchów, Lake Dobczyce, Lake Czorsztyn, Lake Czaniec, Lake Międzybrodzie, Lake Klimkówka and Żywiec Lake. Most of them are man-made reservoirs.

Lesser Poland stretches from the Carpathians in the south to Pilica and Liwiec rivers to the north. It borders Mazovia to the north, Podlaskie to the northeast, Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities to the east, Slovakia to the south, Silesia to the west, and Greater Poland to the northwest. Currently, the region is divided between Polish voivodeshipsLesser Poland Voivodeship (whole), Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship (whole), Silesian Voivodeship (eastern half), Podkarpackie Voivodeship (western part), Masovian Voivodeship (southern part), Łódź Voivodeship (southeastern corner), and Lublin Voivodeship (western part).

In Silesian Voivodeship, the border between Silesia and Lesser Poland is easy to draw, because, with only a few exceptions, it goes along boundaries of local counties. In the south, it goes along the western boundary of the ancient Duchy of Teschen, with the borderline along the Biała river, with Zwardoń, Milówka and Rajcza located in Lesser Poland. Bielsko-Biała is a city made up of two parts – Lesser Poland's Biala (also called Biala Krakowska), makes up the eastern half of the city, and only in 1951 was it merged with Silesian Bielsko.[7] Further north, the border goes along the western boundaries of the cities of Jaworzno, and Sosnowiec, along the Przemsza and Brynica rivers. Then it goes northwest, leaving Czeladź, Siewierz, Koziegłowy, Blachownia, Kłobuck and Krzepice within Lesser Poland.[8] From Krzepice, the border goes eastwards, towards Koniecpol, and along the Pilica river, with such towns as Przedborz,[9] Opoczno,[10] Drzewica, Białobrzegi,[11] and Kozienice[12] located within Lesser Poland. East of Białobrzegi, the boundary goes mainly along the Radomka river, to the Vistula. East of the Vistula, the boundary goes north of Łaskarzew and Żelechów, and south of Mazovian town of Garwolin,[13] turning northwest. The northernmost point of the province is marked by the Liwiec river, with both Siedlce, and Łuków being part of Lesser Poland.[14] The line then goes south, with Miedzyrzec Podlaski being part of the historical Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and Radzyń Podlaski[15] as well as Parczew left in Lesser Poland.

Between the Vistula and the Bug Rivers, the eastern border of Lesser Poland goes west of Leczna, but east of Krasnystaw and Szczebrzeszyn, both of which historically belong to Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities.[16] Further south, Lesser Poland includes Frampol, and Biłgoraj, which lie in the southeastern corner on Lesser Poland's historical Lublin Voivodeship, close to the border with Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities. The border then goes west of Biłgoraj, turning south, towards Leżajsk (which belongs to Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities).[17] The boundary between Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities was described by Ukrainian historian and geographer Myron Korduba as being along the line DuklaKrosnoDomaradzCzudecKrzeszów nad Sanem.[18] The border towns of Lesser Poland were: Rudnik, Kolbuszowa,[19] Ropczyce,[20] Sędziszów Małopolski, Strzyżów,[21] Jasło, Gorlice, and Biecz. The southern border of Lesser Poland goes along the Carpathian Mountains, and, except in a few cases, it has not changed for centuries. The cities of Leżajsk, Rzeszów, Sanok, Brzozów, and Krosno do not belong to historical Lesser Poland, as they are part of Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities (Lwów Voivodeship, around today's Lviv, Ukraine).

 
Kazimierz Dolny on the right bank of the Vistula river.

Historically, Lesser Poland was divided into two lands - Kraków Land and Sandomierz Land, both of which emerged after the Testament of Bolesław III Krzywousty. In the 14th century, Sandomierz Voivodeship and Kraków Voivodeship were created, and in 1474, Lublin Voivodeship was carved out of three Sandomierz Voivodeship counties, located on the right bank of the Vistula. Historian Adolf Pawiński, who in the late 19th century was the director of the Polish Central Archives of Historical Records, estimated in his book "Polska XVI wieku pod względem geograficzno-statystycznym", that the size of Kraków Voivodeship was 19,028 km2. Sandomierz Voivodeship had an area of 25,762 km2, and Lublin Voivodeship had an area of 11,033 km2. Together with the Duchy of Siewierz (607 km2), and the parts of Spiš that belonged to Poland after the Treaty of Lubowla (1211 km2), the total area of Lesser Poland was 57,640 square kilometers.[22] Apart from the three historic lands, Lesser Poland includes other smaller regions, such as Podhale, Ponidzie, and Zagłębie Dąbrowskie.

Etymology edit

Zygmunt Gloger in his work Historical geography of land of ancient Poland (Geografia historyczna ziem dawnej Polski) states that according to a Polish custom, whenever a new village was formed next to an older one, the name of the new entity was presented with an adjective little (or lesser), while the old village was described as greater. The same procedure was used in naming two Polish provinces – the "older" one, the cradle of the Polish state, was called Greater Poland, and its "younger sister", which became part of Poland a few years later, was called Lesser Poland. The name Greater Poland (Polonia Maior) was for the first time used in 1242, by princes Boleslaw and Przemysław I, who named themselves Duces Majoris Poloniae (Princes of the Older Poland).[23] Lesser Poland, or Polonia Minor, appeared for the first time in historical documents in 1493, in the Statutes of Piotrków, during the reign of King Jan Olbracht,[24] to distinguish this province from Greater Poland (Polonia Maior).

History edit

 
Niepołomice Castle
 
Pieniny National Park

Early period and Kingdom of Poland edit

In the first years of Polish statehood, southern Lesser Poland was inhabited by the West Slavic tribe of Vistulans, with two major centers in Kraków and Wiślica. Their land, which had probably been part of Great Moravia, and Bohemia,[25] was annexed by Mieszko I of Poland some time in the late 10th century. Cosmas of Prague in his Chronicle of Bohemians wrote: "Polish prince Mieszko, a cunning man, seized by ruse the city of Kraków, killing with sword all Czechs he found there".[26] Northern part of Lesser Poland (Lublin and Sandomierz) was probably inhabited by another tribe, the Lendians,[27] and Dr Antoni Podraza, historian of the Jagiellonian University claims that ancient division of Lesser Poland into two major parts – Land (Duchy) of Kraków, and Land (Duchy) of Sandomierz, is based on the existence of two Slavic tribes in the area.[28] However, exact location of the Lendians has not been determined to this day. Some historians speculate that they occupied Cherven Cities, and their center was in Przemyśl.[29] Around the year 1000, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kraków was created, and its borders covered whole area of Lesser Poland. During the reign of Casimir I the Restorer, Kraków for the first time became the capital of Poland (around 1040), since Greater Poland and Silesia, with main Polish urban centers, such as Gniezno and Poznań were ravaged by Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia.[30] In 1138, following the Testament of Bolesław III Krzywousty, the country was divided between his sons (see also Fragmentation of Poland). Bolesław III Wrymouth created the Seniorate Province, which, among others, consisted of Kraków. At the same time, Lesser Poland was divided into two parts, when its eastern part formed the Duchy of Sandomierz,[31] carved by the ruler for his son Henry of Sandomierz.

During the fragmentation period, both lands of Lesser Poland were frequently ruled by the same prince. Among them were Bolesław IV the Curly, Mieszko III the Old, Casimir II the Just, Leszek I the White, Bolesław V the Chaste, Leszek II the Black, Władysław I the Elbow-high, and King of Bohemia, Wenceslaus II of Bohemia, who united Lesser Poland in 1290/1291. The province was pillaged during the Mongol invasion of Poland, when a combined army of Kraków and Sandomierz was destroyed by Baidar in the Battle of Chmielnik. The loss was so heavy that Norman Davies wrote: "At Chmielnik, the assembled nobility of Małopolska perished to a man."[32] During their 1241, 1259, and 1287 invasions, the Mongols burned major cities of Lesser Poland, killing thousands of people. Furthermore, the province, especially its northeastern part, was often raided by the Lithuanians, Rusyns, Yotvingians, and Old Prussians. The city of Lublin suffered most frequently – among others, it was burnt by the Rusyns in 1244, the Lithuanians 1255, the Prussians in 1266, and the Yotvingians in 1282.[33] Another center of the province, Sandomierz, was destroyed by the Tartars in 1260,[34] and burnt by the Lithuanians in 1349.[35]

 
Będzin Castle, which guarded the western border of Lesser Poland

Unlike other Polish provinces, especially Silesia, Lesser Poland did not undergo further fragmentation, and in the early 14th century became the core of the reunited nation (together with Greater Poland).[36] The period of nation's fragmentation came to a symbolic end on 30 January 1320, when Władysław I the Elbow-high was crowned as King of Poland. The ceremony took place in Kraków's Wawel Cathedral, and the king of the reunited country decided to choose Kraków as the capital. Through 14th and 15th centuries, Lesser Poland's position as the most important province of the nation was cemented. It became visible during the reign of Casimir III the Great, who favored less known Lesser Poland's noble families, at the expense of Greater Poland's nobility.[37] The reign of Casimir the Great was a period of growing prosperity of Lesser Poland. With high density of population, fertile soils and rich deposits of minerals (especially salt in Bochnia and Wieliczka, as well as lead in Olkusz), the province was the richest part of Poland. After the recapture of the Cherven Cities/Red Ruthenia, Lesser Poland lost its status of the borderland, and both regions created an economic bridge between Poland and the ports of the Black Sea.[25] The king, who drew Jewish settlers from across Europe to his country, built several castles along western border of Lesser Poland, with the most notable ones in Skawina, Pieskowa Skała, Będzin, Lanckorona, Olkusz, Lelów, Bobolice, Krzepice, Ogrodzieniec, Ojców, Olsztyn, Bobolice, Mirów (see also Eagle Nests Trail). Furthermore, he built or strengthened castles in other parts of the province, such as Szydlow, Chęciny, Wiślica, Radom, Niedzica, Opoczno, Lublin, Sandomierz, as well as the Wawel Castle. Also, during his reign (1333–1370), Casimir the Great founded on Magdeburg rights several cities, urbanizing hitherto rural province.[38] Among major Lesser Poland's cities founded by the King, there are:

# City Founded Current voivodeship
1.   Kazimierz 1334 now a district of Kraków
2.   Kłobuck 1339 Silesian Voivodeship
3.   Dobczyce 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
4.   Grybów 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
5.   Tuchów 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
6.   Lelów 1340 Silesian Voivodeship
7.   Myślenice 1342 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
8.   Nowy Targ 1346 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
9.   Biecz 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
10.   Krościenko nad Dunajcem 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
11.   Piwniczna-Zdrój 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
12.   Opoczno 1350 Łódź Voivodeship
13.   Radom 1350 Masovian Voivodeship
14.   Tymbark 1354 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
15.   Pilzno 1354 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
16.   Chęciny 1354 Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
17.   Proszowice 1358 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
18.   Będzin 1358 Silesian Voivodeship
19.   Dębica 1358 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
20.   Stopnica 1362 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
21.   Ropczyce 1362 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
22.   Skawina 1364 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
23.   Muszyna 1364 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
24.   Jasło 1366 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
25.   Brzostek 1366 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
26.   Wojnicz 1369 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
 
Kozłówka Palace
 
Palatial residence in Kurozwęki
 
Castle courtyard with a fortified keep

In the Kingdom of Poland, Lesser Poland was made of three voivodeshipsKraków Voivodeship, Sandomierz Voivodeship, and Lublin Voivodeship, created in 1474 out of eastern part of the Sandomierz Voivodeship.[39] Borders of the province remained unchanged until 1772. The only exception was large part of contemporary Upper Silesia (the area around Bytom, Toszek, Siewierz, and Oświęcim), which belonged to Duchy of Kraków until 1179. In that year, prince of Kraków Casimir II the Just, handed these lands to Prince of Opole Mieszko I Tanglefoot.[40] The Duchy of Siewierz, ruled since 1443 by the Archbishop of Kraków, merged with Lesser Poland in 1790. Other Silesian realms lost in 1179, also returned to Lesser Poland – Duchy of Zator (in 1513), and Duchy of Oświęcim (1564). Both duchies merged into a Silesian County of the Kraków Voivodeship, and shared the fate of Lesser Poland. Apart from Jews, among other ethnic minorities of the province were the Walddeutsche, who settled the borderland of Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia (14th through 17th centuries). In the Middle Ages, the Germans inhabited several cities of Lesser Poland, especially Kraków and Sandomierz (see Rebellion of wójt Albert).

In the late Middle Ages, Lesser Poland gradually became the center of Polish statehood,[41] with Kraków being the capital of the country from the mid-11th century until 1596. Its nobility ruled Poland when Queen Jadwiga was too young to control the state, and the Union of Krewo with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the brainchild of Lesser Poland's szlachta.[42]

In the 15th and 16th centuries, Lesser Poland remained the most important part of the country. After the death of Casimir the Great, Lesser Poland's nobility promoted Louis I of Hungary as the new king, later supporting his daughter Jadwiga of Poland in exchange for Privilege of Koszyce. Since Jadwiga, crowned on 16 October 1384, was too young to rule the country, Poland was in fact governed by the Lesser Poland's nobility, who decided to find her a husband, Grand Duke of Lithuania, Jogaila.[43] Consequently, unions of Poland and Lithuania at Krewo and Horodło were the brainchildren of Lesser Poland's nobility,[44] among whom the most influential individuals were Spytek z Melsztyna, and cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki. Other famous Lesser Poland's families are Lubomirski family, Kmita family, Tarnowski family, Potocki family, Sobieski family, Koniecpolski family, Ossolinski family, Poniatowski family.

Since Lesser Poland was the most important province of the country, several important events took place on its territory. In 1364, Casimir the Great called the Congress of Kraków, and in 1401, the Union of Vilnius and Radom was signed. In 1505 in Radom, the Sejm adopted the Nihil novi title, which forbade the King to issue laws without the consent of the nobility. In the same year, also in the same city, Polish law was codified in the Łaski's Statute, and the Crown Tribunal (the highest appeal court in the Crown of the Polish Kingdom) held its sessions in Lublin. In 1525, the Treaty of Kraków was signed, ending the Polish–Teutonic War. Lesser Poland also is home to the oldest Polish university – the Jagiellonian University, founded in 1364 by Casimir the Great, and several outstanding figures of early Polish culture were born here, such as Jan Kochanowski, Mikołaj Rej, Jan z Lublina, Mikołaj Gomółka, Maciej Miechowita, Marcin Kromer, Łukasz Górnicki, and Mikołaj Radomski.

Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth edit

In the 16th century, Lesser Poland retained its position as the most important province of the country. As no major conflicts took place on its territory, it was the center of Renaissance in Poland. The province was home to numerous scholars, writers and statesmen, and it was here where Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was created in 1569 (see Union of Lublin). In the Commonwealth, Lesser Poland proper was the base of the Lesser Poland Province, which covered southern lands of the vast country. The province was made of Lesser Poland itself, also Podlachia, Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities, Volhynia, Podolia, and Ukrainian voivodeships of Kijów (Kyiv) and Czernihów (Chernihiv), which, until 1569, had been part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

The period in Polish history known as the Polish Golden Age was very fortunate for Lesser Poland. Kings of the Jagiellonian dynasty, especially Sigismund I the Old (himself born in Lesser Poland's Kozienice), and his son Sigismund II Augustus (born in Kraków), resided in Kraków, which was the capital of the immense Polish – Lithuanian Commonwealth. Lesser Poland's prosperity was reflected in numerous examples of Renaissance architecture complexes, built across the province. In 1499, hitherto Gothic Wawel Castle was damaged in a fire, and a few years later, Sigismund I, with help of the best native and foreign artists (such as Francesco the Florentine, Bartholomeo Berrecci or Niccolo Castiglione[45]) refurbished the complex into a splendid Renaissance palace. Furthermore, in the early 16th century, several palaces were built in Lesser Poland – in Drzewica, Szydłowiec, Ogrodzieniec, and Pieskowa Skała. The province became rich mostly due to the grain trade, conducted along the Vistula, and among cities which prospered in the 16th century, there are Kraków, Sandomierz, Lublin, Kazimierz Dolny, Pilzno, Tarnów, Radom, Biecz. In later years of the 16th century, further palaces were built or remodelled in Baranow Sandomierski, and Niepołomice.

 
Pieskowa Skała

In the early 16th century, Protestant Reformation spread across the Commonwealth, and Lesser Poland became one of early centers of the movement, when students from Wittenberg brought the news to Cracow.[46] In the first years of the century, professor of Jagiellonian University Jakub of Iłża (Jakub z Ilzy, died 1542) became one of the main promoters of the movement in the region. He actively supported the notions of Martin Luther, and in 1528 was called to the Bishop of Kraków's court. Convinced of heresy, he was forced to leave Poland in 1535. Reformation soon became very popular among Lesser Poland's nobility, especially Calvinism, and according to one estimate, some 20% of local szlachta converted from Roman Catholicism.[47] They were attracted by Calvinism's democratic character, and Lesser Poland's center of the movement was set in the town of Pińczów, which came to be known as Sarmatian Athens. It was in Pińczów, where a local nobleman converted a Roman Catholic parish into a Protestant one, opened a Calvinist Academy, and published its Antitrinitarian confession in 1560 and in 1561.[48] Several Calvinist synods took place in Lesser Poland – the first one in Słomniki (1554), Pińczów (the first united Synod of Poland and Lithuania – 1556[49] 1561), and Kraków (1562). In 1563, also in Pińczów, the so-called Brest Bible was translated into Polish. In 1570, the Sandomierz Agreement was signed by a number of Protestant groups, with the exception of the Polish Brethren, another religious group very influential in Lesser Poland. The Brethren had their center in Lesser Poland's village of Raków, where a main Arian printing press, as well as a college, known as Akademia Rakowska (Gymnasium Bonarum Artium) founded in 1602 were located. Among distinguished European scholars associated with the school, there were Johannes Crellius, Corderius, and Valentinus Smalcius (who translated into German the Racovian Catechism).

In 1572, the Jagiellon dynasty died out, and next year, Henry III of France became first elected king of the country. After his short reign, and War of the Polish Succession (1587–88), which also took place in Lesser Poland, the new ruler was Stephen Báthory of Poland, who died in 1586. The ruler from Transylvania was followed by Sigismund III Vasa of Sweden, whose election marked gradual decline of the province. Sigismund's eyes were set on Sweden, and for many years he concentrated his efforts on a futile attempt to regain his former Swedish throne (see Polish–Swedish union, War against Sigismund). Therefore, Lesser Poland, located in southwestern corner of the Commonwealth, began to lose its importance, which was marked in 1596, when Sigismund moved his permanent residence, court and the crown headquarters to centrally-located Warsaw.[50]

 
Members of the regional Folk Group of Wilamowice "Cepelia Fil Wilamowice"[51]
 
Lachy Sądeckie are a group of ethnic Poles who live in southern Lesser Poland

Even though first half of the 17th century was filled with wars, all major conflicts did not reach Lesser Poland, and the province continued to prosper, which was reflected in its castles and palaces, such as the enormous Krzyztopor. Apart from minor wars, such as Zebrzydowski Rebellion, and Kostka-Napierski Uprising, the province remained safe. Cossacks of the Khmelnytsky Uprising reached as far west as Zamość and Lwów, but did not enter Lesser Poland. The province did not witness other wars, such as Polish–Swedish War (1626–29), Polish–Muscovite War (1605–18), Polish–Ottoman War (1620–21), and Smolensk War. Nevertheless, Lesser Poland's nobility took active part in these conflicts – Marina Mniszech, the daughter of Voivode of Sandomierz, Jerzy Mniszech, was wife of False Dmitriy I, as well as False Dmitriy II. Furthermore, Lesser Poland's lands, especially its northeastern part, became a base for Polish troops, fighting the Cossacks, and King John II Casimir Vasa often stayed in Lublin with his court, preparing military campaigns in Ukraine.[52] The situation changed with the outbreak of the Russo-Polish War (1654–1667). In October 1655, the Russo-Cossack armies under Ivan Vyhovsky entered eastern Lesser Poland, reaching the Vistula, and pillaging Lublin, Puławy, and Kazimierz Dolny. The invaders quickly retreated, but a few months later, Lesser Poland was flooded by the Swedes.

 
Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line

Swedish invasion of Poland had catastrophic consequences for the hitherto prosperous province. The attackers, supported by their allies from Transylvania, seized whole Lesser Poland, reaching as far south as Nowy Targ, Nowy Sącz, and Żywiec.[53] All major cities were looted and burned, and some of them, like Radom, did not recover until the 19th century.[54] The Swedes captured and pillaged Sandomierz (where they destroyed the Royal Castle, and after the invasion, the city never recovered[55]), Opoczno,[56] Lublin,[57] Kazimierz Dolny[58] Pilzno,[59] Szydlow,[60] Szydłowiec,[61] Tarnów,[62] Kielce,[63] Kraśnik,[64] and Kraków. The invaders seized the capital of Lesser Poland after a short siege, and their occupation of the province was confirmed after their victories in the Battle of Wojnicz, and the Battle of Golab. In those years, one of the most important and symbolic events in the history of the nation took place in Lesser Poland. It was the Siege of Jasna Góra, which, according to some accounts, turned the course of the war. Furthermore, following the Treaty of Radnot, Lesser Poland was invaded in January 1657 by George II Rákóczi, whose troops caused more destruction. Foreign armies were not chased out of Lesser Poland until 1657, Kraków itself was recaptured on 18 August 1657. After these invasions, the province was ruined, with hundreds of villages, towns and cities burned. The population decreased (the urban population by nearly half[65]), the peasantry starved, and like other parts of the Commonwealth, Lesser Poland was devastated. The period of peace lasted for about forty years, when in 1700, another major conflict, the Great Northern War began. Lesser Poland once again became a battleground, with Battle of Kliszów taking place there in 1702, and the Sandomierz Confederation formed in 1704.

After the conflict, Lesser Poland began a recovery, which was hampered by several other factors. Province's cities frequently burned (Lublin 1719, Nowy Targ 1784, Nowy Sącz, Dukla 1758, Wieliczka 1718, Miechów 1745, Drzewica), there also were numerous outbreaks of plagues and typhus (in 1707–1708, some 20,000 died in Kraków and its area[66])

Lesser Poland was one of main centers of the Bar Confederation. On 21 June 1786 in Kraków, local confederation was announced, and on the same day Voievode of Kraków, Michal Czarnocki, urged his citizens to join the movement. Soon afterwards, Kraków was captured by the Russian troops, and the center of Lesser Poland's insurgency moved to the mountainous south – areas around Dukla and Nowy Sącz.[67] During the Confederation, several battles and skirmishes took place there. In 1770, after the Battle of Iwonicz, the Russians ransacked Biecz. The movement ended in 1772, and its decline was connected with the Partitions of Poland. Another local center of the movement was Jasna Góra Monastery in Częstochowa, which was defended by Kazimierz Pulaski for almost two years (1770–1772).[68]

 
Czarny Staw (Black Pond) in the High Tatras

Partitions of Poland (1772–1918) edit

The Partitions of Poland began earlier in Lesser Poland than in other provinces of the country. In 1769, Austrian Empire annexed a small territory of Spisz, and next year, the towns of Czorsztyn, Nowy Sącz and Nowy Targ.[69] In 1771, the Russians and the Prussians agreed on the first partition of the country, and in early 1772, Austrian Emperor Maria Theresa decided to join the two powers. In the first partition of the Commonwealth, the Austrians seized the territory which would later be called Galicia, and which included southwestern corner of Lesser Poland (south of the Vistula river), with Żywiec, Tarnów, and Biecz, but without major urban centers of the province, such as Kraków, Sandomierz, Radom, Lublin, Częstochowa, and Kielce.

 
Nowy Wiśnicz
 
Baranów Sandomierski
 
Vistula in Sandomierz

Second Partition of Poland (1793) did not result in significant changes of boundaries in the area, as the Austrian Empire did not participate in it. However, the Prussians moved on, and in 1793 they annexed northwestern corner of the province, together with the city of Częstochowa,[8][70] and its vicinity, which became part of the newly created province of South Prussia. Therefore, in late 1793, Lesser Poland was already divided between three countries – Austrian Empire (south of the Vistula), Kingdom of Prussia (Częstochowa and northwestern corner), and still existing Commonwealth. After the Third Partition (1795), most of Lesser Poland was annexed by Austria, with all major cities. Prussia managed to seize a small, western part of the province, with the towns of Siewierz, Zawiercie, Będzin, and Myszków, calling this land New Silesia, while the Austrians decided to name newly acquired lands of northern Lesser Poland West Galicia. In 1803, West Galicia was merged with Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, but retained some autonomy. Lesser Poland was one of major centers of Polish resistance against the occupiers. On 24 March 1794 in Kraków, Tadeusz Kościuszko announced the general insurrection (see Kościuszko Uprising), mobilising all able males of Lesser Poland. Two weeks later, Battle of Racławice took place, ending with a Polish victory. The uprising was suppressed by combined Prusso – Russian forces, and among battles fought in Lesser Poland, there is Battle of Szczekociny.

During Napoleonic Wars, the Duchy of Warsaw was created by Napoleon Bonaparte out of Polish lands which had been granted to Prussia in the Partitions. In 1809, after the Polish–Austrian War, and the Treaty of Schönbrunn, the Duchy was expanded, when northern Lesser Poland was added to its territory (with Kielce, Radom, and Lublin). Following the Congress of Vienna, Duchy of Warsaw was turned into Russian-ruled Congress Poland, and historical capital of the province, Kraków, was turned into Free City of Kraków, which also included the towns of Trzebinia, Chrzanów, Jaworzno, and Krzeszowice. In Congress Poland, the lands of Lesser Poland were initially divided between four palatinates – Palatinate of Kraków (with capital in Kielce), Palatinate of Sandomierz (with capital in Radom), Palatinate of Lublin, and Palatinate of Podlasie (with capital in Siedlce), (see also Administrative division of Congress Poland). Later, the palatinates were turned into governorates. Thus, Russian part of Lesser Poland was divided into Kielce Governorate, Lublin Governorate, Radom Governorate, Siedlce Governorate, and Piotrków Governorate (western counties, with Częstochowa and industrial area of Zagłębie Dąbrowskie). Borders of these administrative units did not reflect historical boundaries of the province.

 
"Peasant war" by Jan Lewicki (1795–1871)

Most of the November Uprising, which began in 1830, missed Lesser Poland, as major battles took place in the area around Warsaw. In early 1831, when Russian forces advanced into Congress Poland, some skirmishes took place in northern counties of the province – at Puławy, Kurow, and Kazimierz Dolny. In early 1846, a group of Polish patriots attempted a failed uprising in the Free City of Kraków. The insurrection was quickly suppressed by the Austrian troops, and as a result, the Free City was annexed by the Austrian Empire. In the same year, Austrian part of Lesser Poland was witness to a massacre of Polish nobility by the peasantry, known as Galician slaughter. The peasants, led by Jakub Szela, murdered about 1000 nobles, and destroyed about 500 manors.[71] These events took place in three counties – Sanok, Jasło and Tarnów.

Northern and central Lesser Poland (the part of the province which was taken by the Russian Empire) was one of the main centers of the January Uprising (1863–1864). In the first days of the insurrection, skirmishes with the Russian Army took place in such towns, as Łuków, Kraśnik, Szydłowiec, Bodzentyn, and Suchedniów. Since the Poles were poorly armed, the Russians did not have major problems with them, and soon afterwards, the insurrectionists decided to organize military camps. Among biggest camps in Lesser Poland, there were Ojców (3000 soldiers), and Wąchock, where Marian Langiewicz gathered up to 1500 people. The uprising died out by early spring of 1864, and among counties where it continued for the longest time, was the extreme northeastern corner of Lesser Poland, around Łuków, where reverend Stanisław Brzóska was active. Since Russian military supremacy was crushing, the Poles were forced to limit their actions to guerrilla warfare. Among the biggest battles which took place in Lesser Poland there are: Battle of Szydłowiec (23 January 1863); Battle of Miechów (17 February 1863); Battle of Małogoszcz (24 February 1863); Battle of Staszów (17 February 1863); Battle of Pieskowa Skała (4 March 1863); two Battles of Opatów (25 November 1863, 21 February 1864).

As a result of their support of the failed insurrection, several Lesser Poland's towns lost their charters and were turned into villages. Among them were Kraśnik,[72] Bodzentyn, Opatów, Iłża, Małogoszcz,[73] Wąchock,[74] Busko-Zdrój,[75] Jędrzejów,[76] Cmielow,[77] Zwoleń, Drzewica,[78] Wierzbica,[79] Czeladź, Kazimierz Dolny, Wolborz, Stopnica, Daleszyce, Wiślica, Pajęczno, Lipsko, Pacanów, Ożarów, Wolbrom, Proszowice, Nowe Miasto Korczyn, Włoszczowa, Przysucha, Opole Lubelskie.

 
In the 19th century, Kraków's Jagiellonian University was a major center of Polish science and culture

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Lesser Poland remained one of the centers of Polish culture, especially the city of Kraków, where Jagiellonian University was one of only two Polish-language colleges of that period (the other one was University of Lwów). Another significant center of national culture was the town of Puławy, where in the late 18th century, a local palace owned by Czartoryski family became a museum of Polish national memorabilia and a major cultural and political centre. A number of prominent artists, both representing Romanticism, and Positivism was born in Lesser Poland, including Wincenty Pol (born in Lublin), Stefan Żeromski (born near Kielce), Aleksander Świętochowski (born near Łuków in extreme northeast corner of Lesser Poland), Walery Przyborowski (born near Kielce), Piotr Michałowski, Helena Modjeska, Henryk Wieniawski (born in Lublin), Leon Wyczółkowski (born near Siedlce), Juliusz Kossak (born in Nowy Wiśnicz), Józef Szujski (born in Tarnów). In the early 20th century, Lesser Poland, especially its part which belonged to Austria-Hungary, was a center of a cultural movement called Young Poland. Many artists associated with the movement were born in Lesser Poland, with the most prominent including Władysław Orkan, Kazimierz Przerwa-Tetmajer, Xawery Dunikowski, Jacek Malczewski, Józef Mehoffer, and Stanisław Wyspiański.

Since Austrian part of Poland enjoyed a wide autonomy, the province of Galicia, whose western part was made of Lesser Poland, became a hotbed of Polish conspirational activities. In anticipation of a future war, Galician Poles, with help of their brethren from other parts of the divided country, created several paramilitary organizations, such as Polish Rifle Squads, and Riflemen's Association. The capital of Lesser Poland, Kraków, was a key center of pro-independence movements, with such individuals, as Józef Piłsudski, being actively involved in those activities. In August 1914, after the outbreak of World War I, Pilsudski's Legions crossed the Austrian – Russian border north of Kraków, and entered Congress Poland. However, the Pilsudski and his soldiers were disappointed to see that the inhabitants of Kielce did not welcome them with joy.[80] The division of Lesser Poland was more visible than ever.

 
Gorals from Beskidy

During World War I, Lesser Poland became one of main theaters of the Eastern Front. Russian push into the territory of Austria – Hungary resulted in the Battle of Galicia. Among other major battles which took place in Lesser Poland, there are the Battle of the Vistula River, and the Gorlice-Tarnów Offensive. After Russian troops had retreated east, whole province was under control of the Austrians and the Germans, and northern Lesser Poland was part of the German-sponsored Kingdom of Poland (1916–1918). In later stages of the conflict, the divided province once again became a center of Polish independence movement. An independent Polish government was re-proclaimed in northern Lesser Poland's city of Lublin, on 7 November 1918. Soon afterwards, it formed the basis of the new government of the country.[81] In other parts of the province, other governments were formed – Polish Liquidation Commission in Kraków, also the short-lived Republic of Tarnobrzeg.

The division of Lesser Poland along the Vistula river, which lasted from 1772 until 1918, is visible even today. For more than 100 years, southern Lesser Poland (Kraków, Tarnów, Biala Krakowska, and Nowy Sącz) was administered by Austria, while northern, larger part of the province (Częstochowa, Sosnowiec, Kielce, Radom, Lublin, Sandomierz) was forcibly part of the Russian Empire. Inhabitants of Austrian part of Poland enjoyed limited autonomy,[82] with Polish language institutions, such as Jagiellonian University. At the same time, Russian-controlled Poland was subject to Russification. As a result of decades of this division, most inhabitants of the areas stolen by Russia are not aware of their Lesser Poland's heritage. Furthermore, current administrative boundaries of the country still reflect the defunct border between the former Russian and Austria–Hungarian Empires.

 
Castle of Bobolice

Interwar Poland (1918–1939) edit

In 1918, when Second Polish Republic was created, whole historical Lesser Poland became part of restored Poland. The historical area of the province was divided between four voivodeships: Kraków Voivodeship (whole), Kielce Voivodeship (whole), Lwów Voivodeship (northwestern corner), and Lublin Voivodeship (western part). Furthermore, in the counties of central Lesser Poland, another administrative unit, Sandomierz Voivodeship was planned, but due to the outbreak of World War II, it was never created. Boundaries between two major Lesser Poland voivodeships – Kraków, and Kielce, were the same as pre-1914 boundaries of Austria-Hungary, and Russia. Nevertheless, in the interbellum period, the notion of Lesser Poland was frequently associated only with former Austrian province of Galicia.[39] Therefore, Western Galicia to the San river, was called Western Lesser Poland, while Eastern Galicia, east of the San, with the city of Lwów (Lviv), was called Eastern Lesser Poland (voivodeships of Tarnopol, Stanisławów, and Lwów). According to a Polish historian Jan Pisuliński, using the term Eastern Lesser Poland to denomine Eastern Galicia is incorrect, as it has no historical justification, being only a designation of nationalist and propaganda significance (similarly to analogous term Western Ukraine used at the same time by the Ukrainian side), which served in the 1920s and 1930s to make a stronger connection of the area between rivers of San and Zbruch with the Polish state and to emphasize the allegedly indigenously Polish nature of that region.[83]

In late 1918, Lesser Poland emerged as one of main centers of fledgling Polish administration and independence movement. According to historian Kazimierz Banburski of Tarnów's District Museum, Tarnów was the first Polish city which became independent, after 123 years of oppression. On 31 October 1918, at 8 am, Tarnów's inhabitants began disarming demoralized Austrian soldiers, and after three hours, the city was completely in Polish hands.[84] On 28 October 1918, Polish Liquidation Committee was created in Kraków. A few days later, socialist peasants founded the Republic of Tarnobrzeg. In the night of 6/7 November 1918, Polish People's Republic was proclaimed in Lublin, by Ignacy Daszynski and other activists. In 1919, the legislative election took place in Lesser Poland without major problems.

 
Wieliczka Salt Mine, a UNESCO World Heritage Site

At that time Lesser Poland, like other provinces of the country, faced several problems. Even though major post-World War I conflicts (such as Polish–Soviet War) did not take place there, it suffered from unemployment, overpopulation, and poverty, especially in towns and countryside. Furthermore, Polish government had to connect parts of the hitherto divided country. There was no direct rail link between Kraków, and Kielce, Radom, and Lublin, and until 1934, when line from Kraków to Tunel was opened, all travelers had to go via Sosnowiec – Maczki. Lack of rail communication between former Austrian and former Russian parts of Lesser Poland is visible even today. Between Kraków and Dęblin, there are only two rail bridges along the Vistula. Residents of the province tried to improve their conditions using legal means, but when it turned out to be impossible, they took to fighting (1923 Kraków riot, 1937 peasant strike in Poland). As if to exacerbate the desperate situation, Lesser Poland witnessed a catastrophic flood in 1934, after which the government decided to construct dams on local rivers.

Even though Lesser Poland's countryside was almost exclusively Polish, its towns and cities were inhabited by numerous Jews, whose communities were very vibrant. In Kraków, Jews made 25% of the population, in Lublin – 31%, in Kielce – 30%, and in Radom – 32%. Apart from the Jews, and Gypsies scattered in the south, there were no other significant national minorities in interbellum Lesser Poland.

Since Lesser Poland was safely located in the middle of the country, away from both German and Soviet border, in the mid-1930s Polish government initiated one of the most ambitious project of the Second Polish Republic – Central Industrial Region, which was located almost exclusively in Lesser Poland. Even though the project was never completed, several plants were constructed, both in Old-Polish Industrial Region, and in other counties of the province. The brand new city of Stalowa Wola was established in dense forests, around a steel mill. In the late 1930s, Lesser Poland was quickly changing, as construction of several factories, and job opportunities caused influx of rural inhabitants to the towns. Such towns, as Dębica, Starachowice, Puławy, or Kraśnik, quickly grew, with their population rising. Earlier, in 1927, Lesser Poland's Dęblin became a major center of Polish aviation, when Polish Air Force Academy was opened there, and in Mielec, PZL Mielec was opened, which was the largest aerospace manufacturer in Poland. Central Industrial Region, however, did not affect western counties of Lesser Poland, which had already been urbanized and industrialized (Biala Krakowska, Żywiec, Kraków, Jaworzno, Zagłębie Dąbrowskie, Zawiercie, and Częstochowa). The government of Poland planned further investments, such as a major East – West rail line, linking Volhynia, and Upper Silesia, but they never materialized. Desperate situation and lack of jobs caused thousands of inhabitants of Lesser Poland (especially from its southern part) to leave their land, mostly for the United States of America,[85] but also Brazil, and Canada.

 
Pope John Paul II was born in Wadowice, Lesser Poland, in 1920

Lesser Poland remained a center of Polish culture, with Kraków's Jagiellonian University, AGH University of Science and Technology, and Catholic University of Lublin, which was opened in 1918. Several important figures of interbellum political, military, and cultural life of Poland were born in Lesser Poland. Among them were Wincenty Witos, Władysław Sikorski, Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski, Józef Dowbor-Muśnicki, Józef Haller, Władysław Belina-Prażmowski, Tadeusz Kutrzeba, Feliks Koneczny, Stefan Żeromski, Tadeusz Peiper, Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska, Witold Gombrowicz, Jan Kiepura, Stefan Jaracz. In 1920, in Lesser Poland's town of Wadowice, Karol Wojtyla, the future Pope John Paul II, was born.

World War II edit

On 1 September 1939, armed forces of Nazi Germany attacked Poland (see: Invasion of Poland). Lesser Poland, due to its proximity to the then-border with Germany, became a battleground on the first day of the invasion. The Germans attacked the province both in its northwest (area west of Częstochowa), and in the south (Podhale), along the border with Slovakia, which also participated in the invasion.

Lesser Poland was defended by the following Polish armies:

  • Karpaty Army, which covered southern, mountainous border of the province,
  • Kraków Army, guarding western part of the province, together with adjacent Polish part of Upper Silesia. Later in the course of war it joined the Karpaty Army, forming the Lesser Poland Army (Armia Małopolska),
  • Łódź Army, which protected extreme northwestern corner of the province, north of Częstochowa,
  • Prusy Army, which was main reserve of the Commander in Chief, and was concentrated in central and northern Lesser Poland (between Radom and Kielce),
  • Lublin Army, improvised after 4 September, and concentrated in the area of Lublin and Sandomierz in northeastern Lesser Poland.
 
Soldiers of Holy Cross Mountains Brigade in parade 1945

After a few days the Battle of the Border was lost, and forces of German Army Group South advanced deep into Lesser Poland's territory. Polish troops resisted fiercely, and among major battles in initial stages of the war, which took place in Lesser Poland, there are Battle of Mokra, Battle of Jordanów, and Battle of Węgierska Górka. By 6 September, Polish forces were in general retreat and Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz-Śmigły ordered all troops to fall back to the secondary lines of defences at the Vistula and San Rivers. German units entered Częstochowa on 3 September (where on the next day they murdered hundreds of civilians), Kielce on 5 September, Kraków on 6 September, and Radom on 8 September (see also Battle of Radom). Within a week, almost whole Lesser Poland was under Nazi occupation. Northeastern part of the province, the area of Lublin, was held by the Poles until 17 September, but eventually, and after fierce battles (see Battle of Tomaszów Lubelski), all Lesser Poland was firmly under Nazi control. First draft of Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact stipulated that northeastern Lesser Poland (east of the Vistula river) was to be occupied by the Soviet Union, and forces of the Red Army reached the area of Lublin after 20 September, but withdrew east on 28 September.

On 12 October 1939, upon a decree of Adolf Hitler, General Government, a separate region of the Greater German Reich was created, with Hans Frank as its Governor-General. Its capital was established in Kraków, and it covered most of the area of historical Lesser Poland, except for its western counties, which were directly incorporated into Nazi Germany's Upper Silesia Province (Będzin, Sosnowiec, Zawiercie, Biała, Żywiec, Chrzanów, Olkusz).

In Lesser Poland, like in all provinces of the occupied country, the Nazis ruled with savage brutality, killing hundreds of thousands of inhabitants, both Polish and Jewish (see: World War II crimes in Poland, Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland, Nazi crimes against ethnic Poles, German AB-Aktion in Poland, Sonderaktion Krakau). The Auschwitz concentration camp, located at the border of Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia, was opened on 14 June 1940, and on 1 October 1941, the Germans opened Majdanek concentration camp on the outskirts of Lublin. The third concentration camp in Lesser Poland was in Kraków's district of Płaszów. In late 1939 and early 1940, in Lesser Poland's spa of Zakopane, and in Kraków, several Gestapo–NKVD Conferences took place, during which the mutual cooperation between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union was discussed.

Anti-Nazi resistance was particularly strong in Lesser Poland, and it was in the extreme northwestern corner of the province (around Opoczno), that armed struggle against the occupiers began in late 1939 and early 1940 (see Henryk Dobrzański). Structures of the Home Army were well-developed in the region. Lesser Poland's independent areas of the Home Army were located in Kraków, Kielce-Radom, and Lublin. During Operation Tempest in mid-1944, several Lesser Poland's towns were liberated, also uprising in Kraków was prepared, but never realized. Apart from the Home Army, other resistance groups were strong in the province, such as pro-Communist Armia Ludowa, peasant's Bataliony Chłopskie, and right-wing National Armed Forces, with its Holy Cross Mountains Brigade.

In all major Lesser Poland's cities, Jewish ghettos were opened, with the biggest ones in Kraków, and Lublin. At first the Nazis were planning to create a so-called "reservation" for European Jews, located around Lesser Poland's town of Nisko (see Nisko Plan), but they changed the plan, and decided to murder all Jews. Condemned to death, Jews in Lesser Poland took to fighting (see Częstochowa Ghetto Uprising), but their efforts failed. As a result of The Holocaust in Poland, once thriving and numerous Jewish population of Lesser Poland was decimated.

Germany operated several prisoner-of-war camps, including Stalag 301, Stalag 307, Stalag 359, Stalag 367, Stalag 369, Stalag 380, Stalag XII-C, Oflag 77, and multiple forced labour subcamps of Stalag VIII-B/344, for Polish, French, Belgian, Italian, Soviet, Dutch, Senegalese and other Allied POWs in the region.[86][87][88]

In the summer of 1944, after Lvov–Sandomierz Offensive, Red Army pushed the Wehrmacht from eastern Lesser Poland. The city of Lublin was captured by the Soviets on 22 July 1944, Stalowa Wola – on 1 August, and Sandomierz, on the left bank of the Vistula – on 18 August. The front line stabilized along the Vistula for about six months (with some bridgeheads on the western bank on the Vistula – see Battle of Studzianki), and in early 1945, Soviet Vistula–Oder Offensive began, which pushed Germans to the gates of Berlin. The Soviets entered Kielce on 15 January, Częstochowa – on 17 January, and Kraków on 19 January. On 27 January, the Red Army entered Sosnowiec. In took the Soviets much longer to clear the areas in the mountains – they did not enter Żywiec until 5 April 1945.[89]

Post-World War II edit

Together with the Red Army, NKVD and Soviet authorities followed, whose purpose was to make Poland a Communist country, with a puppet government, formed as Polish Committee of National Liberation. Since 1 August 1944, the provisional government was officially headquartered in Lesser Poland's Lublin. Thousands of people took to the forests, to continue their fight for free Poland (see Anti-communist resistance in Poland (1944–46)). Lesser Poland again was one of the main centers of the resistance. Several skirmishes took place in the province, including Battle of Kuryłówka. The Communists did not hesitate to kill those rebels they captured (Public execution in Dębica (1946)), and by 1947, the resistance movement was crushed. The last Polish cursed soldier, Józef Franczak, was killed in 1963 near Świdnik in northeastern Lesser Poland. Also, all victims of the 1951 Mokotów Prison execution were members of Lesser Poland's branch of Freedom and Independence. Another well-known anti-Communist fighter from Lesser Poland is Józef Kuraś, who was active in the southern region of Podhale.

In early 1945, the lands of Lesser Poland were divided between three voivodeships – those of Kraków, Lublin, and Kielce. Since summer 1945, several counties were transferred to neighboring voivodeships – eastern Lesser Poland (Dębica, Jasło, Mielec) became part of Rzeszów Voivodeship, while western counties of Będzin and Zawiercie were transferred to Katowice Voivodeship. In 1950, the city of Częstochowa became part of Katowice Voivodeship, and next year, the city of Bielsko-Biała was created out of Lesser Poland's Biala Krakowska, and Upper Silesia's Bielsko. The new city became part of Katowice Voivodeship. Lesser Poland was further divided in 1975, when territorial reform was carried out (see Voivodeships of Poland (1975–1988)). Counties were abolished, and several small voivodeships were created, in such Lesser Poland's towns and cities, as Tarnobrzeg, Tarnów, Nowy Sącz, Bielsko-Biała, Radom, Częstochowa, and Siedlce.

The government of Communist Poland invested in heavy industry, following the pre-1939 idea of Central Industrial Area. In Kraków, a new district of Nowa Huta was constructed in the 1950s. In Częstochowa and Zawiercie, the steelworks were significantly expanded, and in early 1970, the government initiated construction of Katowice Steelworks, which, despite its name, is located in Lesser Poland's Dąbrowa Górnicza. To connect Katowice Steelworks with Soviet plants, in late 1970s Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line was opened, which crossed Lesser Poland from west to east. Among other major factories, opened in Lesser Poland during Communist rule, there are:

 
A fire engine made by FSC Star in Lesser Poland's Starachowice

Other Lesser Poland's major plants were significantly expanded after 1945, including Żywiec Brewery, Okocim Brewery, Fablok, Łucznik Arms Factory, FŁT-Kraśnik, Jaworzno Power Station, Siersza Power Plant, Huta Stalowa Wola, Janina Coal Mine, Sobieski Coal Mine, Zakłady Azotowe Tarnów-Mościce. Furthermore, in early 1950s significant sulfur resources were discovered in Tarnobrzeg, as a result of which Siarkopol company was founded, and the city of Tarnobrzeg quickly grew. In 1975, coal was discovered northeast of Lublin, and soon afterwards, Bogdanka Coal Mine and Piaski Coal Mine were opened.

Between 1971 and 1977, Central Trunk Line was opened, which goes along western boundary of the province, and which connects Kraków and Katowice, with Warsaw. In the early 1980s, construction of a highway between Kraków and Katowice began. The 61-kilometer road is now run by Stalexport Autostrada Małopolska, and is part of A4 highway.

Residents of Lesser Poland frequently protested against Communist government. Major centers of anti-Communist resistance were in Kraków, Nowa Huta, Radom, and Lublin. Among major protests that took place in the province were 1968 Polish political crisis (with Kraków as one of major centers of protests), June 1976 protests (in Radom), Lublin 1980 strikes, 31 August 1982 demonstrations in Poland (in several locations), 1988 Polish strikes (with Stalowa Wola as one of major centers). Several anti-Nazi, and anti-Communist leaders hailed from Lesser Poland: Jan Piwnik, Emil August Fieldorf, Leopold Okulicki, Ryszard Siwiec, Stanisław Pyjas, Hieronim Dekutowski, Andrzej Gwiazda, Andrzej Czuma.

A number of key personalities of Communist government were born in Lesser Poland, including Józef Cyrankiewicz, Bolesław Bierut, Edward Gierek, Wojciech Jaruzelski, Czesław Kiszczak, Stanisław Kania, Hilary Minc, Edward Ochab, Michał Rola-Żymierski, Józef Oleksy.

Among prominent personalities of Polish cultural life of the 20th century, who were born in Lesser Poland, there are: Xawery Dunikowski, Witold Gombrowicz, Gustaw Herling-Grudziński, Sławomir Mrożek, Tadeusz Kantor, Jan Kanty Pawluśkiewicz, Marek Kondrat, Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska, Krzysztof Penderecki, Zbigniew Preisner, Leon Schiller, Jerzy Stuhr, Jan Sztaudynger, Grzegorz Turnau, Jerzy Turowicz.

Local Government Reorganization Act (1998) edit

 
Boundary between Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia (red line) on the territory of current Silesian Voivodeship
 
Kraków is the capital of Lesser Poland
 
Lublin, the second-largest city of Lesser Poland
 
Częstochowa, the third-largest city of Lesser Poland
 
Radom, the fourth-largest city of Lesser Poland
 
Sosnowiec, the fifth-largest city of Lesser Poland

In 1998, the government of Poland carried out administrative reform of the country. For the first time in history, Lesser Poland Voivodeship was created, with its capital in Kraków, and an area of 15,108 square kilometers. The new province covers only a small, southwestern part of historical Lesser Poland.

Today, Lesser Poland is divided between several voivodeships: whole Lesser Poland Voivodeship, whole Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, western half of Lublin Voivodeship, western part of Subcarpathian Voivodeship, eastern half of Silesian Voivodeship, southern part of Mazovian Voivodeship and southeastern corner of Łódź Voivodeship (around Opoczno).

There were suggestions that Lesser Poland Voivodeship should stretch from Bielsko-Biała to Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski and Sandomierz. Furthermore, creation of an Old Poland Voivodeship was proposed, on the historical lands of northern Lesser Poland. Also, since about half of territory of current Silesian Voivodeship belongs to historical Lesser Poland, there are suggestions to rename it into Silesian – Lesser Poland Voivodeship.[90]

Major cities and towns (by size) edit

The list is based on the Polish Central Statistical Office list of 100 biggest cities of Poland, as for 30 June 2008.[91]

L.p. City Population Area
(km2.)
Current voivodeship
2.   Kraków 756 441 326,80 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
9.   Lublin 351 345 147,45 Lublin Voivodeship
13.   Częstochowa 241 449 159,71 Silesian Voivodeship
14.   Radom 224 501 111,80 Masovian Voivodeship
15.   Sosnowiec 221 775 91,06 Silesian Voivodeship
17.   Kielce 205 655 109,65 Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
22.   Bielsko-Biała 175 476 124,51 Silesian Voivodeship
27.   Dąbrowa Górnicza 128 560 188,73 Silesian Voivodeship
35.   Tarnów 115 769 72,38 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
42.   Jaworzno 95 383 152,67 Silesian Voivodeship
45.   Nowy Sącz 84 492 57,58 Lesser Poland Voivodeship
48.   Siedlce 77 102 32,00 Masovian Voivodeship
53.   Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski 72 888 46,43 Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
66.   Stalowa Wola 64 753 82,52 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
71.   Mielec 60 979 46,89 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
76.   Będzin 58 559 37,37 Silesian Voivodeship
84.   Starachowice 52 430 31,82 Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
85.   Zawiercie 52 290 85,25 Silesian Voivodeship
87.   Tarnobrzeg 49 753 85,39 Subcarpathian Voivodeship
88.   Puławy 49 223 50,49 Lublin Voivodeship
92.   Skarżysko-Kamienna 48 308 64,39 Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
97.   Dębica 46 693 34,02 Subcarpathian Voivodeship

In the Kingdom of Poland and Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, several other locations used to be important urban centers of Lesser Poland, but in the course of the time, their significance declined. The main example is Sandomierz, which for hundreds of years was one of the most important cities of Poland,[92] but now is a town of 25,000. Other examples of historically important places, which are now little towns or villages are:

  • Biecz, a town of 5,000, once the seat of a county, incorporated in 1257,
  • Chęciny, a village now, once the seat of a county, with a royal castle,
  • Czchów, a town of 2,000, incorporated before 1333, once the seat of a county,
  • Goraj, a village now, which used to be one of urban centers of Lublin Voivodeship,
  • Iłża, a town of 5,000, incorporated before 1294, with a royal castle,
  • Kazimierz Dolny, which enjoyed its greatest prosperity in the 16th and the first half of the 17th century,
  • Koprzywnica, a village now, a town in 1268–1869,
  • Książ Wielki, a town in 1385–1875, once the seat of a county,
  • Lelów, a village now, which used to be the seat of a county. Incorporated in 1314, with a royal castle,
  • Nowe Miasto Korczyn, a town in 1258–1869, with a royal castle, where general sejmiks of Lesser Poland took place,
  • Opatów, a town of 7,000, incorporated in 1282, once the seat of sejmiks,
  • Parczew, now a town of 10,000, once a major urban center of northeast Lesser Poland,
  • Pilzno, now a town of 4,000, once the seat of a county,
  • Sieciechów, a village now, once an important town, incorporated in 1232,
  • Stężyca, a village now. Once the seat of a county, which used to be a town in 1330–1869,
  • Szczyrzyc, a village now, which used to be the seat of a county,
  • Szydłowiec, a town of 12,000, with a royal castle, which in the Renaissance period was an important urban center of northern Lesser Poland,
  • Szydłów, a village now, which used to be a major urban center of Sandomierz Voivodeship,
  • Urzędów, a village now, which in 1405–1869 used to be a town and the seat of a county,
  • Wiślica, a village now, which was probably the capital of the Vistulans, and the seat of a county,
  • Wojnicz, now a town of 3,500, incorporated in 1278, used to be the seat of a county,
  • Zawichost, a town of 2,000, once a royal town with a castle, incorporated before 1255.

Economy and industry edit

History of industry in Lesser Poland goes back to prehistoric times, when in Świętokrzyskie Mountains, first bloomeries were constructed. In the Middle Ages, first plants were opened in that area, and as a result, Old-Polish Industrial Region was created, which was a major industrial region of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the 17th century, first Polish blast furnaces were constructed in Samsonów by Italian engineer Hieronim Caccio. Apart from iron products, used for military purposes, Old-Polish Industrial Region also manufactured charcoal and glass. In 1782, in Poland there were 34 bloomeries, out of which 27 were located in Old-Polish Industrial Region. Another major industrial area of Lesser Poland is Zagłębie Dąbrowskie, where in the 16th century, lead, silver, and zinc were found. As early as in the 15th century, coal was extracted in Trzebinia – Siersza, and in the following centuries, especially in the 19th century, several coal mines and steel mills were opened in Zagłębie and in Zagłębie Krakowskie (first coal mine in Jaworzno was opened in 1792). In nearby Olkusz, the history of zinc mining dates to the 12th century when Casimir II the Just set up a mining settlement. Also, in the towns of Wieliczka and Bochnia, salt mines were established in the 12th and 13th centuries (see Bochnia Salt Mine, Wieliczka Salt Mine).

In the 20th century, natural resources were also discovered in central and eastern counties Lesser Poland. In 1964, the world's largest open-pit sulfur mine was opened in Machów near Tarnobrzeg.[93] Other sulfur deposits in the area of Tarnobrzeg are Jeziorko, Grzybów-Gacki, and Grębów-Wydza. The mine at Machów is now closed. In the late 1960s, eastern Lesser Poland became one of three coal basins of the country, when Lublin Basin was created.[94] Major coal mine in the area is KWK Bogdanka near Łęczna, which is the only coal mine in Poland which has continuously generated a profit. Other Polish coal mines located in Lesser Poland are those found in western part of the province, along the boundary with Upper Silesia – KWK Janina in Jaworzno, KWK Sobieski, and also in Jaworzno. Copper and silver are extracted in Myszków (see Myszków mine).

In the late 1930s, the government of the Second Polish Republic created Central Industrial Region, which was almost exclusively located in Lesser Poland. Currently, within borders of the province, there are following industrial regions:

In 2009, Polityka weekly made its own list of 500 biggest Polish companies. According to the list, second biggest company of the country was Polska Grupa Energetyczna, which, as Polityka stated, is headquartered in Lublin.[95] Third biggest company of Poland in 2009 was Fiat Auto Poland from Bielsko-Biała. Other Lesser Polish companies which ranked high were: BP Poland from Kraków (ranked 12th), Emperia Holding from Lublin (ranked 26th), Kolporter Holding from Kielce (ranked 43rd), and Żywiec Brewery (ranked 44th). Other major companies of Lesser Poland are Azoty Tarnów, Bank BPH, Bogdanka Coal Mine, Carlsberg Polska, Comarch, Dębica SA, Huta Częstochowa, Huta Katowice, Fablok, FŁT-Kraśnik, Huta Stalowa Wola, Instal-Lublin, Janina Coal Mine, Jaworzno Power Station, Kozienice Power Station, Łucznik Arms Factory, Nowiny Cement Plant near Kielce, Połaniec Power Station, PZL Mielec, PZL-Świdnik, Sobieski Coal Mine, Tadeusz Sendzimir Steelworks.

Since the lands of historical Lesser Poland belong now to different voivodeships, unemployment rate differs from one region to another. In January 2010, in Poland the unemployment rate was 12,7%.[96] In Silesian Voivodeship, eastern half of which is Lesser Poland, it was 9,9%, in Lesser Poland Voivodeship – 10,5%, in Subcarpathian Voivodeship – 16,3%, in Holy Cross Voivodeship – 15,5%, in Lublin Voivodeship – 13,6%, and in Mazovian Voivodeship (southern part of which is Lesser Poland) – 9,6%. In Lesser Poland's cities, the best situation was in Kraków (as for November 2009[97]), where 4,1% had no job. In Bielsko-Biała, the rate was 5,7%, in Lublin – 8,8%, in Siedlce – 9,1%, in Tarnów – 9,2%, in Nowy Sącz – 10%, in Kielce and Częstochowa – 10,1%, in Jaworzno – 10,2%, in Dąbrowa Górnicza – 10,3%, in Sosnowiec – 12,2%, and in Tarnobrzeg – 14,3%. The worst situation on the job market (as for November 2009) was in Radom, where unemployment rate was 20,9% (it made Radom second worst city county of the nation, only after Grudziądz).

Transport edit

Roads edit

Several European roads (see International E-road network) cross Lesser Poland. The most important one is the European route E40, which goes from west to east, across whole Europe. In Lesser Poland, the E40 goes from Jaworzno, via Kraków and Tarnów, towards eastern border of the country. Another main European road in Lesser Poland is the E77, which goes from north to south, via Radom, Kielce and Kraków, to southern border of Poland at Chyżne. Third major European road in Lesser Poland is the E30, which crosses the territory of the province in its extreme northeast corner, in Siedlce. Apart from these roads, Lesser Poland is crossed by the following European routes:

  • E371, which begins in Radom, and goes via Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski, Tarnobrzeg, and Rzeszów to the border crossing at Barwinek,
  • E372, which begins in Warsaw, and via northeastern Lesser Poland (Lublin, Świdnik), goes to Ukrainian border at Hrebenne,
  • E462, which goes through southwestern corner of the province, from Czech border and Bielsko-Biała, to John Paul II International Airport Kraków-Balice,
  • E75, which crosses western counties of Lesser Poland – from Częstochowa, through Dąbrowa Górnicza and Jaworzno, to Bielsko-Biała and Polish – Czech border.

Airports edit

 
Kraków John Paul II International Airport, the busiest airport in Lesser Poland

Within borders of historical Lesser Poland, there are four airports – John Paul II International Airport Kraków–Balice, Lublin Airport, Warsaw Radom Airport and Katowice International Airport, which is located in the village of Pyrzowice, on the border between Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia. Pyrzowice is part of Gmina Ożarowice, which after Partitions of Poland, and Congress of Vienna belonged to Będzin County of the Russian Empire. In the interbellum, the area of future airport belonged to Lesser Poland's Kielce Voivodeship, and in 1945, was transferred to Katowice Voivodeship (initially Silesian-Dąbrowa Voivodeship). In 1998, Ożarowice, together with the airport, was attached to Tarnowskie Góry County, despite the fact that it is not located in Upper Silesia[98]

Further airports in Lesser Poland will be opened in the future – Kielce – Obice.[99] Also, Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport is located on eastern border of the province.

Railroads edit

Railroad network of Lesser Poland is very unevenly distributed. It is very dense in the west, along the border with Upper Silesia, and sparse in the east, especially along the Vistula, and around Lublin. All major cities of the province are connected with each other, however traveling from Kraków to Lublin is time-consuming, as trains have to take an extended route, via Kielce, Radom, and Dęblin. Also, there is no direct connection between Tarnów and Kielce, as these cities belonged to different countries before 1918. Underdevelopment of the railroads in northern and eastern Lesser Poland is the result of the policy of the Russian Empire. For military reasons, the Russians were not interested in construction of a dense network of lines along the border with Germany and Austria-Hungary, allowing only the construction of narrow-gauge connections.[100] Along the Vistula, between Kraków and Dęblin (the distance of some 320 kilometers), there are only four rail bridges – in Dęblin (rebuilt after the war, in 1947[101]), in Sandomierz (built in 1928[102]), in Tarnobrzeg-Nagnajów (built in 1961, together with a road bridge[103]), and in Zaduszniki (built in 1979 for the Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line[104]). In Kraków itself, there are three rail bridges over the Vistula.

Among rail hubs of Lesser Poland, there are Bielsko-Biała, Chabówka, Częstochowa, Dąbrowa Górnicza, Dębica, Dęblin, Jaworzno-Szczakowa, Kalwaria Zebrzydowska Lanckorona, Kielce, Koniecpol, Kozłów, Kraków, Lublin, Łuków, Muszyna, Nowy Sącz, Oświęcim, Siedlce, Spytkowice, Skarżysko-Kamienna, Stalowa Wola, Stróże, Sucha Beskidzka, Radom, Tarnów, Trzebinia, Tunel, Zawiercie, and Żywiec.

In the late 1970s, the Communist government built the broad-gauge Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line, which crosses Lesser Poland from west to east along the Vistula.

Tourism and nature edit

 
Kraków Old Town, UNESCO World Heritage Site

The historical capital of Lesser Poland – Kraków – is regarded as the cultural capital of Poland,[105] while Zakopane is considered the winter capital of Poland.[106] In 1978, UNESCO placed Kraków's Old Town on the list of World Heritage Sites. From Sandomierz to Kraków goes the re-established Lesser Polish Way, one of the routes of the medieval Way of St. James. Every year, hundreds of thousands of tourists come to Lesser Poland, to see its historic cities – Sandomierz, Kazimierz Dolny, Zakopane, Biecz, Opatów, Szydłów, Lublin, and Kraków. Famous Jasna Góra Monastery in Częstochowa, spiritual capital of the country,[107] attracts hundreds of thousands of pilgrims, as well as Auschwitz concentration camp (also placed on the UNESCO World Heritage Sites List[108]). Lesser Poland has many museums, the city of Kraków itself has about sixty of them. Among the most famous are The Czartoryski Museum, The Galicia Jewish Museum, The National Museum, Kraków, Polish Aviation Museum, Sukiennice Museum, and Wawel Castle. There are museums in other locations of the province, such as Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Bielsko-Biała Museum, Holy Father John Paul II Family Home in Wadowice, Jacek Malczewski Museum in Radom, Lublin Museum, Museum of Częstochowa, Museum of Sandomierz Diocese, Museum of Żywiec Brewery, Museum of Zagłębie in Będzin, Przypkowscy Clock Museum, Regional Museum in Wiślica, Regional Museum in Siedlce, Tytus Chałubiński Tatra Museum in Zakopane.

 
Lady with an Ermine by Leonardo da Vinci, Czartoryski Museum, Kraków

Among other major places of interest of the province are: Baranów Sandomierski Castle, Będzin Castle, Chęciny Castle, Czarnolas in Zwoleń, Dunajec river castles, Kalwaria Zebrzydowska park (UNESCO World Heritage Sites List[108]), Krzyżtopór, Lipnica Murowana, Lublin Castle, Łysa Góra, Maczuga Herkulesa, Majdanek concentration camp, Niedzica Castle, Ogrodzieniec, Pieskowa Skała, Temple of the Sibyl, Trail of the Eagles' Nests, Wieliczka Salt Mine (UNESCO World Heritage Sites List[108]), Wooden Churches of Southern Lesser Poland (UNESCO World Heritage Sites List[108]). Furthermore, thousands of tourists come to Radom in northern Lesser Poland, to watch the popular, biannual Radom Air Show. Lesser Poland has a number of open-air museumsGóra Birów in Kraków-Częstochowa Upland, Museum of Kielce Village in Kielce, Museum of Lublin Village in Lublin, Museum of Folk Culture in Kolbuszowa, Museum of Radom Village in Radom, Vistula River Etnographic Park in Babice, Nowy Sącz Etnographic Park in Nowy Sącz, Orawa Etnographic Park in Zubrzyca Górna, Chabówka Rolling-Stock Heritage Park in Chabówka. The Małopolska Institute of Culture, located in Kraków, promotes the activities of regional museums and smaller sites of interest.

Lesser Poland is famous for its underground waters and spas, such as Busko-Zdrój, Solec-Zdrój, Nałęczów, Muszyna, Szczawnica, Piwniczna, Wysowa-Zdrój, Rabka, Swoszowice, Żegiestów, Krzeszowice, Wieliczka, and Krynica-Zdrój.[109] Mountains and resorts of the province make it a major center of Polish tourism – Tatra National Park is visited by around 3 million tourists every year.[110]

The following National Parks are located in Lesser Poland:

Education edit

 
Collegium Maius, oldest building of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, the oldest university in Poland and the 13th oldest university in continuous operation in the world

Universities edit

Lesser Poland is home to Poland's oldest university – Kraków's Jagiellonian University, which was established in 1364. For centuries, it was the only college of the province, and of the whole country. In December 1918, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin was opened, becoming second university of Lesser Poland. In 1944, also in Lublin, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University was established.

Technical universities edit

There are several technical universities in Lesser Poland – Kraków's AGH University of Science and Technology, and University of Technology, as well as University of Bielsko-Biała, Częstochowa University of Technology, Lublin University of Technology, Kazimierz Pułaski Technical University of Radom, and Kielce University of Technology.

Other colleges edit

Future teachers may study at Pedagogical University of Cracow, or Jan Długosz University in Częstochowa, and future physicians at Jagiellonian University Medical College, and Medical University of Lublin. Other state colleges are Jan Kochanowski University in Kielce, Pontifical University of John Paul II in Kraków, Agricultural University of Cracow, University of Life Sciences in Lublin, and Cracow University of Economics. Unique in the country is the Polish Air Force Academy, located in Dęblin. Among private colleges of Lesser Poland, there is Wyższa Szkoła Biznesu – National-Louis University in Nowy Sącz.

Regional identity and culture edit

Since Lesser Poland ceased to exist as a unified region in the late 18th century, during the Partitions of Poland, most of its inhabitants are not aware of their heritage. Even the residents of Jaworzno, a city which for centuries belonged to Kraków Land and only in 1975 was transferred to Katowice Voivodeship (see Voivodeships of Poland (1975–98)), are not familiar with their Lesser Polish roots. In a poll in April 2011, 57% of Jaworzno's inhabitants stated that their city is historically tied with Lesser Poland, but as many as 36% said their city is tied with Upper Silesia.[111] Polish linguist Jan Miodek emphasizes the fact that linguistically, Będzin is closer to Myślenice than to Tarnowskie Góry, only 20 km away. Miodek wrote that even though Upper Silesia and Lesser Poland's Zagłębie Dąbrowskie are industrially and administratively tied, both regions are culturally and linguistically different from each other.[112] Residents of Zagłębie Dąbrowskie are known for their dislike of Upper Silesians, whom they call hanysy, while the Silesians call them gorole. In recent years, more inhabitants of Zagłębie become aware of their Lesser Poland's heritage,[113] Also, after Partitions of Poland, when Austrian province of Galicia was created, the cities of Rzeszów and Przemyśl, which are part of historical Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities, became associated with Lesser Poland. Therefore, currently the notion of Lesser Poland most commonly applies to the two voivodeships which in the past belonged to Austrian Empire – Lesser Poland Voivodeship, and Subcarpathian Voivodeship[114]

Among several Lesser Poland's regional organizations, one of the most important is Stowarzyszenie Gmin i Powiatów Małopolski (The Association of Villages and Counties of Lesser Poland). It publishes a magazine called Wspólnota Małopolska (Lesser Polish Community), and every year it chooses a Lesser Polish Person of the Year (among winners are John Paul II, Anna Dymna, and Stanisław Dziwisz). The Association of Villages and Counties of Lesser Poland has over 120 members from four Polish voivodeships. Among members are cities of Kraków, Częstochowa, Bielsko-Biała, Tarnów, and Przemyśl.[115]

Arguably, the most famous product of Lesser Polish cuisine is the bagel, which was invented in Kraków. Other famous food specialties of the province are oscypek (EU Protected Geographical Status), slivovitz from the village of Łącko, bublik, papal cream cake from Wadowice,[116] Lisiecka Sausage (EU Protected Geographical Status), and Bryndza Podhalańska. Among other popular products that are made in Lesser Poland, there are beers (Browary Lubelskie, Żywiec Beer, and Okocim Beer), pastas and snacks from Lublin's Lubella, Kielce Mayonnaise, coffee substitute beverage INKA from Skawina, chocolates from Kraków's Wawel Factory, juices from Tymbark, vodka Żołądkowa Gorzka produced in Lublin, and Chopin produced in Siedlce.

 
Folklore group in Podhale costume, Bukowina Tatrzańska, Lesser Poland, 2016

Folk costumes from Lesser Poland are widely known across the country – a dancing couple, dressed in traditional Kraków costume (Krakowiacy), is presented on the logo of renowned Żywiec beer,[117] and Podhale is one of few Polish regions, where people regularly wear their traditional costumes.[118] Both Kraków and Podhale folk costumes are among most popular garbs in Poland.[119] Other folk costumes from the region are those of Zagłębie Dąbrowskie, Sandomierz, Rzeszów, Częstochowa, Kielce, Radom (regarded as the most traditional of all Polish costumes[120]), Opoczno, Holy Cross Mountains, Nowy Sącz, and Lublin. There are several folk festivals in Lesser Poland, such as On the frontier of Lesser Poland and Mazovia (in Opoczno[121]), Folk Festival of Józef Myszka (in Museum of Radom Village in Iłża[122]), annual Days of Lesser Poland's Cultural Heritage,[123] Week of the Beskidy Culture (in several locations), Wianki in Kraków, Festival of Old Music and Culture in Niepołomice, Festival of Folk Bands and Folk Singers in Kazimierz Dolny, International Folklore Meetings of Ignacy Wachowiak in Lublin, International Festival of Folklore of Mountain Lands in Zakopane, Jewish Culture Festival in Kraków. Krakowiak is one of Polish national dances, other popular Lesser Poland's folk dances are Zbójnicki from Podhale and dances from Lublin. Among Lesser Poland's customs are Lajkonik, and Kraków szopka.

 
Polish flat soda bread (known as Proziaki in podkarpacie)

Sports and entertainment edit

 
KS Cracovia on Independence Day 2019

Several renowned sportspeople and entertainers come from Lesser Poland. Among them are some of the most famous personalities of contemporary Polish sports – boxer Tomasz Adamek, Formula 1 driver Robert Kubica, swimmer Paweł Korzeniowski, skier Justyna Kowalczyk, tennis player Agnieszka Radwańska, football and volleyball stars Jakub Błaszczykowski, Artur Boruc, and Piotr Gruszka. Among late and retired sports stars who were born in the region, there also are Polish Sportspersonalities of the Year: tennis player and Wimbledon finalist Jadwiga Jędrzejowska, skier Józef Łuszczek, ski jumper Stanisław Marusarz, and driver Sobiesław Zasada.

Kraków's major association football teams – KS Cracovia, and Wisła Kraków, are multiple champions of the country, also Stal Mielec won Polish championship twice (1973, 1976), and Garbarnia Kraków and Raków Częstochowa once each (1931 and 2023). Other popular football teams from Lesser Poland are Zagłębie Sosnowiec (four time Polish Cup winner), Górnik Łęczna, Korona Kielce, Motor Lublin, Radomiak Radom, Stal Stalowa Wola, and Sandecja Nowy Sącz.

Besides association football, Lesser Poland's teams were multiple national champions in other sports:

Major sports venues of the province are Stadion Miejski im. Henryka Reymana, Stadion Cracovii im. Józefa Piłsudskiego and Tauron Arena Kraków in Kraków, Stadion Miejski, Hala Legionów and Kielce Racetrack in Kielce, Arena Lublin and Hala Globus in Lublin, Miejski Stadion Sportowy "KSZO" w Ostrowcu Sw., Zagłębiowski Park Sportowy in Sosnowiec, Dębowiec Sports Arena in Bielsko-Biała, Arena Częstochowa, Hala Sportowa MOSiR in Radom, Wielka Krokiew in Zakopane.

Among popular rock music bands from Lesser Poland, there are Budka Suflera, Golec uOrkiestra, Maanam, and Zakopower. From Lesser Poland hail composers Jan Kanty Pawluśkiewicz, and Krzysztof Penderecki, as well as singers Basia, Ewa Demarczyk, Justyna Steczkowska, Grzegorz Turnau, Maciej Zembaty. Major music festivals in the province are: Coke Live Music Festival in Kraków, Celtic Music Festival ZAMEK in Będzin, Film Music Festival in Kraków, Gaude Mater in Częstochowa, Boyscout's Festival of School Music in Kielce, Summer with Chopin in Busko-Zdrój, Festiwal of Shanties in Kraków, and Festival of Student Song in Kraków.

Lesser Polish dialect of Polish edit

 
A map of Polish dialects. The area where Lesser Poland's dialect is spoken is marked in orange.

Lesser Polish dialect is spoken in southeastern corner of Poland, both in lands which belong to historical Lesser Poland, and in areas which are not part of the province (around Sieradz and Łęczyca). On the other hand, as seen on the map, the Lesser Polish dialect is not spoken in the extreme northeast of Lesser Poland, in Siedlce and vicinity, where people rather speak Masovian dialect. Descending from the language of the Vistulans, it is the most numerous dialectal group in modern Poland. According to Wincenty Pol, it is divided into three subdivisions: Sandomierz dialect, Lublin dialect, and Sanok dialect.[124]

In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, Lesser Polish dialect, together with Greater Polish dialect, contributed to creation of standard Polish, it also greatly influenced Silesian (see Dialects of Polish), as well as dialects of Polish used in southern part of Kresy Wschodnie. Later on, however, its importance diminished and was replaced by Masovian dialect, which became the leading dialect of Polish. After Partitions of Poland, when Lesser Poland was divided between Austria and Russia, northern areas of the province took over many features of the Masovian dialect, while Lesser Polish dialect in Austrian province of Galicia was heavily influenced by German.

According to Multimedia Guide to Polish Dialects, a webpage maintained by University of Warsaw, Lesser Polish dialect is divided into the following subdialects:

  • Mazowsze Borderland (Pogranicze Mazowsza – around Radom and Dęblin),
  • Łęczyca (around Łódź, Kutno, Tomaszów Mazowiecki – this part of the country is not historical Lesser Poland),
  • Kielce (around Kielce),
  • Lasowiacy (north of Rzeszów),
  • East Kraków,
  • West Lublin,
  • East Lublin (this area historically belongs to Chełm Land),
  • Przemyśl (historical part of Red Ruthenia/Cherven Cities),
  • Biecz,
  • Nowy Sącz,
  • Podhale,
  • Spisz,
  • Orawa,
  • Żywiec,
  • Sieradz,
  • Sanok region, or Red-Ruthenian[125]
  • Kraków, together with Zagłebie Dąbrowskie.[126]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Heme Oxygenases 2007 Conference. Jagiellonian University. Archived from the original on 15 July 2007. Retrieved 14 August 2007.
  2. ^ . University at Buffalo, SUNY. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  3. ^ Wieland, Christian; Leonhard, Jörn (18 May 2011). What Makes the Nobility Noble?: Comparative Perspectives from the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 9783647310411. Retrieved 5 March 2017 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Podraza, Antoni (1 June 1999). (in Polish). Wspólnota Małopolska. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015. Retrieved 19 April 2011. Czy dzisiejszy mieszkaniec Kielc, Radomia albo Lublina poczuwa się do tego, że pochodzi z Małopolski? Mieszkańcom dawnej Małopolski brakuje przeświadczenia, iż pochodzą z tej samej dzielnicy, które tak wyraźnie cechuje mieszkańców Wielkopolski czy Mazowsza.
  5. ^ http://teatrnn.pl/leksykon/node/1819/lublin_pod_rządami_pierwszych_jagiellonów_1434–1474#6 26 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Lublin pod rządami pierwszych Jagiellonów 1434–1474
  6. ^ Waldseemüller, Martin (1525), "Karte von Germania, Kleinpolen, Hungary, Walachai u. Siebenbuergen nebst Theilen der angraenzenden Laender", Claudii Ptolemaei geographicae enarrationis libri octo (in Latin and German)
  7. ^ (in Polish). Powiat Bielsko-Biała. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  8. ^ a b "Przewodnik po Częstochowie z 1909 roku" [The 1909 Guide to Czestochowa and vicinity] (in Polish). Czestochowski Serwis Informacyjny. from the original on 14 August 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011. Starostwo krzepickie, zajmujące prawie 1/3 część dzisiejszego powiatu Częstochowskiego (do starostwa należało miasto Kłobuck i dwadzieścia kilka okolicznych wsi), zaliczało się do województwa krakowskiego i do powiatu lelowskiego.
  9. ^ (in Polish). Portal Turystyczno – Krajoznawcy. Archived from the original on 6 September 2010. Retrieved 19 April 2011. W XVI – XVIII w. Przedbórz był siedzibą starostwa niegrodowego w ówczesnym województwie sandomierskim.
  10. ^ [History of Opoczno County] (in Polish). Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  11. ^ Gloger 1903, p. 186.
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Bibliography edit

  • Bedford, Neal (2008). Lonely Planet Poland (6 ed.). Lonely Planet. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-74104-479-9.
  • Cosmas of Prague (2006). Kosmasa Kronika Czechów (in Polish). Trans. Maria Wojciechowska. Wrocław. OL 5262807M.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Davies, Norman (2005). God's Playground: A History of Poland in Two Volumes. Vol. 1. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-925339-5.
  • Gloger, Zygmunt (1903). Geografia historyczna ziem dawnej Polski (in Polish). Nabu Press. ISBN 978-1-145-33359-8.
  • Jezierski, Andrzej; Leszczyńska, Cecylia (2003). Historia gospodarcza Polski (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Key Text. ISBN 83-87251-71-2.
  • Labuda, G. (1988). "Polska, Czechy, Rus i kraj Ledzian w drugiej potowie X wieku". Studia nad poczatkami panstwa polskiego (in Polish). Vol. II. Poznań.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Lerski, Jerzy Jan (1996). "Little (Lesser) Poland (Małopolska)". In Piotr Wróbel, Richard J. Kozicki (ed.). Historical dictionary of Poland. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-26007-9.

External links edit

  • Castles of Lesser Poland on lonelyplanet
  • Visit Lesser Poland webpage
  • Portal of citizen journalism for Małopolska region
  • National Parks in Lesser Poland

lesser, poland, confused, with, voivodeship, often, known, polish, name, małopolska, pronounced, mawɔˈpɔlska, latin, polonia, minor, historical, region, situated, southern, south, eastern, poland, capital, largest, city, kraków, throughout, centuries, develope. Not to be confused with Lesser Poland Voivodeship Lesser Poland often known by its Polish name Malopolska pronounced mawɔˈpɔlska Latin Polonia Minor is a historical region situated in southern and south eastern Poland Its capital and largest city is Krakow Throughout centuries Lesser Poland developed a separate culture featuring diverse architecture folk costumes dances cuisine traditions and a rare Lesser Polish dialect The region is rich in historical landmarks monuments castles natural scenery and UNESCO World Heritage Sites Lesser Poland MalopolskaHistorical regionFrom top left to right Wawel Castle in KrakowLublin Old TownMarket Square in TarnowSandomierz Town HallWieliczka Salt MineRadom City HallSandomierz Krakow and Lublin landsCoat of armsLocation of Lesser Poland shown in darker pink in PolandCountry PolandSeatKrakowArea Total60 000 km2 20 000 sq mi Population Totalc 9 000 000Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Lesser Poland Malopolska and other historical lands of Poland against the background of modern administrative borders names in Polish Wawel Castle in KrakowOld Town in LublinThe region should not be confused with the modern Lesser Poland Voivodeship which covers only the southwestern part of Lesser Poland 1 Historical Lesser Poland was much larger than the current voivodeship that bears its name It reached from Bielsko Biala in the southwest as far as to Siedlce in the northeast 2 It consisted of the three voivodeships of Krakow Sandomierz and Lublin It comprised almost 60 000 km2 in area today s population in this area is about 9 000 000 inhabitants Its landscape is mainly hilly with the Carpathian Mountains and Tatra Mountain Range in the south it is located in the basin of the upper Vistula river It has been noted for its mighty aristocracy magnateria and wealthy nobility szlachta 3 Between the 14th and 18th century the Lesser Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland also encompassed the historical regions of Podlachia Volhynia Podolia and Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities In the era of partitions the southern part of Lesser Poland became known as Galicia which was under Austrian control until Poland regained its independence in 1918 As a result of this long lasting division many inhabitants of the northern part of Lesser Poland including those in such cities as Lublin Radom Kielce and Czestochowa do not recognize their Lesser Polish identity 4 However while Lublin Lubelskie was declared an independent Voivodeship as early as 1474 5 it still has speakers of the Lesser Polish dialect Across history many ethnic and religious minorities existed in Lesser Poland as they fled persecution from other areas or countries Poland s once tolerant policy towards these minorities allowed them to flourish and create separate self governing communities Some minorities still remain but are on the verge of extinction most notably Wymysorys speaking Vilamovians Halcnovians Gorals Lemkos and once Polish Jews and Walddeutsche Germans Contents 1 Geography and boundaries 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Early period and Kingdom of Poland 3 2 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 3 3 Partitions of Poland 1772 1918 3 4 Interwar Poland 1918 1939 3 5 World War II 3 6 Post World War II 3 7 Local Government Reorganization Act 1998 4 Major cities and towns by size 5 Economy and industry 6 Transport 6 1 Roads 6 2 Airports 6 3 Railroads 7 Tourism and nature 8 Education 8 1 Universities 8 2 Technical universities 8 3 Other colleges 9 Regional identity and culture 10 Sports and entertainment 11 Lesser Polish dialect of Polish 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksGeography and boundaries edit nbsp The Lesser Poland Province in the widest sense with Podlachia Podolia Red Ruthenia Volhynia and KievLesser Poland lies in the area of the upper confluence of the Vistula river and covers a large upland including the Swietokrzyskie Mountains with the Krakow Czestochowa Upland further west Malopolska Upland Sandomierz Basin and Lublin Upland Unlike other historical parts of the country such as Kujawy Mazovia Podlachia Pomerania or Greater Poland Lesser Poland is mainly hilly with Poland s highest peak Rysy located within the borders of the province Flat are northern and central areas of the province around Tarnobrzeg Stalowa Wola Radom and Siedlce also valleys of the main rivers the Vistula the Pilica and the San Apart from Rysy there are several other peaks located in the province Pilsko Babia Gora Turbacz as well as Lysica in the Swietokrzyskie Mountains The southern part of the province is covered by the Carpathian Mountains which are made of smaller ranges such as Pieniny Tatry and Beskidy nbsp Palm Sunday in Lipnica Murowana nbsp The 1507 Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia Map Polonia Minor Russia by Martin Waldseemuller 6 Almost the whole area is located in the Vistula Basin with the exception of the western and southern parts belonging to the Odra and Dunaj Basins The main rivers of the province are the Vistula upper Warta Sola Skawa Raba Dunajec Wislok Wisloka San Wieprz Przemsza Nida Kamienna Radomka and Pilica The major lakes of the province are Lake Roznow Lake Czchow Lake Dobczyce Lake Czorsztyn Lake Czaniec Lake Miedzybrodzie Lake Klimkowka and Zywiec Lake Most of them are man made reservoirs Lesser Poland stretches from the Carpathians in the south to Pilica and Liwiec rivers to the north It borders Mazovia to the north Podlaskie to the northeast Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities to the east Slovakia to the south Silesia to the west and Greater Poland to the northwest Currently the region is divided between Polish voivodeships Lesser Poland Voivodeship whole Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship whole Silesian Voivodeship eastern half Podkarpackie Voivodeship western part Masovian Voivodeship southern part Lodz Voivodeship southeastern corner and Lublin Voivodeship western part In Silesian Voivodeship the border between Silesia and Lesser Poland is easy to draw because with only a few exceptions it goes along boundaries of local counties In the south it goes along the western boundary of the ancient Duchy of Teschen with the borderline along the Biala river with Zwardon Milowka and Rajcza located in Lesser Poland Bielsko Biala is a city made up of two parts Lesser Poland s Biala also called Biala Krakowska makes up the eastern half of the city and only in 1951 was it merged with Silesian Bielsko 7 Further north the border goes along the western boundaries of the cities of Jaworzno and Sosnowiec along the Przemsza and Brynica rivers Then it goes northwest leaving Czeladz Siewierz Kozieglowy Blachownia Klobuck and Krzepice within Lesser Poland 8 From Krzepice the border goes eastwards towards Koniecpol and along the Pilica river with such towns as Przedborz 9 Opoczno 10 Drzewica Bialobrzegi 11 and Kozienice 12 located within Lesser Poland East of Bialobrzegi the boundary goes mainly along the Radomka river to the Vistula East of the Vistula the boundary goes north of Laskarzew and Zelechow and south of Mazovian town of Garwolin 13 turning northwest The northernmost point of the province is marked by the Liwiec river with both Siedlce and Lukow being part of Lesser Poland 14 The line then goes south with Miedzyrzec Podlaski being part of the historical Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Radzyn Podlaski 15 as well as Parczew left in Lesser Poland Between the Vistula and the Bug Rivers the eastern border of Lesser Poland goes west of Leczna but east of Krasnystaw and Szczebrzeszyn both of which historically belong to Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities 16 Further south Lesser Poland includes Frampol and Bilgoraj which lie in the southeastern corner on Lesser Poland s historical Lublin Voivodeship close to the border with Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities The border then goes west of Bilgoraj turning south towards Lezajsk which belongs to Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities 17 The boundary between Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities was described by Ukrainian historian and geographer Myron Korduba as being along the line Dukla Krosno Domaradz Czudec Krzeszow nad Sanem 18 The border towns of Lesser Poland were Rudnik Kolbuszowa 19 Ropczyce 20 Sedziszow Malopolski Strzyzow 21 Jaslo Gorlice and Biecz The southern border of Lesser Poland goes along the Carpathian Mountains and except in a few cases it has not changed for centuries The cities of Lezajsk Rzeszow Sanok Brzozow and Krosno do not belong to historical Lesser Poland as they are part of Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities Lwow Voivodeship around today s Lviv Ukraine nbsp Kazimierz Dolny on the right bank of the Vistula river Historically Lesser Poland was divided into two lands Krakow Land and Sandomierz Land both of which emerged after the Testament of Boleslaw III Krzywousty In the 14th century Sandomierz Voivodeship and Krakow Voivodeship were created and in 1474 Lublin Voivodeship was carved out of three Sandomierz Voivodeship counties located on the right bank of the Vistula Historian Adolf Pawinski who in the late 19th century was the director of the Polish Central Archives of Historical Records estimated in his book Polska XVI wieku pod wzgledem geograficzno statystycznym that the size of Krakow Voivodeship was 19 028 km2 Sandomierz Voivodeship had an area of 25 762 km2 and Lublin Voivodeship had an area of 11 033 km2 Together with the Duchy of Siewierz 607 km2 and the parts of Spis that belonged to Poland after the Treaty of Lubowla 1211 km2 the total area of Lesser Poland was 57 640 square kilometers 22 Apart from the three historic lands Lesser Poland includes other smaller regions such as Podhale Ponidzie and Zaglebie Dabrowskie Etymology editZygmunt Gloger in his work Historical geography of land of ancient Poland Geografia historyczna ziem dawnej Polski states that according to a Polish custom whenever a new village was formed next to an older one the name of the new entity was presented with an adjective little or lesser while the old village was described as greater The same procedure was used in naming two Polish provinces the older one the cradle of the Polish state was called Greater Poland and its younger sister which became part of Poland a few years later was called Lesser Poland The name Greater Poland Polonia Maior was for the first time used in 1242 by princes Boleslaw and Przemyslaw I who named themselves Duces Majoris Poloniae Princes of the Older Poland 23 Lesser Poland or Polonia Minor appeared for the first time in historical documents in 1493 in the Statutes of Piotrkow during the reign of King Jan Olbracht 24 to distinguish this province from Greater Poland Polonia Maior History editIt has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled History of Lesser Poland Discuss November 2023 nbsp Niepolomice Castle nbsp Pieniny National ParkEarly period and Kingdom of Poland edit In the first years of Polish statehood southern Lesser Poland was inhabited by the West Slavic tribe of Vistulans with two major centers in Krakow and Wislica Their land which had probably been part of Great Moravia and Bohemia 25 was annexed by Mieszko I of Poland some time in the late 10th century Cosmas of Prague in his Chronicle of Bohemians wrote Polish prince Mieszko a cunning man seized by ruse the city of Krakow killing with sword all Czechs he found there 26 Northern part of Lesser Poland Lublin and Sandomierz was probably inhabited by another tribe the Lendians 27 and Dr Antoni Podraza historian of the Jagiellonian University claims that ancient division of Lesser Poland into two major parts Land Duchy of Krakow and Land Duchy of Sandomierz is based on the existence of two Slavic tribes in the area 28 However exact location of the Lendians has not been determined to this day Some historians speculate that they occupied Cherven Cities and their center was in Przemysl 29 Around the year 1000 the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Krakow was created and its borders covered whole area of Lesser Poland During the reign of Casimir I the Restorer Krakow for the first time became the capital of Poland around 1040 since Greater Poland and Silesia with main Polish urban centers such as Gniezno and Poznan were ravaged by Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia 30 In 1138 following the Testament of Boleslaw III Krzywousty the country was divided between his sons see also Fragmentation of Poland Boleslaw III Wrymouth created the Seniorate Province which among others consisted of Krakow At the same time Lesser Poland was divided into two parts when its eastern part formed the Duchy of Sandomierz 31 carved by the ruler for his son Henry of Sandomierz During the fragmentation period both lands of Lesser Poland were frequently ruled by the same prince Among them were Boleslaw IV the Curly Mieszko III the Old Casimir II the Just Leszek I the White Boleslaw V the Chaste Leszek II the Black Wladyslaw I the Elbow high and King of Bohemia Wenceslaus II of Bohemia who united Lesser Poland in 1290 1291 The province was pillaged during the Mongol invasion of Poland when a combined army of Krakow and Sandomierz was destroyed by Baidar in the Battle of Chmielnik The loss was so heavy that Norman Davies wrote At Chmielnik the assembled nobility of Malopolska perished to a man 32 During their 1241 1259 and 1287 invasions the Mongols burned major cities of Lesser Poland killing thousands of people Furthermore the province especially its northeastern part was often raided by the Lithuanians Rusyns Yotvingians and Old Prussians The city of Lublin suffered most frequently among others it was burnt by the Rusyns in 1244 the Lithuanians 1255 the Prussians in 1266 and the Yotvingians in 1282 33 Another center of the province Sandomierz was destroyed by the Tartars in 1260 34 and burnt by the Lithuanians in 1349 35 nbsp Bedzin Castle which guarded the western border of Lesser PolandUnlike other Polish provinces especially Silesia Lesser Poland did not undergo further fragmentation and in the early 14th century became the core of the reunited nation together with Greater Poland 36 The period of nation s fragmentation came to a symbolic end on 30 January 1320 when Wladyslaw I the Elbow high was crowned as King of Poland The ceremony took place in Krakow s Wawel Cathedral and the king of the reunited country decided to choose Krakow as the capital Through 14th and 15th centuries Lesser Poland s position as the most important province of the nation was cemented It became visible during the reign of Casimir III the Great who favored less known Lesser Poland s noble families at the expense of Greater Poland s nobility 37 The reign of Casimir the Great was a period of growing prosperity of Lesser Poland With high density of population fertile soils and rich deposits of minerals especially salt in Bochnia and Wieliczka as well as lead in Olkusz the province was the richest part of Poland After the recapture of the Cherven Cities Red Ruthenia Lesser Poland lost its status of the borderland and both regions created an economic bridge between Poland and the ports of the Black Sea 25 The king who drew Jewish settlers from across Europe to his country built several castles along western border of Lesser Poland with the most notable ones in Skawina Pieskowa Skala Bedzin Lanckorona Olkusz Lelow Bobolice Krzepice Ogrodzieniec Ojcow Olsztyn Bobolice Mirow see also Eagle Nests Trail Furthermore he built or strengthened castles in other parts of the province such as Szydlow Checiny Wislica Radom Niedzica Opoczno Lublin Sandomierz as well as the Wawel Castle Also during his reign 1333 1370 Casimir the Great founded on Magdeburg rights several cities urbanizing hitherto rural province 38 Among major Lesser Poland s cities founded by the King there are City Founded Current voivodeship1 nbsp Kazimierz 1334 now a district of Krakow2 nbsp Klobuck 1339 Silesian Voivodeship3 nbsp Dobczyce 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship4 nbsp Grybow 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship5 nbsp Tuchow 1340 Lesser Poland Voivodeship6 nbsp Lelow 1340 Silesian Voivodeship7 nbsp Myslenice 1342 Lesser Poland Voivodeship8 nbsp Nowy Targ 1346 Lesser Poland Voivodeship9 nbsp Biecz 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship10 nbsp Kroscienko nad Dunajcem 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship11 nbsp Piwniczna Zdroj 1348 Lesser Poland Voivodeship12 nbsp Opoczno 1350 Lodz Voivodeship13 nbsp Radom 1350 Masovian Voivodeship14 nbsp Tymbark 1354 Lesser Poland Voivodeship15 nbsp Pilzno 1354 Subcarpathian Voivodeship16 nbsp Checiny 1354 Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship17 nbsp Proszowice 1358 Lesser Poland Voivodeship18 nbsp Bedzin 1358 Silesian Voivodeship19 nbsp Debica 1358 Subcarpathian Voivodeship20 nbsp Stopnica 1362 Lesser Poland Voivodeship21 nbsp Ropczyce 1362 Subcarpathian Voivodeship22 nbsp Skawina 1364 Lesser Poland Voivodeship23 nbsp Muszyna 1364 Lesser Poland Voivodeship24 nbsp Jaslo 1366 Subcarpathian Voivodeship25 nbsp Brzostek 1366 Subcarpathian Voivodeship26 nbsp Wojnicz 1369 Lesser Poland Voivodeship nbsp Kozlowka Palace nbsp Palatial residence in Kurozweki nbsp Neogothic facade of Lublin Castle nbsp Castle courtyard with a fortified keep In the Kingdom of Poland Lesser Poland was made of three voivodeships Krakow Voivodeship Sandomierz Voivodeship and Lublin Voivodeship created in 1474 out of eastern part of the Sandomierz Voivodeship 39 Borders of the province remained unchanged until 1772 The only exception was large part of contemporary Upper Silesia the area around Bytom Toszek Siewierz and Oswiecim which belonged to Duchy of Krakow until 1179 In that year prince of Krakow Casimir II the Just handed these lands to Prince of Opole Mieszko I Tanglefoot 40 The Duchy of Siewierz ruled since 1443 by the Archbishop of Krakow merged with Lesser Poland in 1790 Other Silesian realms lost in 1179 also returned to Lesser Poland Duchy of Zator in 1513 and Duchy of Oswiecim 1564 Both duchies merged into a Silesian County of the Krakow Voivodeship and shared the fate of Lesser Poland Apart from Jews among other ethnic minorities of the province were the Walddeutsche who settled the borderland of Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia 14th through 17th centuries In the Middle Ages the Germans inhabited several cities of Lesser Poland especially Krakow and Sandomierz see Rebellion of wojt Albert In the late Middle Ages Lesser Poland gradually became the center of Polish statehood 41 with Krakow being the capital of the country from the mid 11th century until 1596 Its nobility ruled Poland when Queen Jadwiga was too young to control the state and the Union of Krewo with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the brainchild of Lesser Poland s szlachta 42 In the 15th and 16th centuries Lesser Poland remained the most important part of the country After the death of Casimir the Great Lesser Poland s nobility promoted Louis I of Hungary as the new king later supporting his daughter Jadwiga of Poland in exchange for Privilege of Koszyce Since Jadwiga crowned on 16 October 1384 was too young to rule the country Poland was in fact governed by the Lesser Poland s nobility who decided to find her a husband Grand Duke of Lithuania Jogaila 43 Consequently unions of Poland and Lithuania at Krewo and Horodlo were the brainchildren of Lesser Poland s nobility 44 among whom the most influential individuals were Spytek z Melsztyna and cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki Other famous Lesser Poland s families are Lubomirski family Kmita family Tarnowski family Potocki family Sobieski family Koniecpolski family Ossolinski family Poniatowski family Since Lesser Poland was the most important province of the country several important events took place on its territory In 1364 Casimir the Great called the Congress of Krakow and in 1401 the Union of Vilnius and Radom was signed In 1505 in Radom the Sejm adopted the Nihil novi title which forbade the King to issue laws without the consent of the nobility In the same year also in the same city Polish law was codified in the Laski s Statute and the Crown Tribunal the highest appeal court in the Crown of the Polish Kingdom held its sessions in Lublin In 1525 the Treaty of Krakow was signed ending the Polish Teutonic War Lesser Poland also is home to the oldest Polish university the Jagiellonian University founded in 1364 by Casimir the Great and several outstanding figures of early Polish culture were born here such as Jan Kochanowski Mikolaj Rej Jan z Lublina Mikolaj Gomolka Maciej Miechowita Marcin Kromer Lukasz Gornicki and Mikolaj Radomski Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth edit In the 16th century Lesser Poland retained its position as the most important province of the country As no major conflicts took place on its territory it was the center of Renaissance in Poland The province was home to numerous scholars writers and statesmen and it was here where Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was created in 1569 see Union of Lublin In the Commonwealth Lesser Poland proper was the base of the Lesser Poland Province which covered southern lands of the vast country The province was made of Lesser Poland itself also Podlachia Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities Volhynia Podolia and Ukrainian voivodeships of Kijow Kyiv and Czernihow Chernihiv which until 1569 had been part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania The period in Polish history known as the Polish Golden Age was very fortunate for Lesser Poland Kings of the Jagiellonian dynasty especially Sigismund I the Old himself born in Lesser Poland s Kozienice and his son Sigismund II Augustus born in Krakow resided in Krakow which was the capital of the immense Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Lesser Poland s prosperity was reflected in numerous examples of Renaissance architecture complexes built across the province In 1499 hitherto Gothic Wawel Castle was damaged in a fire and a few years later Sigismund I with help of the best native and foreign artists such as Francesco the Florentine Bartholomeo Berrecci or Niccolo Castiglione 45 refurbished the complex into a splendid Renaissance palace Furthermore in the early 16th century several palaces were built in Lesser Poland in Drzewica Szydlowiec Ogrodzieniec and Pieskowa Skala The province became rich mostly due to the grain trade conducted along the Vistula and among cities which prospered in the 16th century there are Krakow Sandomierz Lublin Kazimierz Dolny Pilzno Tarnow Radom Biecz In later years of the 16th century further palaces were built or remodelled in Baranow Sandomierski and Niepolomice nbsp Pieskowa SkalaIn the early 16th century Protestant Reformation spread across the Commonwealth and Lesser Poland became one of early centers of the movement when students from Wittenberg brought the news to Cracow 46 In the first years of the century professor of Jagiellonian University Jakub of Ilza Jakub z Ilzy died 1542 became one of the main promoters of the movement in the region He actively supported the notions of Martin Luther and in 1528 was called to the Bishop of Krakow s court Convinced of heresy he was forced to leave Poland in 1535 Reformation soon became very popular among Lesser Poland s nobility especially Calvinism and according to one estimate some 20 of local szlachta converted from Roman Catholicism 47 They were attracted by Calvinism s democratic character and Lesser Poland s center of the movement was set in the town of Pinczow which came to be known as Sarmatian Athens It was in Pinczow where a local nobleman converted a Roman Catholic parish into a Protestant one opened a Calvinist Academy and published its Antitrinitarian confession in 1560 and in 1561 48 Several Calvinist synods took place in Lesser Poland the first one in Slomniki 1554 Pinczow the first united Synod of Poland and Lithuania 1556 49 1561 and Krakow 1562 In 1563 also in Pinczow the so called Brest Bible was translated into Polish In 1570 the Sandomierz Agreement was signed by a number of Protestant groups with the exception of the Polish Brethren another religious group very influential in Lesser Poland The Brethren had their center in Lesser Poland s village of Rakow where a main Arian printing press as well as a college known as Akademia Rakowska Gymnasium Bonarum Artium founded in 1602 were located Among distinguished European scholars associated with the school there were Johannes Crellius Corderius and Valentinus Smalcius who translated into German the Racovian Catechism In 1572 the Jagiellon dynasty died out and next year Henry III of France became first elected king of the country After his short reign and War of the Polish Succession 1587 88 which also took place in Lesser Poland the new ruler was Stephen Bathory of Poland who died in 1586 The ruler from Transylvania was followed by Sigismund III Vasa of Sweden whose election marked gradual decline of the province Sigismund s eyes were set on Sweden and for many years he concentrated his efforts on a futile attempt to regain his former Swedish throne see Polish Swedish union War against Sigismund Therefore Lesser Poland located in southwestern corner of the Commonwealth began to lose its importance which was marked in 1596 when Sigismund moved his permanent residence court and the crown headquarters to centrally located Warsaw 50 nbsp Members of the regional Folk Group of Wilamowice Cepelia Fil Wilamowice 51 nbsp Lachy Sadeckie are a group of ethnic Poles who live in southern Lesser PolandEven though first half of the 17th century was filled with wars all major conflicts did not reach Lesser Poland and the province continued to prosper which was reflected in its castles and palaces such as the enormous Krzyztopor Apart from minor wars such as Zebrzydowski Rebellion and Kostka Napierski Uprising the province remained safe Cossacks of the Khmelnytsky Uprising reached as far west as Zamosc and Lwow but did not enter Lesser Poland The province did not witness other wars such as Polish Swedish War 1626 29 Polish Muscovite War 1605 18 Polish Ottoman War 1620 21 and Smolensk War Nevertheless Lesser Poland s nobility took active part in these conflicts Marina Mniszech the daughter of Voivode of Sandomierz Jerzy Mniszech was wife of False Dmitriy I as well as False Dmitriy II Furthermore Lesser Poland s lands especially its northeastern part became a base for Polish troops fighting the Cossacks and King John II Casimir Vasa often stayed in Lublin with his court preparing military campaigns in Ukraine 52 The situation changed with the outbreak of the Russo Polish War 1654 1667 In October 1655 the Russo Cossack armies under Ivan Vyhovsky entered eastern Lesser Poland reaching the Vistula and pillaging Lublin Pulawy and Kazimierz Dolny The invaders quickly retreated but a few months later Lesser Poland was flooded by the Swedes nbsp Broad Gauge Metallurgy LineSwedish invasion of Poland had catastrophic consequences for the hitherto prosperous province The attackers supported by their allies from Transylvania seized whole Lesser Poland reaching as far south as Nowy Targ Nowy Sacz and Zywiec 53 All major cities were looted and burned and some of them like Radom did not recover until the 19th century 54 The Swedes captured and pillaged Sandomierz where they destroyed the Royal Castle and after the invasion the city never recovered 55 Opoczno 56 Lublin 57 Kazimierz Dolny 58 Pilzno 59 Szydlow 60 Szydlowiec 61 Tarnow 62 Kielce 63 Krasnik 64 and Krakow The invaders seized the capital of Lesser Poland after a short siege and their occupation of the province was confirmed after their victories in the Battle of Wojnicz and the Battle of Golab In those years one of the most important and symbolic events in the history of the nation took place in Lesser Poland It was the Siege of Jasna Gora which according to some accounts turned the course of the war Furthermore following the Treaty of Radnot Lesser Poland was invaded in January 1657 by George II Rakoczi whose troops caused more destruction Foreign armies were not chased out of Lesser Poland until 1657 Krakow itself was recaptured on 18 August 1657 After these invasions the province was ruined with hundreds of villages towns and cities burned The population decreased the urban population by nearly half 65 the peasantry starved and like other parts of the Commonwealth Lesser Poland was devastated The period of peace lasted for about forty years when in 1700 another major conflict the Great Northern War began Lesser Poland once again became a battleground with Battle of Kliszow taking place there in 1702 and the Sandomierz Confederation formed in 1704 After the conflict Lesser Poland began a recovery which was hampered by several other factors Province s cities frequently burned Lublin 1719 Nowy Targ 1784 Nowy Sacz Dukla 1758 Wieliczka 1718 Miechow 1745 Drzewica there also were numerous outbreaks of plagues and typhus in 1707 1708 some 20 000 died in Krakow and its area 66 Lesser Poland was one of main centers of the Bar Confederation On 21 June 1786 in Krakow local confederation was announced and on the same day Voievode of Krakow Michal Czarnocki urged his citizens to join the movement Soon afterwards Krakow was captured by the Russian troops and the center of Lesser Poland s insurgency moved to the mountainous south areas around Dukla and Nowy Sacz 67 During the Confederation several battles and skirmishes took place there In 1770 after the Battle of Iwonicz the Russians ransacked Biecz The movement ended in 1772 and its decline was connected with the Partitions of Poland Another local center of the movement was Jasna Gora Monastery in Czestochowa which was defended by Kazimierz Pulaski for almost two years 1770 1772 68 nbsp Czarny Staw Black Pond in the High TatrasPartitions of Poland 1772 1918 edit The Partitions of Poland began earlier in Lesser Poland than in other provinces of the country In 1769 Austrian Empire annexed a small territory of Spisz and next year the towns of Czorsztyn Nowy Sacz and Nowy Targ 69 In 1771 the Russians and the Prussians agreed on the first partition of the country and in early 1772 Austrian Emperor Maria Theresa decided to join the two powers In the first partition of the Commonwealth the Austrians seized the territory which would later be called Galicia and which included southwestern corner of Lesser Poland south of the Vistula river with Zywiec Tarnow and Biecz but without major urban centers of the province such as Krakow Sandomierz Radom Lublin Czestochowa and Kielce nbsp Nowy Wisnicz nbsp Baranow Sandomierski nbsp Vistula in SandomierzSecond Partition of Poland 1793 did not result in significant changes of boundaries in the area as the Austrian Empire did not participate in it However the Prussians moved on and in 1793 they annexed northwestern corner of the province together with the city of Czestochowa 8 70 and its vicinity which became part of the newly created province of South Prussia Therefore in late 1793 Lesser Poland was already divided between three countries Austrian Empire south of the Vistula Kingdom of Prussia Czestochowa and northwestern corner and still existing Commonwealth After the Third Partition 1795 most of Lesser Poland was annexed by Austria with all major cities Prussia managed to seize a small western part of the province with the towns of Siewierz Zawiercie Bedzin and Myszkow calling this land New Silesia while the Austrians decided to name newly acquired lands of northern Lesser Poland West Galicia In 1803 West Galicia was merged with Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria but retained some autonomy Lesser Poland was one of major centers of Polish resistance against the occupiers On 24 March 1794 in Krakow Tadeusz Kosciuszko announced the general insurrection see Kosciuszko Uprising mobilising all able males of Lesser Poland Two weeks later Battle of Raclawice took place ending with a Polish victory The uprising was suppressed by combined Prusso Russian forces and among battles fought in Lesser Poland there is Battle of Szczekociny During Napoleonic Wars the Duchy of Warsaw was created by Napoleon Bonaparte out of Polish lands which had been granted to Prussia in the Partitions In 1809 after the Polish Austrian War and the Treaty of Schonbrunn the Duchy was expanded when northern Lesser Poland was added to its territory with Kielce Radom and Lublin Following the Congress of Vienna Duchy of Warsaw was turned into Russian ruled Congress Poland and historical capital of the province Krakow was turned into Free City of Krakow which also included the towns of Trzebinia Chrzanow Jaworzno and Krzeszowice In Congress Poland the lands of Lesser Poland were initially divided between four palatinates Palatinate of Krakow with capital in Kielce Palatinate of Sandomierz with capital in Radom Palatinate of Lublin and Palatinate of Podlasie with capital in Siedlce see also Administrative division of Congress Poland Later the palatinates were turned into governorates Thus Russian part of Lesser Poland was divided into Kielce Governorate Lublin Governorate Radom Governorate Siedlce Governorate and Piotrkow Governorate western counties with Czestochowa and industrial area of Zaglebie Dabrowskie Borders of these administrative units did not reflect historical boundaries of the province nbsp Peasant war by Jan Lewicki 1795 1871 Most of the November Uprising which began in 1830 missed Lesser Poland as major battles took place in the area around Warsaw In early 1831 when Russian forces advanced into Congress Poland some skirmishes took place in northern counties of the province at Pulawy Kurow and Kazimierz Dolny In early 1846 a group of Polish patriots attempted a failed uprising in the Free City of Krakow The insurrection was quickly suppressed by the Austrian troops and as a result the Free City was annexed by the Austrian Empire In the same year Austrian part of Lesser Poland was witness to a massacre of Polish nobility by the peasantry known as Galician slaughter The peasants led by Jakub Szela murdered about 1000 nobles and destroyed about 500 manors 71 These events took place in three counties Sanok Jaslo and Tarnow Northern and central Lesser Poland the part of the province which was taken by the Russian Empire was one of the main centers of the January Uprising 1863 1864 In the first days of the insurrection skirmishes with the Russian Army took place in such towns as Lukow Krasnik Szydlowiec Bodzentyn and Suchedniow Since the Poles were poorly armed the Russians did not have major problems with them and soon afterwards the insurrectionists decided to organize military camps Among biggest camps in Lesser Poland there were Ojcow 3000 soldiers and Wachock where Marian Langiewicz gathered up to 1500 people The uprising died out by early spring of 1864 and among counties where it continued for the longest time was the extreme northeastern corner of Lesser Poland around Lukow where reverend Stanislaw Brzoska was active Since Russian military supremacy was crushing the Poles were forced to limit their actions to guerrilla warfare Among the biggest battles which took place in Lesser Poland there are Battle of Szydlowiec 23 January 1863 Battle of Miechow 17 February 1863 Battle of Malogoszcz 24 February 1863 Battle of Staszow 17 February 1863 Battle of Pieskowa Skala 4 March 1863 two Battles of Opatow 25 November 1863 21 February 1864 As a result of their support of the failed insurrection several Lesser Poland s towns lost their charters and were turned into villages Among them were Krasnik 72 Bodzentyn Opatow Ilza Malogoszcz 73 Wachock 74 Busko Zdroj 75 Jedrzejow 76 Cmielow 77 Zwolen Drzewica 78 Wierzbica 79 Czeladz Kazimierz Dolny Wolborz Stopnica Daleszyce Wislica Pajeczno Lipsko Pacanow Ozarow Wolbrom Proszowice Nowe Miasto Korczyn Wloszczowa Przysucha Opole Lubelskie nbsp In the 19th century Krakow s Jagiellonian University was a major center of Polish science and cultureIn the late 19th and early 20th centuries Lesser Poland remained one of the centers of Polish culture especially the city of Krakow where Jagiellonian University was one of only two Polish language colleges of that period the other one was University of Lwow Another significant center of national culture was the town of Pulawy where in the late 18th century a local palace owned by Czartoryski family became a museum of Polish national memorabilia and a major cultural and political centre A number of prominent artists both representing Romanticism and Positivism was born in Lesser Poland including Wincenty Pol born in Lublin Stefan Zeromski born near Kielce Aleksander Swietochowski born near Lukow in extreme northeast corner of Lesser Poland Walery Przyborowski born near Kielce Piotr Michalowski Helena Modjeska Henryk Wieniawski born in Lublin Leon Wyczolkowski born near Siedlce Juliusz Kossak born in Nowy Wisnicz Jozef Szujski born in Tarnow In the early 20th century Lesser Poland especially its part which belonged to Austria Hungary was a center of a cultural movement called Young Poland Many artists associated with the movement were born in Lesser Poland with the most prominent including Wladyslaw Orkan Kazimierz Przerwa Tetmajer Xawery Dunikowski Jacek Malczewski Jozef Mehoffer and Stanislaw Wyspianski Since Austrian part of Poland enjoyed a wide autonomy the province of Galicia whose western part was made of Lesser Poland became a hotbed of Polish conspirational activities In anticipation of a future war Galician Poles with help of their brethren from other parts of the divided country created several paramilitary organizations such as Polish Rifle Squads and Riflemen s Association The capital of Lesser Poland Krakow was a key center of pro independence movements with such individuals as Jozef Pilsudski being actively involved in those activities In August 1914 after the outbreak of World War I Pilsudski s Legions crossed the Austrian Russian border north of Krakow and entered Congress Poland However the Pilsudski and his soldiers were disappointed to see that the inhabitants of Kielce did not welcome them with joy 80 The division of Lesser Poland was more visible than ever nbsp Gorals from BeskidyDuring World War I Lesser Poland became one of main theaters of the Eastern Front Russian push into the territory of Austria Hungary resulted in the Battle of Galicia Among other major battles which took place in Lesser Poland there are the Battle of the Vistula River and the Gorlice Tarnow Offensive After Russian troops had retreated east whole province was under control of the Austrians and the Germans and northern Lesser Poland was part of the German sponsored Kingdom of Poland 1916 1918 In later stages of the conflict the divided province once again became a center of Polish independence movement An independent Polish government was re proclaimed in northern Lesser Poland s city of Lublin on 7 November 1918 Soon afterwards it formed the basis of the new government of the country 81 In other parts of the province other governments were formed Polish Liquidation Commission in Krakow also the short lived Republic of Tarnobrzeg The division of Lesser Poland along the Vistula river which lasted from 1772 until 1918 is visible even today For more than 100 years southern Lesser Poland Krakow Tarnow Biala Krakowska and Nowy Sacz was administered by Austria while northern larger part of the province Czestochowa Sosnowiec Kielce Radom Lublin Sandomierz was forcibly part of the Russian Empire Inhabitants of Austrian part of Poland enjoyed limited autonomy 82 with Polish language institutions such as Jagiellonian University At the same time Russian controlled Poland was subject to Russification As a result of decades of this division most inhabitants of the areas stolen by Russia are not aware of their Lesser Poland s heritage Furthermore current administrative boundaries of the country still reflect the defunct border between the former Russian and Austria Hungarian Empires nbsp Castle of BoboliceInterwar Poland 1918 1939 edit In 1918 when Second Polish Republic was created whole historical Lesser Poland became part of restored Poland The historical area of the province was divided between four voivodeships Krakow Voivodeship whole Kielce Voivodeship whole Lwow Voivodeship northwestern corner and Lublin Voivodeship western part Furthermore in the counties of central Lesser Poland another administrative unit Sandomierz Voivodeship was planned but due to the outbreak of World War II it was never created Boundaries between two major Lesser Poland voivodeships Krakow and Kielce were the same as pre 1914 boundaries of Austria Hungary and Russia Nevertheless in the interbellum period the notion of Lesser Poland was frequently associated only with former Austrian province of Galicia 39 Therefore Western Galicia to the San river was called Western Lesser Poland while Eastern Galicia east of the San with the city of Lwow Lviv was called Eastern Lesser Poland voivodeships of Tarnopol Stanislawow and Lwow According to a Polish historian Jan Pisulinski using the term Eastern Lesser Poland to denomine Eastern Galicia is incorrect as it has no historical justification being only a designation of nationalist and propaganda significance similarly to analogous term Western Ukraine used at the same time by the Ukrainian side which served in the 1920s and 1930s to make a stronger connection of the area between rivers of San and Zbruch with the Polish state and to emphasize the allegedly indigenously Polish nature of that region 83 In late 1918 Lesser Poland emerged as one of main centers of fledgling Polish administration and independence movement According to historian Kazimierz Banburski of Tarnow s District Museum Tarnow was the first Polish city which became independent after 123 years of oppression On 31 October 1918 at 8 am Tarnow s inhabitants began disarming demoralized Austrian soldiers and after three hours the city was completely in Polish hands 84 On 28 October 1918 Polish Liquidation Committee was created in Krakow A few days later socialist peasants founded the Republic of Tarnobrzeg In the night of 6 7 November 1918 Polish People s Republic was proclaimed in Lublin by Ignacy Daszynski and other activists In 1919 the legislative election took place in Lesser Poland without major problems nbsp Wieliczka Salt Mine a UNESCO World Heritage SiteAt that time Lesser Poland like other provinces of the country faced several problems Even though major post World War I conflicts such as Polish Soviet War did not take place there it suffered from unemployment overpopulation and poverty especially in towns and countryside Furthermore Polish government had to connect parts of the hitherto divided country There was no direct rail link between Krakow and Kielce Radom and Lublin and until 1934 when line from Krakow to Tunel was opened all travelers had to go via Sosnowiec Maczki Lack of rail communication between former Austrian and former Russian parts of Lesser Poland is visible even today Between Krakow and Deblin there are only two rail bridges along the Vistula Residents of the province tried to improve their conditions using legal means but when it turned out to be impossible they took to fighting 1923 Krakow riot 1937 peasant strike in Poland As if to exacerbate the desperate situation Lesser Poland witnessed a catastrophic flood in 1934 after which the government decided to construct dams on local rivers Even though Lesser Poland s countryside was almost exclusively Polish its towns and cities were inhabited by numerous Jews whose communities were very vibrant In Krakow Jews made 25 of the population in Lublin 31 in Kielce 30 and in Radom 32 Apart from the Jews and Gypsies scattered in the south there were no other significant national minorities in interbellum Lesser Poland Since Lesser Poland was safely located in the middle of the country away from both German and Soviet border in the mid 1930s Polish government initiated one of the most ambitious project of the Second Polish Republic Central Industrial Region which was located almost exclusively in Lesser Poland Even though the project was never completed several plants were constructed both in Old Polish Industrial Region and in other counties of the province The brand new city of Stalowa Wola was established in dense forests around a steel mill In the late 1930s Lesser Poland was quickly changing as construction of several factories and job opportunities caused influx of rural inhabitants to the towns Such towns as Debica Starachowice Pulawy or Krasnik quickly grew with their population rising Earlier in 1927 Lesser Poland s Deblin became a major center of Polish aviation when Polish Air Force Academy was opened there and in Mielec PZL Mielec was opened which was the largest aerospace manufacturer in Poland Central Industrial Region however did not affect western counties of Lesser Poland which had already been urbanized and industrialized Biala Krakowska Zywiec Krakow Jaworzno Zaglebie Dabrowskie Zawiercie and Czestochowa The government of Poland planned further investments such as a major East West rail line linking Volhynia and Upper Silesia but they never materialized Desperate situation and lack of jobs caused thousands of inhabitants of Lesser Poland especially from its southern part to leave their land mostly for the United States of America 85 but also Brazil and Canada nbsp Pope John Paul II was born in Wadowice Lesser Poland in 1920Lesser Poland remained a center of Polish culture with Krakow s Jagiellonian University AGH University of Science and Technology and Catholic University of Lublin which was opened in 1918 Several important figures of interbellum political military and cultural life of Poland were born in Lesser Poland Among them were Wincenty Witos Wladyslaw Sikorski Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski Jozef Dowbor Musnicki Jozef Haller Wladyslaw Belina Prazmowski Tadeusz Kutrzeba Feliks Koneczny Stefan Zeromski Tadeusz Peiper Maria Pawlikowska Jasnorzewska Witold Gombrowicz Jan Kiepura Stefan Jaracz In 1920 in Lesser Poland s town of Wadowice Karol Wojtyla the future Pope John Paul II was born World War II edit On 1 September 1939 armed forces of Nazi Germany attacked Poland see Invasion of Poland Lesser Poland due to its proximity to the then border with Germany became a battleground on the first day of the invasion The Germans attacked the province both in its northwest area west of Czestochowa and in the south Podhale along the border with Slovakia which also participated in the invasion Lesser Poland was defended by the following Polish armies Karpaty Army which covered southern mountainous border of the province Krakow Army guarding western part of the province together with adjacent Polish part of Upper Silesia Later in the course of war it joined the Karpaty Army forming the Lesser Poland Army Armia Malopolska Lodz Army which protected extreme northwestern corner of the province north of Czestochowa Prusy Army which was main reserve of the Commander in Chief and was concentrated in central and northern Lesser Poland between Radom and Kielce Lublin Army improvised after 4 September and concentrated in the area of Lublin and Sandomierz in northeastern Lesser Poland nbsp Soldiers of Holy Cross Mountains Brigade in parade 1945After a few days the Battle of the Border was lost and forces of German Army Group South advanced deep into Lesser Poland s territory Polish troops resisted fiercely and among major battles in initial stages of the war which took place in Lesser Poland there are Battle of Mokra Battle of Jordanow and Battle of Wegierska Gorka By 6 September Polish forces were in general retreat and Marshal of Poland Edward Rydz Smigly ordered all troops to fall back to the secondary lines of defences at the Vistula and San Rivers German units entered Czestochowa on 3 September where on the next day they murdered hundreds of civilians Kielce on 5 September Krakow on 6 September and Radom on 8 September see also Battle of Radom Within a week almost whole Lesser Poland was under Nazi occupation Northeastern part of the province the area of Lublin was held by the Poles until 17 September but eventually and after fierce battles see Battle of Tomaszow Lubelski all Lesser Poland was firmly under Nazi control First draft of Molotov Ribbentrop Pact stipulated that northeastern Lesser Poland east of the Vistula river was to be occupied by the Soviet Union and forces of the Red Army reached the area of Lublin after 20 September but withdrew east on 28 September On 12 October 1939 upon a decree of Adolf Hitler General Government a separate region of the Greater German Reich was created with Hans Frank as its Governor General Its capital was established in Krakow and it covered most of the area of historical Lesser Poland except for its western counties which were directly incorporated into Nazi Germany s Upper Silesia Province Bedzin Sosnowiec Zawiercie Biala Zywiec Chrzanow Olkusz Further information Administrative division of Polish territories during World War II In Lesser Poland like in all provinces of the occupied country the Nazis ruled with savage brutality killing hundreds of thousands of inhabitants both Polish and Jewish see World War II crimes in Poland Occupation of Poland 1939 1945 Holocaust in Nazi occupied Poland Nazi crimes against ethnic Poles German AB Aktion in Poland Sonderaktion Krakau The Auschwitz concentration camp located at the border of Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia was opened on 14 June 1940 and on 1 October 1941 the Germans opened Majdanek concentration camp on the outskirts of Lublin The third concentration camp in Lesser Poland was in Krakow s district of Plaszow In late 1939 and early 1940 in Lesser Poland s spa of Zakopane and in Krakow several Gestapo NKVD Conferences took place during which the mutual cooperation between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union was discussed Anti Nazi resistance was particularly strong in Lesser Poland and it was in the extreme northwestern corner of the province around Opoczno that armed struggle against the occupiers began in late 1939 and early 1940 see Henryk Dobrzanski Structures of the Home Army were well developed in the region Lesser Poland s independent areas of the Home Army were located in Krakow Kielce Radom and Lublin During Operation Tempest in mid 1944 several Lesser Poland s towns were liberated also uprising in Krakow was prepared but never realized Apart from the Home Army other resistance groups were strong in the province such as pro Communist Armia Ludowa peasant s Bataliony Chlopskie and right wing National Armed Forces with its Holy Cross Mountains Brigade In all major Lesser Poland s cities Jewish ghettos were opened with the biggest ones in Krakow and Lublin At first the Nazis were planning to create a so called reservation for European Jews located around Lesser Poland s town of Nisko see Nisko Plan but they changed the plan and decided to murder all Jews Condemned to death Jews in Lesser Poland took to fighting see Czestochowa Ghetto Uprising but their efforts failed As a result of The Holocaust in Poland once thriving and numerous Jewish population of Lesser Poland was decimated Germany operated several prisoner of war camps including Stalag 301 Stalag 307 Stalag 359 Stalag 367 Stalag 369 Stalag 380 Stalag XII C Oflag 77 and multiple forced labour subcamps of Stalag VIII B 344 for Polish French Belgian Italian Soviet Dutch Senegalese and other Allied POWs in the region 86 87 88 In the summer of 1944 after Lvov Sandomierz Offensive Red Army pushed the Wehrmacht from eastern Lesser Poland The city of Lublin was captured by the Soviets on 22 July 1944 Stalowa Wola on 1 August and Sandomierz on the left bank of the Vistula on 18 August The front line stabilized along the Vistula for about six months with some bridgeheads on the western bank on the Vistula see Battle of Studzianki and in early 1945 Soviet Vistula Oder Offensive began which pushed Germans to the gates of Berlin The Soviets entered Kielce on 15 January Czestochowa on 17 January and Krakow on 19 January On 27 January the Red Army entered Sosnowiec In took the Soviets much longer to clear the areas in the mountains they did not enter Zywiec until 5 April 1945 89 Post World War II edit Together with the Red Army NKVD and Soviet authorities followed whose purpose was to make Poland a Communist country with a puppet government formed as Polish Committee of National Liberation Since 1 August 1944 the provisional government was officially headquartered in Lesser Poland s Lublin Thousands of people took to the forests to continue their fight for free Poland see Anti communist resistance in Poland 1944 46 Lesser Poland again was one of the main centers of the resistance Several skirmishes took place in the province including Battle of Kurylowka The Communists did not hesitate to kill those rebels they captured Public execution in Debica 1946 and by 1947 the resistance movement was crushed The last Polish cursed soldier Jozef Franczak was killed in 1963 near Swidnik in northeastern Lesser Poland Also all victims of the 1951 Mokotow Prison execution were members of Lesser Poland s branch of Freedom and Independence Another well known anti Communist fighter from Lesser Poland is Jozef Kuras who was active in the southern region of Podhale In early 1945 the lands of Lesser Poland were divided between three voivodeships those of Krakow Lublin and Kielce Since summer 1945 several counties were transferred to neighboring voivodeships eastern Lesser Poland Debica Jaslo Mielec became part of Rzeszow Voivodeship while western counties of Bedzin and Zawiercie were transferred to Katowice Voivodeship In 1950 the city of Czestochowa became part of Katowice Voivodeship and next year the city of Bielsko Biala was created out of Lesser Poland s Biala Krakowska and Upper Silesia s Bielsko The new city became part of Katowice Voivodeship Lesser Poland was further divided in 1975 when territorial reform was carried out see Voivodeships of Poland 1975 1988 Counties were abolished and several small voivodeships were created in such Lesser Poland s towns and cities as Tarnobrzeg Tarnow Nowy Sacz Bielsko Biala Radom Czestochowa and Siedlce The government of Communist Poland invested in heavy industry following the pre 1939 idea of Central Industrial Area In Krakow a new district of Nowa Huta was constructed in the 1950s In Czestochowa and Zawiercie the steelworks were significantly expanded and in early 1970 the government initiated construction of Katowice Steelworks which despite its name is located in Lesser Poland s Dabrowa Gornicza To connect Katowice Steelworks with Soviet plants in late 1970s Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line was opened which crossed Lesser Poland from west to east Among other major factories opened in Lesser Poland during Communist rule there are FSC Lublin opened in 1951 FSC Star in Starachowice opened in 1948 and based on earlier factory PZL Swidnik opened in 1951 Zaklady Azotowe Pulawy opened in 1965 Polaniec Power Station opened in 1979 Skawina Power Station opened in 1957 Nowiny Cement Plant opened in 1960 Kozienice Power Station opened in 1973 nbsp A fire engine made by FSC Star in Lesser Poland s StarachowiceOther Lesser Poland s major plants were significantly expanded after 1945 including Zywiec Brewery Okocim Brewery Fablok Lucznik Arms Factory FLT Krasnik Jaworzno Power Station Siersza Power Plant Huta Stalowa Wola Janina Coal Mine Sobieski Coal Mine Zaklady Azotowe Tarnow Moscice Furthermore in early 1950s significant sulfur resources were discovered in Tarnobrzeg as a result of which Siarkopol company was founded and the city of Tarnobrzeg quickly grew In 1975 coal was discovered northeast of Lublin and soon afterwards Bogdanka Coal Mine and Piaski Coal Mine were opened Between 1971 and 1977 Central Trunk Line was opened which goes along western boundary of the province and which connects Krakow and Katowice with Warsaw In the early 1980s construction of a highway between Krakow and Katowice began The 61 kilometer road is now run by Stalexport Autostrada Malopolska and is part of A4 highway Residents of Lesser Poland frequently protested against Communist government Major centers of anti Communist resistance were in Krakow Nowa Huta Radom and Lublin Among major protests that took place in the province were 1968 Polish political crisis with Krakow as one of major centers of protests June 1976 protests in Radom Lublin 1980 strikes 31 August 1982 demonstrations in Poland in several locations 1988 Polish strikes with Stalowa Wola as one of major centers Several anti Nazi and anti Communist leaders hailed from Lesser Poland Jan Piwnik Emil August Fieldorf Leopold Okulicki Ryszard Siwiec Stanislaw Pyjas Hieronim Dekutowski Andrzej Gwiazda Andrzej Czuma A number of key personalities of Communist government were born in Lesser Poland including Jozef Cyrankiewicz Boleslaw Bierut Edward Gierek Wojciech Jaruzelski Czeslaw Kiszczak Stanislaw Kania Hilary Minc Edward Ochab Michal Rola Zymierski Jozef Oleksy Among prominent personalities of Polish cultural life of the 20th century who were born in Lesser Poland there are Xawery Dunikowski Witold Gombrowicz Gustaw Herling Grudzinski Slawomir Mrozek Tadeusz Kantor Jan Kanty Pawluskiewicz Marek Kondrat Maria Pawlikowska Jasnorzewska Krzysztof Penderecki Zbigniew Preisner Leon Schiller Jerzy Stuhr Jan Sztaudynger Grzegorz Turnau Jerzy Turowicz Local Government Reorganization Act 1998 edit nbsp Boundary between Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia red line on the territory of current Silesian Voivodeship nbsp Krakow is the capital of Lesser Poland nbsp Lublin the second largest city of Lesser Poland nbsp Czestochowa the third largest city of Lesser Poland nbsp Radom the fourth largest city of Lesser Poland nbsp Sosnowiec the fifth largest city of Lesser PolandIn 1998 the government of Poland carried out administrative reform of the country For the first time in history Lesser Poland Voivodeship was created with its capital in Krakow and an area of 15 108 square kilometers The new province covers only a small southwestern part of historical Lesser Poland Today Lesser Poland is divided between several voivodeships whole Lesser Poland Voivodeship whole Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship western half of Lublin Voivodeship western part of Subcarpathian Voivodeship eastern half of Silesian Voivodeship southern part of Mazovian Voivodeship and southeastern corner of Lodz Voivodeship around Opoczno There were suggestions that Lesser Poland Voivodeship should stretch from Bielsko Biala to Ostrowiec Swietokrzyski and Sandomierz Furthermore creation of an Old Poland Voivodeship was proposed on the historical lands of northern Lesser Poland Also since about half of territory of current Silesian Voivodeship belongs to historical Lesser Poland there are suggestions to rename it into Silesian Lesser Poland Voivodeship 90 Major cities and towns by size editThe list is based on the Polish Central Statistical Office list of 100 biggest cities of Poland as for 30 June 2008 91 L p City Population Area km2 Current voivodeship2 nbsp Krakow 756 441 326 80 Lesser Poland Voivodeship9 nbsp Lublin 351 345 147 45 Lublin Voivodeship13 nbsp Czestochowa 241 449 159 71 Silesian Voivodeship14 nbsp Radom 224 501 111 80 Masovian Voivodeship15 nbsp Sosnowiec 221 775 91 06 Silesian Voivodeship17 nbsp Kielce 205 655 109 65 Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship22 nbsp Bielsko Biala 175 476 124 51 Silesian Voivodeship27 nbsp Dabrowa Gornicza 128 560 188 73 Silesian Voivodeship35 nbsp Tarnow 115 769 72 38 Lesser Poland Voivodeship42 nbsp Jaworzno 95 383 152 67 Silesian Voivodeship45 nbsp Nowy Sacz 84 492 57 58 Lesser Poland Voivodeship48 nbsp Siedlce 77 102 32 00 Masovian Voivodeship53 nbsp Ostrowiec Swietokrzyski 72 888 46 43 Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship66 nbsp Stalowa Wola 64 753 82 52 Subcarpathian Voivodeship71 nbsp Mielec 60 979 46 89 Subcarpathian Voivodeship76 nbsp Bedzin 58 559 37 37 Silesian Voivodeship84 nbsp Starachowice 52 430 31 82 Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship85 nbsp Zawiercie 52 290 85 25 Silesian Voivodeship87 nbsp Tarnobrzeg 49 753 85 39 Subcarpathian Voivodeship88 nbsp Pulawy 49 223 50 49 Lublin Voivodeship92 nbsp Skarzysko Kamienna 48 308 64 39 Swietokrzyskie Voivodeship97 nbsp Debica 46 693 34 02 Subcarpathian VoivodeshipIn the Kingdom of Poland and Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth several other locations used to be important urban centers of Lesser Poland but in the course of the time their significance declined The main example is Sandomierz which for hundreds of years was one of the most important cities of Poland 92 but now is a town of 25 000 Other examples of historically important places which are now little towns or villages are Biecz a town of 5 000 once the seat of a county incorporated in 1257 Checiny a village now once the seat of a county with a royal castle Czchow a town of 2 000 incorporated before 1333 once the seat of a county Goraj a village now which used to be one of urban centers of Lublin Voivodeship Ilza a town of 5 000 incorporated before 1294 with a royal castle Kazimierz Dolny which enjoyed its greatest prosperity in the 16th and the first half of the 17th century Koprzywnica a village now a town in 1268 1869 Ksiaz Wielki a town in 1385 1875 once the seat of a county Lelow a village now which used to be the seat of a county Incorporated in 1314 with a royal castle Nowe Miasto Korczyn a town in 1258 1869 with a royal castle where general sejmiks of Lesser Poland took place Opatow a town of 7 000 incorporated in 1282 once the seat of sejmiks Parczew now a town of 10 000 once a major urban center of northeast Lesser Poland Pilzno now a town of 4 000 once the seat of a county Sieciechow a village now once an important town incorporated in 1232 Stezyca a village now Once the seat of a county which used to be a town in 1330 1869 Szczyrzyc a village now which used to be the seat of a county Szydlowiec a town of 12 000 with a royal castle which in the Renaissance period was an important urban center of northern Lesser Poland Szydlow a village now which used to be a major urban center of Sandomierz Voivodeship Urzedow a village now which in 1405 1869 used to be a town and the seat of a county Wislica a village now which was probably the capital of the Vistulans and the seat of a county Wojnicz now a town of 3 500 incorporated in 1278 used to be the seat of a county Zawichost a town of 2 000 once a royal town with a castle incorporated before 1255 Economy and industry editHistory of industry in Lesser Poland goes back to prehistoric times when in Swietokrzyskie Mountains first bloomeries were constructed In the Middle Ages first plants were opened in that area and as a result Old Polish Industrial Region was created which was a major industrial region of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth In the 17th century first Polish blast furnaces were constructed in Samsonow by Italian engineer Hieronim Caccio Apart from iron products used for military purposes Old Polish Industrial Region also manufactured charcoal and glass In 1782 in Poland there were 34 bloomeries out of which 27 were located in Old Polish Industrial Region Another major industrial area of Lesser Poland is Zaglebie Dabrowskie where in the 16th century lead silver and zinc were found As early as in the 15th century coal was extracted in Trzebinia Siersza and in the following centuries especially in the 19th century several coal mines and steel mills were opened in Zaglebie and in Zaglebie Krakowskie first coal mine in Jaworzno was opened in 1792 In nearby Olkusz the history of zinc mining dates to the 12th century when Casimir II the Just set up a mining settlement Also in the towns of Wieliczka and Bochnia salt mines were established in the 12th and 13th centuries see Bochnia Salt Mine Wieliczka Salt Mine In the 20th century natural resources were also discovered in central and eastern counties Lesser Poland In 1964 the world s largest open pit sulfur mine was opened in Machow near Tarnobrzeg 93 Other sulfur deposits in the area of Tarnobrzeg are Jeziorko Grzybow Gacki and Grebow Wydza The mine at Machow is now closed In the late 1960s eastern Lesser Poland became one of three coal basins of the country when Lublin Basin was created 94 Major coal mine in the area is KWK Bogdanka near Leczna which is the only coal mine in Poland which has continuously generated a profit Other Polish coal mines located in Lesser Poland are those found in western part of the province along the boundary with Upper Silesia KWK Janina in Jaworzno KWK Sobieski and also in Jaworzno Copper and silver are extracted in Myszkow see Myszkow mine In the late 1930s the government of the Second Polish Republic created Central Industrial Region which was almost exclusively located in Lesser Poland Currently within borders of the province there are following industrial regions Bielsko Industrial Region Bielski Okreg Przemyslowy which includes both towns from Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia Andrychow Bielsko Biala Cieszyn Kety Pszczyna Skoczow Zywiec Czestochowa Industrial Region Czestochowski Okreg Przemyslowy which includes Czestochowa Myszkow and Zawiercie Upper Silesian Industrial Region Gornoslaski Okreg Przemyslowy Despite the name it also includes cities from Lesser Poland s Zaglebie Dabrowskie Sosnowiec Bedzin Czeladz Dabrowa Gornicza Wojkowice Jaworzno Chrzanow Industrial Region Jaworznicko Chrzanowski Okreg Przemyslowy with the towns of Jaworzno Chrzanow Trzebinia Libiaz Chelmek Bukowno Alwernia Krzeszowice Carpathian Industrial Region Karpacki Okreg Przemyslowy which stretches from Nowy Sacz through Jaslo and Gorlice to Sanok Krakow Industrial Region Krakowski Okreg Przemyslowy the city of Krakow and the towns of Wieliczka Skawina Myslenice Bochnia Lublin Industrial Region Lubelski Okreg Przemyslowy the city of Lublin and the towns of Swidnik Pulawy Leczna Tarnobrzeg Industrial Area Tarnobrzeski Okreg Przemyslowy Stalowa Wola Tarnobrzeg Nisko Staszow Janow Lubelski Gorzyce Polaniec Mielec Tarnow Rzeszow Industrial Region Tarnowsko Rzeszowski Okreg Przemyslowy which stretches from Tarnow to Rzeszow with such towns as Debica Niedomice Sedziszow Malopolski Ropczyce In 2009 Polityka weekly made its own list of 500 biggest Polish companies According to the list second biggest company of the country was Polska Grupa Energetyczna which as Polityka stated is headquartered in Lublin 95 Third biggest company of Poland in 2009 was Fiat Auto Poland from Bielsko Biala Other Lesser Polish companies which ranked high were BP Poland from Krakow ranked 12th Emperia Holding from Lublin ranked 26th Kolporter Holding from Kielce ranked 43rd and Zywiec Brewery ranked 44th Other major companies of Lesser Poland are Azoty Tarnow Bank BPH Bogdanka Coal Mine Carlsberg Polska Comarch Debica SA Huta Czestochowa Huta Katowice Fablok FLT Krasnik Huta Stalowa Wola Instal Lublin Janina Coal Mine Jaworzno Power Station Kozienice Power Station Lucznik Arms Factory Nowiny Cement Plant near Kielce Polaniec Power Station PZL Mielec PZL Swidnik Sobieski Coal Mine Tadeusz Sendzimir Steelworks Since the lands of historical Lesser Poland belong now to different voivodeships unemployment rate differs from one region to another In January 2010 in Poland the unemployment rate was 12 7 96 In Silesian Voivodeship eastern half of which is Lesser Poland it was 9 9 in Lesser Poland Voivodeship 10 5 in Subcarpathian Voivodeship 16 3 in Holy Cross Voivodeship 15 5 in Lublin Voivodeship 13 6 and in Mazovian Voivodeship southern part of which is Lesser Poland 9 6 In Lesser Poland s cities the best situation was in Krakow as for November 2009 97 where 4 1 had no job In Bielsko Biala the rate was 5 7 in Lublin 8 8 in Siedlce 9 1 in Tarnow 9 2 in Nowy Sacz 10 in Kielce and Czestochowa 10 1 in Jaworzno 10 2 in Dabrowa Gornicza 10 3 in Sosnowiec 12 2 and in Tarnobrzeg 14 3 The worst situation on the job market as for November 2009 was in Radom where unemployment rate was 20 9 it made Radom second worst city county of the nation only after Grudziadz Transport editRoads edit Several European roads see International E road network cross Lesser Poland The most important one is the European route E40 which goes from west to east across whole Europe In Lesser Poland the E40 goes from Jaworzno via Krakow and Tarnow towards eastern border of the country Another main European road in Lesser Poland is the E77 which goes from north to south via Radom Kielce and Krakow to southern border of Poland at Chyzne Third major European road in Lesser Poland is the E30 which crosses the territory of the province in its extreme northeast corner in Siedlce Apart from these roads Lesser Poland is crossed by the following European routes E371 which begins in Radom and goes via Ostrowiec Swietokrzyski Tarnobrzeg and Rzeszow to the border crossing at Barwinek E372 which begins in Warsaw and via northeastern Lesser Poland Lublin Swidnik goes to Ukrainian border at Hrebenne E462 which goes through southwestern corner of the province from Czech border and Bielsko Biala to John Paul II International Airport Krakow Balice E75 which crosses western counties of Lesser Poland from Czestochowa through Dabrowa Gornicza and Jaworzno to Bielsko Biala and Polish Czech border Airports edit nbsp Krakow John Paul II International Airport the busiest airport in Lesser PolandWithin borders of historical Lesser Poland there are four airports John Paul II International Airport Krakow Balice Lublin Airport Warsaw Radom Airport and Katowice International Airport which is located in the village of Pyrzowice on the border between Lesser Poland and Upper Silesia Pyrzowice is part of Gmina Ozarowice which after Partitions of Poland and Congress of Vienna belonged to Bedzin County of the Russian Empire In the interbellum the area of future airport belonged to Lesser Poland s Kielce Voivodeship and in 1945 was transferred to Katowice Voivodeship initially Silesian Dabrowa Voivodeship In 1998 Ozarowice together with the airport was attached to Tarnowskie Gory County despite the fact that it is not located in Upper Silesia 98 Further airports in Lesser Poland will be opened in the future Kielce Obice 99 Also Rzeszow Jasionka Airport is located on eastern border of the province Railroads edit Railroad network of Lesser Poland is very unevenly distributed It is very dense in the west along the border with Upper Silesia and sparse in the east especially along the Vistula and around Lublin All major cities of the province are connected with each other however traveling from Krakow to Lublin is time consuming as trains have to take an extended route via Kielce Radom and Deblin Also there is no direct connection between Tarnow and Kielce as these cities belonged to different countries before 1918 Underdevelopment of the railroads in northern and eastern Lesser Poland is the result of the policy of the Russian Empire For military reasons the Russians were not interested in construction of a dense network of lines along the border with Germany and Austria Hungary allowing only the construction of narrow gauge connections 100 Along the Vistula between Krakow and Deblin the distance of some 320 kilometers there are only four rail bridges in Deblin rebuilt after the war in 1947 101 in Sandomierz built in 1928 102 in Tarnobrzeg Nagnajow built in 1961 together with a road bridge 103 and in Zaduszniki built in 1979 for the Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line 104 In Krakow itself there are three rail bridges over the Vistula Among rail hubs of Lesser Poland there are Bielsko Biala Chabowka Czestochowa Dabrowa Gornicza Debica Deblin Jaworzno Szczakowa Kalwaria Zebrzydowska Lanckorona Kielce Koniecpol Kozlow Krakow Lublin Lukow Muszyna Nowy Sacz Oswiecim Siedlce Spytkowice Skarzysko Kamienna Stalowa Wola Stroze Sucha Beskidzka Radom Tarnow Trzebinia Tunel Zawiercie and Zywiec In the late 1970s the Communist government built the broad gauge Broad Gauge Metallurgy Line which crosses Lesser Poland from west to east along the Vistula Tourism and nature edit nbsp Krakow Old Town UNESCO World Heritage SiteThe historical capital of Lesser Poland Krakow is regarded as the cultural capital of Poland 105 while Zakopane is considered the winter capital of Poland 106 In 1978 UNESCO placed Krakow s Old Town on the list of World Heritage Sites From Sandomierz to Krakow goes the re established Lesser Polish Way one of the routes of the medieval Way of St James Every year hundreds of thousands of tourists come to Lesser Poland to see its historic cities Sandomierz Kazimierz Dolny Zakopane Biecz Opatow Szydlow Lublin and Krakow Famous Jasna Gora Monastery in Czestochowa spiritual capital of the country 107 attracts hundreds of thousands of pilgrims as well as Auschwitz concentration camp also placed on the UNESCO World Heritage Sites List 108 Lesser Poland has many museums the city of Krakow itself has about sixty of them Among the most famous are The Czartoryski Museum The Galicia Jewish Museum The National Museum Krakow Polish Aviation Museum Sukiennice Museum and Wawel Castle There are museums in other locations of the province such as Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum Bielsko Biala Museum Holy Father John Paul II Family Home in Wadowice Jacek Malczewski Museum in Radom Lublin Museum Museum of Czestochowa Museum of Sandomierz Diocese Museum of Zywiec Brewery Museum of Zaglebie in Bedzin Przypkowscy Clock Museum Regional Museum in Wislica Regional Museum in Siedlce Tytus Chalubinski Tatra Museum in Zakopane nbsp Lady with an Ermine by Leonardo da Vinci Czartoryski Museum KrakowAmong other major places of interest of the province are Baranow Sandomierski Castle Bedzin Castle Checiny Castle Czarnolas in Zwolen Dunajec river castles Kalwaria Zebrzydowska park UNESCO World Heritage Sites List 108 Krzyztopor Lipnica Murowana Lublin Castle Lysa Gora Maczuga Herkulesa Majdanek concentration camp Niedzica Castle Ogrodzieniec Pieskowa Skala Temple of the Sibyl Trail of the Eagles Nests Wieliczka Salt Mine UNESCO World Heritage Sites List 108 Wooden Churches of Southern Lesser Poland UNESCO World Heritage Sites List 108 Furthermore thousands of tourists come to Radom in northern Lesser Poland to watch the popular biannual Radom Air Show Lesser Poland has a number of open air museums Gora Birow in Krakow Czestochowa Upland Museum of Kielce Village in Kielce Museum of Lublin Village in Lublin Museum of Folk Culture in Kolbuszowa Museum of Radom Village in Radom Vistula River Etnographic Park in Babice Nowy Sacz Etnographic Park in Nowy Sacz Orawa Etnographic Park in Zubrzyca Gorna Chabowka Rolling Stock Heritage Park in Chabowka The Malopolska Institute of Culture located in Krakow promotes the activities of regional museums and smaller sites of interest Lesser Poland is famous for its underground waters and spas such as Busko Zdroj Solec Zdroj Naleczow Muszyna Szczawnica Piwniczna Wysowa Zdroj Rabka Swoszowice Zegiestow Krzeszowice Wieliczka and Krynica Zdroj 109 Mountains and resorts of the province make it a major center of Polish tourism Tatra National Park is visited by around 3 million tourists every year 110 The following National Parks are located in Lesser Poland Tatra National Park Ojcow National Park Pieniny National Park Poland Babia Gora National Park Gorce National Park Magurski National Park Roztocze National Park Swietokrzyski National Park Polesie National ParkEducation edit nbsp Collegium Maius oldest building of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow the oldest university in Poland and the 13th oldest university in continuous operation in the worldUniversities edit Lesser Poland is home to Poland s oldest university Krakow s Jagiellonian University which was established in 1364 For centuries it was the only college of the province and of the whole country In December 1918 John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin was opened becoming second university of Lesser Poland In 1944 also in Lublin Maria Curie Sklodowska University was established Technical universities edit There are several technical universities in Lesser Poland Krakow s AGH University of Science and Technology and University of Technology as well as University of Bielsko Biala Czestochowa University of Technology Lublin University of Technology Kazimierz Pulaski Technical University of Radom and Kielce University of Technology Other colleges edit Future teachers may study at Pedagogical University of Cracow or Jan Dlugosz University in Czestochowa and future physicians at Jagiellonian University Medical College and Medical University of Lublin Other state colleges are Jan Kochanowski University in Kielce Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow Agricultural University of Cracow University of Life Sciences in Lublin and Cracow University of Economics Unique in the country is the Polish Air Force Academy located in Deblin Among private colleges of Lesser Poland there is Wyzsza Szkola Biznesu National Louis University in Nowy Sacz Regional identity and culture editSince Lesser Poland ceased to exist as a unified region in the late 18th century during the Partitions of Poland most of its inhabitants are not aware of their heritage Even the residents of Jaworzno a city which for centuries belonged to Krakow Land and only in 1975 was transferred to Katowice Voivodeship see Voivodeships of Poland 1975 98 are not familiar with their Lesser Polish roots In a poll in April 2011 57 of Jaworzno s inhabitants stated that their city is historically tied with Lesser Poland but as many as 36 said their city is tied with Upper Silesia 111 Polish linguist Jan Miodek emphasizes the fact that linguistically Bedzin is closer to Myslenice than to Tarnowskie Gory only 20 km away Miodek wrote that even though Upper Silesia and Lesser Poland s Zaglebie Dabrowskie are industrially and administratively tied both regions are culturally and linguistically different from each other 112 Residents of Zaglebie Dabrowskie are known for their dislike of Upper Silesians whom they call hanysy while the Silesians call them gorole In recent years more inhabitants of Zaglebie become aware of their Lesser Poland s heritage 113 Also after Partitions of Poland when Austrian province of Galicia was created the cities of Rzeszow and Przemysl which are part of historical Red Ruthenia Cherven Cities became associated with Lesser Poland Therefore currently the notion of Lesser Poland most commonly applies to the two voivodeships which in the past belonged to Austrian Empire Lesser Poland Voivodeship and Subcarpathian Voivodeship 114 Among several Lesser Poland s regional organizations one of the most important is Stowarzyszenie Gmin i Powiatow Malopolski The Association of Villages and Counties of Lesser Poland It publishes a magazine called Wspolnota Malopolska Lesser Polish Community and every year it chooses a Lesser Polish Person of the Year among winners are John Paul II Anna Dymna and Stanislaw Dziwisz The Association of Villages and Counties of Lesser Poland has over 120 members from four Polish voivodeships Among members are cities of Krakow Czestochowa Bielsko Biala Tarnow and Przemysl 115 Arguably the most famous product of Lesser Polish cuisine is the bagel which was invented in Krakow Other famous food specialties of the province are oscypek EU Protected Geographical Status slivovitz from the village of Lacko bublik papal cream cake from Wadowice 116 Lisiecka Sausage EU Protected Geographical Status and Bryndza Podhalanska Among other popular products that are made in Lesser Poland there are beers Browary Lubelskie Zywiec Beer and Okocim Beer pastas and snacks from Lublin s Lubella Kielce Mayonnaise coffee substitute beverage INKA from Skawina chocolates from Krakow s Wawel Factory juices from Tymbark vodka Zoladkowa Gorzka produced in Lublin and Chopin produced in Siedlce nbsp Folklore group in Podhale costume Bukowina Tatrzanska Lesser Poland 2016Folk costumes from Lesser Poland are widely known across the country a dancing couple dressed in traditional Krakow costume Krakowiacy is presented on the logo of renowned Zywiec beer 117 and Podhale is one of few Polish regions where people regularly wear their traditional costumes 118 Both Krakow and Podhale folk costumes are among most popular garbs in Poland 119 Other folk costumes from the region are those of Zaglebie Dabrowskie Sandomierz Rzeszow Czestochowa Kielce Radom regarded as the most traditional of all Polish costumes 120 Opoczno Holy Cross Mountains Nowy Sacz and Lublin There are several folk festivals in Lesser Poland such as On the frontier of Lesser Poland and Mazovia in Opoczno 121 Folk Festival of Jozef Myszka in Museum of Radom Village in Ilza 122 annual Days of Lesser Poland s Cultural Heritage 123 Week of the Beskidy Culture in several locations Wianki in Krakow Festival of Old Music and Culture in Niepolomice Festival of Folk Bands and Folk Singers in Kazimierz Dolny International Folklore Meetings of Ignacy Wachowiak in Lublin International Festival of Folklore of Mountain Lands in Zakopane Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow Krakowiak is one of Polish national dances other popular Lesser Poland s folk dances are Zbojnicki from Podhale and dances from Lublin Among Lesser Poland s customs are Lajkonik and Krakow szopka nbsp Polish flat soda bread known as Proziaki in podkarpacie Sports and entertainment edit nbsp KS Cracovia on Independence Day 2019Several renowned sportspeople and entertainers come from Lesser Poland Among them are some of the most famous personalities of contemporary Polish sports boxer Tomasz Adamek Formula 1 driver Robert Kubica swimmer Pawel Korzeniowski skier Justyna Kowalczyk tennis player Agnieszka Radwanska football and volleyball stars Jakub Blaszczykowski Artur Boruc and Piotr Gruszka Among late and retired sports stars who were born in the region there also are Polish Sportspersonalities of the Year tennis player and Wimbledon finalist Jadwiga Jedrzejowska skier Jozef Luszczek ski jumper Stanislaw Marusarz and driver Sobieslaw Zasada Krakow s major association football teams KS Cracovia and Wisla Krakow are multiple champions of the country also Stal Mielec won Polish championship twice 1973 1976 and Garbarnia Krakow and Rakow Czestochowa once each 1931 and 2023 Other popular football teams from Lesser Poland are Zaglebie Sosnowiec four time Polish Cup winner Gornik Leczna Korona Kielce Motor Lublin Radomiak Radom Stal Stalowa Wola and Sandecja Nowy Sacz Besides association football Lesser Poland s teams were multiple national champions in other sports ice hockey Podhale Nowy Targ TH Unia Oswiecim Cracovia KH Zaglebie Sosnowiec men s and women s volleyball AZS Czestochowa Plomien Milowice Sosnowiec which in 1978 won the CEV Champions League Hutnik Krakow Wisla Krakow BKS Stal Bielsko Biala Muszynianka Muszyna men s and women s handball Hutnik Krakow Vive Targi Kielce Cracovia Montex Lublin men s and women s basketball Zaglebie Sosnowiec Cracovia Wisla Krakow speedway Wlokniarz Czestochowa Unia Tarnow Motor Lublin Major sports venues of the province are Stadion Miejski im Henryka Reymana Stadion Cracovii im Jozefa Pilsudskiego and Tauron Arena Krakow in Krakow Stadion Miejski Hala Legionow and Kielce Racetrack in Kielce Arena Lublin and Hala Globus in Lublin Miejski Stadion Sportowy KSZO w Ostrowcu Sw Zaglebiowski Park Sportowy in Sosnowiec Debowiec Sports Arena in Bielsko Biala Arena Czestochowa Hala Sportowa MOSiR in Radom Wielka Krokiew in Zakopane Among popular rock music bands from Lesser Poland there are Budka Suflera Golec uOrkiestra Maanam and Zakopower From Lesser Poland hail composers Jan Kanty Pawluskiewicz and Krzysztof Penderecki as well as singers Basia Ewa Demarczyk Justyna Steczkowska Grzegorz Turnau Maciej Zembaty Major music festivals in the province are Coke Live Music Festival in Krakow Celtic Music Festival ZAMEK in Bedzin Film Music Festival in Krakow Gaude Mater in Czestochowa Boyscout s Festival of School Music in Kielce Summer with Chopin in Busko Zdroj Festiwal of Shanties in Krakow and Festival of Student Song in Krakow Lesser Polish dialect of Polish editFurther information Lesser Polish dialect nbsp A map of Polish dialects The area where Lesser Poland s dialect is spoken is marked in orange Lesser Polish dialect is spoken in southeastern corner of Poland both in lands which belong to historical Lesser Poland and in areas which are not part of the province around Sieradz and Leczyca On the other hand as seen on the map the Lesser Polish dialect is not spoken in the extreme northeast of Lesser Poland in Siedlce and vicinity where people rather speak Masovian dialect Descending from the language of the Vistulans it is the most numerous dialectal group in modern Poland According to Wincenty Pol it is divided into three subdivisions Sandomierz dialect Lublin dialect and Sanok dialect 124 In the Middle Ages and Renaissance Lesser Polish dialect together with Greater Polish dialect contributed to creation of standard Polish it also greatly influenced Silesian see Dialects of Polish as well as dialects of Polish used in southern part of Kresy Wschodnie Later on however its importance diminished and was replaced by Masovian dialect which became the leading dialect of Polish After Partitions of Poland when Lesser Poland was divided between Austria and Russia northern areas of the province took over many features of the Masovian dialect while Lesser Polish dialect in Austrian province of Galicia was heavily influenced by German According to Multimedia Guide to Polish Dialects a webpage maintained by University of Warsaw Lesser Polish dialect is divided into the following subdialects Mazowsze Borderland Pogranicze Mazowsza around Radom and Deblin Leczyca around Lodz Kutno Tomaszow Mazowiecki this part of the country is not historical Lesser Poland Kielce around Kielce 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925339 5 Gloger Zygmunt 1903 Geografia historyczna ziem dawnej Polski in Polish Nabu Press ISBN 978 1 145 33359 8 Jezierski Andrzej Leszczynska Cecylia 2003 Historia gospodarcza Polski in Polish Warsaw Wydawnictwo Key Text ISBN 83 87251 71 2 Labuda G 1988 Polska Czechy Rus i kraj Ledzian w drugiej potowie X wieku Studia nad poczatkami panstwa polskiego in Polish Vol II Poznan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lerski Jerzy Jan 1996 Little Lesser Poland Malopolska In Piotr Wrobel Richard J Kozicki ed Historical dictionary of Poland Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 26007 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lesser Poland Appeal of inhabitants of Western Lesser Poland against calling them Silesians Castles of Lesser Poland on lonelyplanet Visit Lesser Poland webpage Lesser Poland information at University at Buffalo Portal of citizen journalism for Malopolska region National Parks in Lesser Poland A Polish Radio CD with folk music of Northern Lesser Poland areas of Radom Opoczno and Kielce Western Lesser Poland Webpage of inhabitants of eastern counties of Silesian Voivodeship who do not wish to be associated with Silesia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lesser Poland amp oldid 1212460108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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