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Pruszków

Pruszków [ˈpruʂkuf] (listen) (Yiddish: ‏פּרושקאָוו Prushkov) is a city in east-central Poland, situated in the Masovian Voivodeship since 1999. It was previously in Warszawa Voivodeship (1975–1998). Pruszków is the capital of Pruszków County, located along the western edge of the Warsaw urban area.

Pruszków
Central part of the city
Motto(s): 
Kolej na Pruszków!
It's Pruszków's turn!
Pruszków
Pruszków
Coordinates: 52°10′N 20°48′E / 52.167°N 20.800°E / 52.167; 20.800Coordinates: 52°10′N 20°48′E / 52.167°N 20.800°E / 52.167; 20.800 Country
Country Poland
Voivodeship Masovian
CountyPruszków County
GminaPruszków (urban gmina)
First mentioned15th century
City rights1916
Government
 • City mayorPaweł Makuch
Area
 • Total19.15 km2 (7.39 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2021)
 • Total62,750 [1]
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
05-800, 05-802, 05-803,
05-804
Area code+48 22
Car platesWPR
Websitehttp://www.pruszkow.pl/

In the 1990s and 2000s the city was synonymous with the "Pruszków gang", one of two major organised crime groups in the country.[citation needed] Currently[when?] it is best known for being the country's cycling centre with a purpose built indoor velodrome.

History

 
Building of the Management Board of ZNTK (Railway Repair Works) in Pruszków

Pruszków was incorporated as a town in 1916 during World War I, although the village was first mentioned in chronicles in the 15th century. Within the Polish Crown, it was a private village of Polish nobility, administratively located in the Masovian Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province. The development of the town was aided by the construction of the Warsaw-Vienna Railway in the 19th century and the construction of the Elektryczna Kolej Dojazdowa (now Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa), Poland's first electrified commuter train line, in 1927. In the late 19th century, industry developed intensively in Pruszków. There were needles, porcelain, faience, and soap factories in Pruszków.[2] A large psychiatric hospital opened in the outlying village of Tworki in 1891 and is still operating to this day.[3] During World War I, a battle between German and Russian forces took place in Pruszków on 12–18 October 1914 (part of Battle of the Vistula River). Despite the initial success of the German forces on 12 October, they were push-backed out of town after successful Russian counter-attack on 14th. An intense artillery fire by both sides caused severe damages to many buildings in Pruszków including train station, power plant, and two churches. In August 1915 Pruszków was taken by the German forces without a fight. Within interwar Poland, it was administratively located in the Warsaw County in the Warsaw Voivodeship.

World War II

 
Cemetery of Polish soldiers killed during the German invasion of Poland in September 1939

The city was occupied by Germany following the German–Soviet invasion of Poland, which started World War II in September 1939. On 14 December 1939, the Germans murdered 46 Poles from Pruszków during the large Palmiry massacre.[4] Before the invasion, the city had a large Jewish population. In 1940, the German occupation authorities established a Jewish ghetto in Pruszków, in order to confine its Jewish population for the purpose of persecution and exploitation.[5] The ghetto was liquidated on 31 January 1941, when all its 1,400[6]–3,000 inhabitants were transported in cattle trucks to Warsaw Ghetto, the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe with over 400,000 Jews crammed into an area of 1.3 square miles (3.4 km2). From there, most victims were sent to Treblinka extermination camp.[7][8][9][10]

 
Polish insurgents in Pruszków in October 1944 after Warsaw's capitulation
Historic sights of Pruszków (examples)
 
Sokół Palace
 
Church of the Immaculate Conception
 
St. Casimir Church
 
Potulicki Palace

During the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, the Nazis created the large Durchgangslager 121 (Dulag 121) transit camp in Pruszków on the site of the Train Repair Shops (Zakłady Naprawcze Taboru Kolejowego) to intern the evacuees expelled from the capital. Around 550,000 Warsaw residents and approximately 100,000 more from its outskirts were incarcerated in the camp. The SS and Gestapo segregated the Poles, who were then either deported to forced labour in Germany, sent to Nazi concentration camps, or expelled to more southern locations of German-occupied Poland.[11] Approximately 650,000 Poles passed through the Pruszków camp in August, September and October 1944. Approximately 55,000 were sent to concentration camps, including 13,500 to Auschwitz, 12,000 to Ravensbrück and 8,700 to Mauthausen.[11] They included people from a variety of social classes and occupations (government officials, scholars, artists, physicians, merchants, and blue-collar workers), in varying physical conditions (the injured, the sick, invalids, and pregnant women), and of various ages from infants only a few weeks old to the elderly, aged 86 or more. In a few cases, these were also people of different ethnic backgrounds including Jews living on "Aryan papers."[12] The Germans murdered several Polish Catholic monks and nuns in the camp.[13][14][15]

Following the Soviet westward offensive, on 26 March 1945, the 16 members of the Polish Underground Government were invited by the Russians for talks, to a house in Pruszków on Armii Krajowej Street. They were captured by the Soviet NKVD agents, transported to USSR, imprisoned, tortured and sentenced in Moscow during the so-called Trial of the Sixteen.

Post-war Poland

After World War II, Pruszków became one of Masovia's largest industrial centers. Due to its proximity to Warsaw, it is now home to several factories and companies, including Herbapol, Daewoo Electronics, L'Oréal Cosmetics as well as logistic centers. It is also an important sports center, with a sports gymnasium, soccer stadium and a cycling course.

Crime

The most well known of the Polish organised crime groups in the 1990s was the so-called "Pruszków gang" and their arch-nemesis' the "Wołomin gang",[16][quote] with whom they fought bloody turf wars.[17] Eventually the groups were finally crushed by the Polish police in cooperation with the German police in a spectacular raid on the A2 motorway between Konin and Poznań in September 2011.[18]

Population

The town's population has grown significantly, from 16,000 in the early part of the 20th century to 60,068 in the 2014 census by the Central Statistical Office of Poland.[19][20]

Sports

 
BGŻ Arena indoor velodrome

The city's local football team is Znicz Pruszków. It plays in the third division but in the past it competed in the second division between 2007-2010 and 2016-2017. Robert Lewandowski played for Znicz from 2006 to 2008, whereas Pruszków-born Jacek Gmoch and Radosław Majewski also played in Znicz: Gmoch from 1953 to 1958, Majewski from 2002 to 2006.[21]

The city has two professional basketball teams: women's PTS Lider Pruszków [pl] and the basketball section of the football club, men's Znicz Basket Pruszków.

The Pruszków Arena is a modern indoor velodrome.

Buildings and structures

256 metres tall chimney of former "Pruszków II Power Plant", now used as radio tower.

Education

  • Physical Culture and Tourism High School (Wyższa Szkoła Kultury Fizycznej i Turystyki)

Notable people

 
Childhood home of Polish poet Jan Lechoń

References

  1. ^ "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved 17 August 2022. Data for territorial unit 1421021.
  2. ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom IX (in Polish). Warszawa. 1888. p. 105.
  3. ^ Tworki is an administrative part of Pruszków today
  4. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. p. 244.
  5. ^ "The War Against The Jews." The Holocaust Chronicle, 2009. Chicago, Il. Accessed 21 June 2011.
  6. ^ The statistical data compiled on the basis of "Glossary of 2,077 Jewish towns in Poland" 8 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews  (in English), as well as "Getta Żydowskie," by Gedeon,  (in Polish) and "Ghetto List" by Michael Peters at www.deathcamps.org/occupation/ghettolist.htm  (in English). Accessed 12 July 2011.
  7. ^ Warsaw Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), Washington, D.C.
  8. ^ Richard C. Lukas, Out of the Inferno: Poles Remember the Holocaust, University Press of Kentucky 1989 – 201 pages. Page 13; also in Richard C. Lukas, The Forgotten Holocaust: The Poles Under German Occupation, 1939-1944, University Press of Kentucky, 1986, Google Print, p.13.
  9. ^ Gunnar S. Paulsson, "The Rescue of Jews by Non-Jews in Nazi-Occupied Poland," Journal of Holocaust Education, Vol.7, Nos.1&2, 1998, pp.19-44. Published by Frank Cass, London.
  10. ^ Edward Victor, "Ghettos and Other Jewish Communities." 9 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Judaica Philatelic. Accessed 20 June 2011.
  11. ^ a b "Transporty z obozu Dulag 121". Muzeum Dulag 121 (in Polish). Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  12. ^ Księga Pamięci. Transporty Polaków z Warszawy do KL Auschwitz 1940-1944 (Memorial Book: Transports of Poles from Warsaw to Auschwitz Concentration Camp 1940-1944. 26 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum. On the Sixtieth Anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising. Accessed 13 July 2011.
  13. ^ "Józef Cisek" (in Polish). Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  14. ^ "Janina Kamilk" (in Polish). Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  15. ^ "Bronisława Rochowicz" (in Polish). Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  16. ^ "Head of the Polish MI on the priorities and key strategies of the Ministry – News – Ministry of the Interior and Administration". Msw.gov.pl. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  17. ^ Klaus Bachmann (1 January 1970). ""Nikos" Skotarczak starb bei Frühstück im Nachtclub: Gründervater der Auto-Mafia erschossen | Berliner Zeitung". Berliner-zeitung.de. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  18. ^ Kacper Guzek (29 September 2011), Policja rozbiła gang samochodowy z Wołomina. Widowiskowa akcja na autostradzie (in Polish), Super Express: "Kronika kryminalna"
  19. ^ http://stat.gov.pl/files/gfx/portalinformacyjny/pl/defaultaktualnosci/5515/3/9/1/rocznik_demograficzny_2015.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  20. ^ "Central Statistical Office (Poland), Ludność. Stan i struktura w przekroju terytorialnym" (PDF).
  21. ^ "Bajka o Robercie Lewandowskim". Sport.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 14 February 2016.

External links

  •   Media related to Pruszków at Wikimedia Commons
  • (in Polish) Official website
  • (in Polish) Alleycat races in Pruszków
  • (in English)
  • Jewish Community in Pruszków on Virtual Shtetl]

pruszków, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, ˈpruʂkuf, listen, yiddish, רושקא, וו, prushkov, city, east, central, poland, situated, masovian, voivodeship, since, 1999, previously, warszawa, voivodeship, 1975, 1998, capital, county, located, along. For other places with the same name see Pruszkow disambiguation Pruszkow ˈpruʂkuf listen Yiddish פ רושקא וו Prushkov is a city in east central Poland situated in the Masovian Voivodeship since 1999 It was previously in Warszawa Voivodeship 1975 1998 Pruszkow is the capital of Pruszkow County located along the western edge of the Warsaw urban area PruszkowCentral part of the cityFlagCoat of armsMotto s Kolej na Pruszkow It s Pruszkow s turn PruszkowShow map of Masovian VoivodeshipPruszkowShow map of PolandCoordinates 52 10 N 20 48 E 52 167 N 20 800 E 52 167 20 800 Coordinates 52 10 N 20 48 E 52 167 N 20 800 E 52 167 20 800 CountryCountry PolandVoivodeship MasovianCountyPruszkow CountyGminaPruszkow urban gmina First mentioned15th centuryCity rights1916Government City mayorPawel MakuchArea Total19 15 km2 7 39 sq mi Population 31 December 2021 Total62 750 1 Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code05 800 05 802 05 803 05 804Area code 48 22Car platesWPRWebsitehttp www pruszkow pl In the 1990s and 2000s the city was synonymous with the Pruszkow gang one of two major organised crime groups in the country citation needed Currently when it is best known for being the country s cycling centre with a purpose built indoor velodrome Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 1 2 Post war Poland 2 Crime 3 Population 4 Sports 5 Buildings and structures 6 Education 7 Notable people 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Building of the Management Board of ZNTK Railway Repair Works in Pruszkow Pruszkow was incorporated as a town in 1916 during World War I although the village was first mentioned in chronicles in the 15th century Within the Polish Crown it was a private village of Polish nobility administratively located in the Masovian Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province The development of the town was aided by the construction of the Warsaw Vienna Railway in the 19th century and the construction of the Elektryczna Kolej Dojazdowa now Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa Poland s first electrified commuter train line in 1927 In the late 19th century industry developed intensively in Pruszkow There were needles porcelain faience and soap factories in Pruszkow 2 A large psychiatric hospital opened in the outlying village of Tworki in 1891 and is still operating to this day 3 During World War I a battle between German and Russian forces took place in Pruszkow on 12 18 October 1914 part of Battle of the Vistula River Despite the initial success of the German forces on 12 October they were push backed out of town after successful Russian counter attack on 14th An intense artillery fire by both sides caused severe damages to many buildings in Pruszkow including train station power plant and two churches In August 1915 Pruszkow was taken by the German forces without a fight Within interwar Poland it was administratively located in the Warsaw County in the Warsaw Voivodeship World War II Edit Cemetery of Polish soldiers killed during the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 The city was occupied by Germany following the German Soviet invasion of Poland which started World War II in September 1939 On 14 December 1939 the Germans murdered 46 Poles from Pruszkow during the large Palmiry massacre 4 Before the invasion the city had a large Jewish population In 1940 the German occupation authorities established a Jewish ghetto in Pruszkow in order to confine its Jewish population for the purpose of persecution and exploitation 5 The ghetto was liquidated on 31 January 1941 when all its 1 400 6 3 000 inhabitants were transported in cattle trucks to Warsaw Ghetto the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe with over 400 000 Jews crammed into an area of 1 3 square miles 3 4 km2 From there most victims were sent to Treblinka extermination camp 7 8 9 10 Polish insurgents in Pruszkow in October 1944 after Warsaw s capitulation Historic sights of Pruszkow examples Sokol Palace Church of the Immaculate Conception St Casimir Church Potulicki Palace During the 1944 Warsaw Uprising the Nazis created the large Durchgangslager 121 Dulag 121 transit camp in Pruszkow on the site of the Train Repair Shops Zaklady Naprawcze Taboru Kolejowego to intern the evacuees expelled from the capital Around 550 000 Warsaw residents and approximately 100 000 more from its outskirts were incarcerated in the camp The SS and Gestapo segregated the Poles who were then either deported to forced labour in Germany sent to Nazi concentration camps or expelled to more southern locations of German occupied Poland 11 Approximately 650 000 Poles passed through the Pruszkow camp in August September and October 1944 Approximately 55 000 were sent to concentration camps including 13 500 to Auschwitz 12 000 to Ravensbruck and 8 700 to Mauthausen 11 They included people from a variety of social classes and occupations government officials scholars artists physicians merchants and blue collar workers in varying physical conditions the injured the sick invalids and pregnant women and of various ages from infants only a few weeks old to the elderly aged 86 or more In a few cases these were also people of different ethnic backgrounds including Jews living on Aryan papers 12 The Germans murdered several Polish Catholic monks and nuns in the camp 13 14 15 Following the Soviet westward offensive on 26 March 1945 the 16 members of the Polish Underground Government were invited by the Russians for talks to a house in Pruszkow on Armii Krajowej Street They were captured by the Soviet NKVD agents transported to USSR imprisoned tortured and sentenced in Moscow during the so called Trial of the Sixteen Post war Poland Edit After World War II Pruszkow became one of Masovia s largest industrial centers Due to its proximity to Warsaw it is now home to several factories and companies including Herbapol Daewoo Electronics L Oreal Cosmetics as well as logistic centers It is also an important sports center with a sports gymnasium soccer stadium and a cycling course Crime EditThe most well known of the Polish organised crime groups in the 1990s was the so called Pruszkow gang and their arch nemesis the Wolomin gang 16 quote with whom they fought bloody turf wars 17 Eventually the groups were finally crushed by the Polish police in cooperation with the German police in a spectacular raid on the A2 motorway between Konin and Poznan in September 2011 18 Population EditThe town s population has grown significantly from 16 000 in the early part of the 20th century to 60 068 in the 2014 census by the Central Statistical Office of Poland 19 20 Sports Edit BGZ Arena indoor velodrome The city s local football team is Znicz Pruszkow It plays in the third division but in the past it competed in the second division between 2007 2010 and 2016 2017 Robert Lewandowski played for Znicz from 2006 to 2008 whereas Pruszkow born Jacek Gmoch and Radoslaw Majewski also played in Znicz Gmoch from 1953 to 1958 Majewski from 2002 to 2006 21 The city has two professional basketball teams women s PTS Lider Pruszkow pl and the basketball section of the football club men s Znicz Basket Pruszkow The Pruszkow Arena is a modern indoor velodrome Buildings and structures Edit256 metres tall chimney of former Pruszkow II Power Plant now used as radio tower Education EditPhysical Culture and Tourism High School Wyzsza Szkola Kultury Fizycznej i Turystyki Notable people Edit Childhood home of Polish poet Jan Lechon Leszek Cichy born 1951 mountaineer and high altitude climber Jacek Gmoch born 1939 footballer and football manager Albena Grabowska born 1971 writer neurologist Bronislaw Komorowski born 1952 former President of Poland spent part of his childhood in Pruszkow Jan Lechon 1899 1956 poet spent part of his childhood in Pruszkow Radoslaw Majewski born 1986 footballer Konrad Morawski 1913 1985 television and theatre actorReferences Edit Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved 17 August 2022 Data for territorial unit 1421021 Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich Tom IX in Polish Warszawa 1888 p 105 Tworki is an administrative part of Pruszkow today Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN p 244 The War Against The Jews The Holocaust Chronicle 2009 Chicago Il Accessed 21 June 2011 The statistical data compiled on the basis of Glossary of 2 077 Jewish towns in Poland Archived 8 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Virtual Shtetl Museum of the History of the Polish Jews in English as well as Getta Zydowskie by Gedeon in Polish and Ghetto List by Michael Peters at www deathcamps org occupation ghettolist htm in English Accessed 12 July 2011 Warsaw Ghetto United States Holocaust Memorial Museum USHMM Washington D C Richard C Lukas Out of the Inferno Poles Remember the Holocaust University Press of Kentucky 1989 201 pages Page 13 also in Richard C Lukas The Forgotten Holocaust The Poles Under German Occupation 1939 1944 University Press of Kentucky 1986 Google Print p 13 Gunnar S Paulsson The Rescue of Jews by Non Jews in Nazi Occupied Poland Journal of Holocaust Education Vol 7 Nos 1 amp 2 1998 pp 19 44 Published by Frank Cass London Edward Victor Ghettos and Other Jewish Communities Archived 9 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Judaica Philatelic Accessed 20 June 2011 a b Transporty z obozu Dulag 121 Muzeum Dulag 121 in Polish Retrieved 1 April 2021 Ksiega Pamieci Transporty Polakow z Warszawy do KL Auschwitz 1940 1944 Memorial Book Transports of Poles from Warsaw to Auschwitz Concentration Camp 1940 1944 Archived 26 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Auschwitz Birkenau Museum On the Sixtieth Anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising Accessed 13 July 2011 Jozef Cisek in Polish Retrieved 28 March 2021 Janina Kamilk in Polish Retrieved 28 March 2021 Bronislawa Rochowicz in Polish Retrieved 28 March 2021 Head of the Polish MI on the priorities and key strategies of the Ministry News Ministry of the Interior and Administration Msw gov pl Retrieved 22 April 2018 Klaus Bachmann 1 January 1970 Nikos Skotarczak starb bei Fruhstuck im Nachtclub Grundervater der Auto Mafia erschossen Berliner Zeitung Berliner zeitung de Retrieved 22 April 2018 Kacper Guzek 29 September 2011 Policja rozbila gang samochodowy z Wolomina Widowiskowa akcja na autostradzie in Polish Super Express Kronika kryminalna http stat gov pl files gfx portalinformacyjny pl defaultaktualnosci 5515 3 9 1 rocznik demograficzny 2015 pdf bare URL PDF Central Statistical Office Poland Ludnosc Stan i struktura w przekroju terytorialnym PDF Bajka o Robercie Lewandowskim Sport pl in Polish Retrieved 14 February 2016 External links Edit Media related to Pruszkow at Wikimedia Commons in Polish Official website in Polish Alleycat races in Pruszkow in English Museum of Ancient Mazovian Metallurgy Jewish Community in Pruszkow on Virtual Shtetl Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pruszkow amp oldid 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