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Żagań

Żagań [ˈʐaɡaɲ] (French and German: Sagan, Upper Sorbian: Zahań [ˈzahajn], Latin: Saganum) is a town in western Poland, on the Bóbr river, with 25,731 inhabitants (2019). The town is the capital of Żagań County in the historic region of Silesia. Previously in the Zielona Góra Voivodeship (1975–1998), Żagań has been in the Lubusz Voivodeship since 1999.

Żagań
Old town
Żagań
Coordinates: 51°37′N 15°19′E / 51.617°N 15.317°E / 51.617; 15.317
Country Poland
Voivodeship Lubusz
CountyŻagań
GminaŻagań (urban gmina)
Established12th century
First mentioned1202
Town rightsbetween 1248 and 1260
Government
 • MayorSławomir Kowal
Area
 • Total39.92 km2 (15.41 sq mi)
Population
 (2019-06-30[1])
 • Total25,731
 • Density640/km2 (1,700/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
68-100 to 68-103
Area code+48 68
Car platesFZG
Websitehttps://urzadmiasta.zagan.pl/

The town hosts the Polish 11th Armoured Cavalry Division.[2] An American Armored Brigade Combat Team is constantly rotated through the town under Operation Atlantic Resolve.[3]

Etymology edit

The town's name probably means "place of the burnt forest" (Polish: żegać, żagiew): probably referring to the burning of primeval forest by early settlers. If this is correct, it is consistent with the names of nearby places: Żary, Zgorzelec, Pożarów.[4]

Geography edit

Żagań is located roughly halfway between Cottbus and Wrocław, approximately 100 meters above sea level and at the centre of the Żagań administrative district. It is about 100 km (62 mi) north of the Polish border with the Czech Republic, and approximately 40 km (25 mi) to the east of Poland's border with Germany. The rural district of Żagań surrounds the town on its northern, eastern and southern sides. Iłowa lies to the south-west and the rural district of Żary is to the north-west. The Rivers Bóbr and Kwisa meet up just outside the town on its south-eastern side.

History edit

Polish Piast dynasty edit

 
Medieval town walls with the old Augustinian monastery in the background

The area formed part of Poland after the creation of the state in the 10th century. Żagań was founded in the 12th century by Polish monarch Bolesław IV the Curly near an old settlement of the same name, which name was then changed to Stary Żagań ("Old Żagań"). The name comes from the Old Polish word zagon. It was first mentioned in a 1202 deed, when it belonged to the Duchy of Silesia under the rule of the Piast duke Henry I the Bearded, within fragmented Poland. In 1251, it became part of the newly created Duchy of Głogów under Henry's grandson Konrad I. Duke Konrad I granted Żagań town rights between 1248 and 1260.[5] The town developed wealth from development of mining, and attracted German settlers from the west.[6]

After Konrad's death in 1274, his heirs again divided the duchy and the castle of Żagań became the residence of his youngest son Przemko of Ścinawa, Duke of Żagań from 1278, who established a monastery of the Augustinian Canons here. Thus the Duchy of Żagań came into the existence. In 1284, he swapped his estates for the Duchy of Ścinawa and was succeeded by his elder brother Konrad II the Hunchback. When Konrad II died in 1304, all the former Głogów estates were reunified under his surviving brother Henry III.

 
Żagań Palace

In 1309, Henry III of Głogów was succeeded by his eldest son Henry IV the Faithful, who in 1321 again had to divide the duchy with his younger brothers. He ceded Głogów to Przemko II and retired to Żagań, which again became the capital of a duchy in its own right. In 1329, all the sons of Henry III of Głogów became vassals of John of Luxembourg, the King of Bohemia - with the exception of Przemko II who died suddenly two years later. When in 1393 Henry VI the Elder, grandson of Henry IV, died without issue, the estates were again reunified with Głogów until in 1412 Jan I, the eldest son of Duke Henry VIII the Sparrow, became the sole ruler of the Żagań duchy.

Saxon, Habsburg and Prussian rule edit

After a fierce battle for the inheritance, Jan II the Mad, son of Jan I, finally sold it to Duke Albert III of Saxony from the House of Wettin, thus ending the centuries-long Piast rule.

In 1549, Elector Maurice of Saxony ceded Sagan to the Bohemian king Ferdinand I of Habsburg. Emperor Ferdinand II of Habsburg allotted the fief to Albrecht von Wallenstein, his supreme commander in the Thirty Years' War in 1627. It then passed to the illustrious Bohemian family of Lobkowicz, who had the Baroque Żagań Palace erected. One of two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town in the 18th century and Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland traveled that route numerous times.[7] After the First Silesian War of 1742, Żagań became part of Prussia. It was part of the Province of Silesia of Prussia and after 1871 Germany. In the 19th century Żagań was still a significant Polish center.[8]

 
Former Lutheran chapel
 
Plan of Żagań, 1927

In 1786, the fief was purchased by Peter von Biron, Duke of Courland, and in 1843, it passed to his daughter Dorothea, the wife of Edmond de Talleyrand, a nephew of the great French diplomat Talleyrand, who spent her retirement years at Sagan. A patent of King Frederick William IV of Prussia on 6 January 1845 invested her as Duchess of Sagan; and Napoleon III recognized the title in France, in favour of her son Louis.

Second World War edit

The double title (a prince and a duc) both Prussian and French, served to render the duc de Sagan a neutral party during the Second World War: his Château de Valençay provided a safe haven for treasures of the Louvre during the German occupation of France.

 
Model of Stalag Luft III at the Żagań Historical Museum

During the war, the Germans operated two prisoner-of-war camps and a forced labour camp in the town, all intended for prisoners of various nationalities.[8] Sagan was occupied by Soviet troops during the third week of February 1945, following several days of savage fighting.

Prisoner of war camps and The Great Escape edit

As early as 1939, soon after invading Poland, Nazi Germany established a system of prisoner of war (POW) camps in Sagan. In total, the Mannschafts-Stammlager Stalag VIIIC and its subsidiaries held over 300,000 prisoners from some 30 different countries. It is estimated that around 120,000 of them died of hunger, disease and maltreatment. Later, in 1942, an additional camp was set up for Allied pilots, called Stalag Luft III.[9]

 
Memorial to 50 Allied POWs murdered by the Germans after the Great Escape

In March 1942, the town became the location of the Stalag Luft III camp for captured airmen (Kriegsgefangenen Stammlager der Luftwaffe 3 Sagan).[10] It was the site of the most courageous escape resulting in the killing of 50 prisoners including the following Polish flight officers: Major Antoni Kiewnarski; Lieutenant Stanisław Król; and navigation Lieutenants Włodzimierz Kolanowski, Jerzy Mondschein, Kazimierz Pawluk and Paweł Tobolski. This episode of history was the subject of the 1963 film The Great Escape, starring Steve McQueen. It was the biggest and the most deadly escape of officer aircrew captured by Nazi Germany during the entire war. The number of prisoners attempting the escape was 200, of whom 76 managed to leave the camp; 73 were caught and 50 executed on Hitler's orders. Just three successfully escaped, one to Gibraltar and two to Sweden.[10] All three reunited in England.

There were only a few other, similar escapes from German POW camps during the Second World War. A slightly smaller one on March 6, 1943, from Oflag XXI-B in Szubin, involved 43 British officers. On September 19–20, 1943, an escape from the Oflag VI B in Dössel near Wartburg involved 47 Polish officers. A day later 67 French officers escaped from Edelbach in Austria 67. Another involved 54 French soldiers on December 18, 1943, from Marlag near Hamburg.

Modern Poland edit

 
T-72 tanks in the grounds of Lieutenant General Zygmunt Sadowski Barracks. The 34th Armoured Cavalry Brigade is based in Żagań.

After Nazi Germany's defeat, the town became again part of Poland as the result of the border changes decided at the Potsdam Conference. The totality of the town's population was expelled,[citation needed] and the town was repopulated by Poles, many displaced from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union.

Clearing the rubble began in 1947, and was followed by the establishment of small enterprises, factories and schools. During the 1970s, a "new town" quarter was built, and by 1983, the historic baronial château ("Żagań Palace") had been fully rebuilt.[11]

For many years regiments of the Soviet Air Forces flew from the town's airbase (Żagań-Tomaszowo?). In 1992 the 42nd Guards Bomber Aviation Regiment finally left and was disbanded after a brief stay at Szprotawa.[12]

In the years 1967–1971 a museum dedicated to the history of prisoners of war of the Stalag VIII-C camp was established.[13] In 2011, the former Augustinian monastery complex with the church of the Assumption was designated a Historic Monument of Poland.[14] In 2013, the first Polish monument of Wojtek the Bear, soldier of the Polish II Corps during World War II, was unveiled in Żagań.[15]

Sights and monuments edit

Sights of Żagań (selected)
 
Church of the Assumption
 
Clock tower of the historic Town Hall
 
Plac Słowiański with current Town Hall
 
Monument of Wojtek the Bear
 
District court in Żagań

Sports edit

Żagań is home to sports' clubs

  • Czarni Żagań – football club, now plays in the lower leagues, 1964–65 Polish Cup runner-up
  • WKS Sobieski Żagań – volleyball club, now plays in II liga (3rd tier)
  • KS Bóbr Żagań – volleyball and rugby club
  • UKS Orzeł Żagań – youth unihockey club

Transport edit

Roads running through Żagań edit

  Voivodeship road 296

  Voivodeship road 295

  National road 12

Important roads running near Żagań edit

  National road 27

  National road 18

    Motorway A18 / E 36

    Motorway A4 / E 40

    Expressway S3 / E 65

Notable people edit

 
Łukasz Garguła, former Polish footballer

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Żagań is twinned with:[16]

Notable facts edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Population. Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019. As of 30th June". stat.gov.pl. Statistics Poland. 2019-10-15. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  2. ^ Egnash, Martin (3 February 2017). "American soldiers on reassurance mission bring life to small Polish town". Stars & Stripes. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  3. ^ Gnauck, Gerhard (13 January 2017). "US forces in Poland: Here to stay". DW. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  4. ^ Żagań. Plan miasta. Zielona Góra: Zakład Kartograficzny "Sygnatura". 1998. ISBN 83-87873-02-0.
  5. ^ Studia nad początkami i rozplanowaniem miast nad środkową Odrą i dolną Wartą (Województwo zielonogórskie), Lubuskie Towarzystwo Naukowe, Zielona Góra, 1970, p. 516 (in Polish)
  6. ^ Sebastian Brather (2008). Archäologie der westlichen Slawen: Siedlung, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft im früh- und hochmittelalterlichen Ostmitteleuropa (in German). Walter de Gruyter. pp. 87. ISBN 9783110206098.
  7. ^ "Informacja historyczna". Dresden-Warszawa (in Polish). Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Żagań". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  9. ^ "Historia obozów jenieckich". Muzeum Obozów Jenieckich w Żaganiu (The Museum of Prisoners of War Camps in Żagań). 2004. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
  10. ^ a b "Stalag Luft III". Muzeum Obozów Jenieckich w Żaganiu (The Museum of PoW camps in Żagań). 2004. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
  11. ^ "Historia". Żagań town website (in Polish). Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  12. ^ Holm. "42nd Guards Tannenbergskiy Red Banner orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov Bomber Aviation Regiment". Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  13. ^ "Muzeum". Urząd Miasta Żagań (in Polish). Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  14. ^ a b Rozporządzenie Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 28 lutego 2011 r. w sprawie uznania za pomnik historii "Żagań - poaugustiański zespół klasztorny", Dz. U. z 2011 r. Nr 54, poz. 280
  15. ^ "Niedźwiedź Wojtek zamieszkał w Żaganiu". Urząd Miasta Żagań (in Polish). Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  16. ^ "Miasta partnerskie". urzadmiasta.zagan.pl (in Polish). Żagań. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  17. ^ "Pierwsza na świecie powieść science-fiction". 15 November 2004.
  18. ^ "Historia ochrony odgromowej w Polsce".

External links edit

  • Official town webpage
  • Palace in Żagań
  • Jewish Community in Żagań on Virtual Shtetl
  • Heimatkreisgemeinschaft Sagan Sprottau e.V. Organization of refugees
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Sagan" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 1001–1002.

Żagań, ˈʐaɡaɲ, french, german, sagan, upper, sorbian, zahań, ˈzahajn, latin, saganum, town, western, poland, bóbr, river, with, inhabitants, 2019, town, capital, county, historic, region, silesia, previously, zielona, góra, voivodeship, 1975, 1998, been, lubus. Zagan ˈʐaɡaɲ French and German Sagan Upper Sorbian Zahan ˈzahajn Latin Saganum is a town in western Poland on the Bobr river with 25 731 inhabitants 2019 The town is the capital of Zagan County in the historic region of Silesia Previously in the Zielona Gora Voivodeship 1975 1998 Zagan has been in the Lubusz Voivodeship since 1999 ZaganOld townFlagCoat of armsZaganCoordinates 51 37 N 15 19 E 51 617 N 15 317 E 51 617 15 317Country PolandVoivodeship LubuszCountyZaganGminaZagan urban gmina Established12th centuryFirst mentioned1202Town rightsbetween 1248 and 1260Government MayorSlawomir KowalArea Total39 92 km2 15 41 sq mi Population 2019 06 30 1 Total25 731 Density640 km2 1 700 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code68 100 to 68 103Area code 48 68Car platesFZGWebsitehttps urzadmiasta zagan pl The town hosts the Polish 11th Armoured Cavalry Division 2 An American Armored Brigade Combat Team is constantly rotated through the town under Operation Atlantic Resolve 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Polish Piast dynasty 3 2 Saxon Habsburg and Prussian rule 3 3 Second World War 3 3 1 Prisoner of war camps and The Great Escape 3 4 Modern Poland 4 Sights and monuments 5 Sports 6 Transport 6 1 Roads running through Zagan 6 2 Important roads running near Zagan 7 Notable people 8 Twin towns sister cities 9 Notable facts 10 References 11 External linksEtymology editThe town s name probably means place of the burnt forest Polish zegac zagiew probably referring to the burning of primeval forest by early settlers If this is correct it is consistent with the names of nearby places Zary Zgorzelec Pozarow 4 Geography editZagan is located roughly halfway between Cottbus and Wroclaw approximately 100 meters above sea level and at the centre of the Zagan administrative district It is about 100 km 62 mi north of the Polish border with the Czech Republic and approximately 40 km 25 mi to the east of Poland s border with Germany The rural district of Zagan surrounds the town on its northern eastern and southern sides Ilowa lies to the south west and the rural district of Zary is to the north west The Rivers Bobr and Kwisa meet up just outside the town on its south eastern side History editPolish Piast dynasty edit nbsp Medieval town walls with the old Augustinian monastery in the background The area formed part of Poland after the creation of the state in the 10th century Zagan was founded in the 12th century by Polish monarch Boleslaw IV the Curly near an old settlement of the same name which name was then changed to Stary Zagan Old Zagan The name comes from the Old Polish word zagon It was first mentioned in a 1202 deed when it belonged to the Duchy of Silesia under the rule of the Piast duke Henry I the Bearded within fragmented Poland In 1251 it became part of the newly created Duchy of Glogow under Henry s grandson Konrad I Duke Konrad I granted Zagan town rights between 1248 and 1260 5 The town developed wealth from development of mining and attracted German settlers from the west 6 After Konrad s death in 1274 his heirs again divided the duchy and the castle of Zagan became the residence of his youngest son Przemko of Scinawa Duke of Zagan from 1278 who established a monastery of the Augustinian Canons here Thus the Duchy of Zagan came into the existence In 1284 he swapped his estates for the Duchy of Scinawa and was succeeded by his elder brother Konrad II the Hunchback When Konrad II died in 1304 all the former Glogow estates were reunified under his surviving brother Henry III nbsp Zagan Palace In 1309 Henry III of Glogow was succeeded by his eldest son Henry IV the Faithful who in 1321 again had to divide the duchy with his younger brothers He ceded Glogow to Przemko II and retired to Zagan which again became the capital of a duchy in its own right In 1329 all the sons of Henry III of Glogow became vassals of John of Luxembourg the King of Bohemia with the exception of Przemko II who died suddenly two years later When in 1393 Henry VI the Elder grandson of Henry IV died without issue the estates were again reunified with Glogow until in 1412 Jan I the eldest son of Duke Henry VIII the Sparrow became the sole ruler of the Zagan duchy Saxon Habsburg and Prussian rule edit After a fierce battle for the inheritance Jan II the Mad son of Jan I finally sold it to Duke Albert III of Saxony from the House of Wettin thus ending the centuries long Piast rule In 1549 Elector Maurice of Saxony ceded Sagan to the Bohemian king Ferdinand I of Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand II of Habsburg allotted the fief to Albrecht von Wallenstein his supreme commander in the Thirty Years War in 1627 It then passed to the illustrious Bohemian family of Lobkowicz who had the Baroque Zagan Palace erected One of two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town in the 18th century and Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland traveled that route numerous times 7 After the First Silesian War of 1742 Zagan became part of Prussia It was part of the Province of Silesia of Prussia and after 1871 Germany In the 19th century Zagan was still a significant Polish center 8 nbsp Former Lutheran chapel nbsp Plan of Zagan 1927 In 1786 the fief was purchased by Peter von Biron Duke of Courland and in 1843 it passed to his daughter Dorothea the wife of Edmond de Talleyrand a nephew of the great French diplomat Talleyrand who spent her retirement years at Sagan A patent of King Frederick William IV of Prussia on 6 January 1845 invested her as Duchess of Sagan and Napoleon III recognized the title in France in favour of her son Louis Second World War edit The double title a prince and a duc both Prussian and French served to render the duc de Sagan a neutral party during the Second World War his Chateau de Valencay provided a safe haven for treasures of the Louvre during the German occupation of France nbsp Model of Stalag Luft III at the Zagan Historical Museum During the war the Germans operated two prisoner of war camps and a forced labour camp in the town all intended for prisoners of various nationalities 8 Sagan was occupied by Soviet troops during the third week of February 1945 following several days of savage fighting Prisoner of war camps and The Great Escape edit As early as 1939 soon after invading Poland Nazi Germany established a system of prisoner of war POW camps in Sagan In total the Mannschafts Stammlager Stalag VIIIC and its subsidiaries held over 300 000 prisoners from some 30 different countries It is estimated that around 120 000 of them died of hunger disease and maltreatment Later in 1942 an additional camp was set up for Allied pilots called Stalag Luft III 9 nbsp Memorial to 50 Allied POWs murdered by the Germans after the Great Escape Main article Stalag Luft III In March 1942 the town became the location of the Stalag Luft III camp for captured airmen Kriegsgefangenen Stammlager der Luftwaffe 3 Sagan 10 It was the site of the most courageous escape resulting in the killing of 50 prisoners including the following Polish flight officers Major Antoni Kiewnarski Lieutenant Stanislaw Krol and navigation Lieutenants Wlodzimierz Kolanowski Jerzy Mondschein Kazimierz Pawluk and Pawel Tobolski This episode of history was the subject of the 1963 film The Great Escape starring Steve McQueen It was the biggest and the most deadly escape of officer aircrew captured by Nazi Germany during the entire war The number of prisoners attempting the escape was 200 of whom 76 managed to leave the camp 73 were caught and 50 executed on Hitler s orders Just three successfully escaped one to Gibraltar and two to Sweden 10 All three reunited in England There were only a few other similar escapes from German POW camps during the Second World War A slightly smaller one on March 6 1943 from Oflag XXI B in Szubin involved 43 British officers On September 19 20 1943 an escape from the Oflag VI B in Dossel near Wartburg involved 47 Polish officers A day later 67 French officers escaped from Edelbach in Austria 67 Another involved 54 French soldiers on December 18 1943 from Marlag near Hamburg Modern Poland edit nbsp T 72 tanks in the grounds of Lieutenant General Zygmunt Sadowski Barracks The 34th Armoured Cavalry Brigade is based in Zagan After Nazi Germany s defeat the town became again part of Poland as the result of the border changes decided at the Potsdam Conference The totality of the town s population was expelled citation needed and the town was repopulated by Poles many displaced from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union Clearing the rubble began in 1947 and was followed by the establishment of small enterprises factories and schools During the 1970s a new town quarter was built and by 1983 the historic baronial chateau Zagan Palace had been fully rebuilt 11 For many years regiments of the Soviet Air Forces flew from the town s airbase Zagan Tomaszowo In 1992 the 42nd Guards Bomber Aviation Regiment finally left and was disbanded after a brief stay at Szprotawa 12 In the years 1967 1971 a museum dedicated to the history of prisoners of war of the Stalag VIII C camp was established 13 In 2011 the former Augustinian monastery complex with the church of the Assumption was designated a Historic Monument of Poland 14 In 2013 the first Polish monument of Wojtek the Bear soldier of the Polish II Corps during World War II was unveiled in Zagan 15 Sights and monuments editSights of Zagan selected nbsp Church of the Assumption nbsp Clock tower of the historic Town Hall nbsp Plac Slowianski with current Town Hall nbsp Monument of Wojtek the Bear nbsp District court in Zagan Baroque ducal palace Palace park Post Augustinian Monastery Complex with the church of the Assumption one of the burial sites of the Piast dynasty named one of Poland s official national Historic Monuments Pomnik historii as designated on March 11 2011 14 Its listing is maintained by the National Heritage Board of Poland Post franciscan monastery with the Saints Peter and Paul church Town hall Museum of the World War II POW camp Monument of Wojtek the Bear soldier of the II Corps of the Polish Army during World War II Post evangelical Church Tower Medieval town walls Sports editZagan is home to sports clubs Czarni Zagan football club now plays in the lower leagues 1964 65 Polish Cup runner up WKS Sobieski Zagan volleyball club now plays in II liga 3rd tier KS Bobr Zagan volleyball and rugby club UKS Orzel Zagan youth unihockey clubTransport editRoads running through Zagan edit nbsp Voivodeship road 296 nbsp Voivodeship road 295 nbsp National road 12 Important roads running near Zagan edit nbsp National road 27 nbsp National road 18 nbsp nbsp Motorway A18 E 36 nbsp nbsp Motorway A4 E 40 nbsp nbsp Expressway S3 E 65Notable people edit nbsp Lukasz Gargula former Polish footballer Johannes Kepler 1571 1630 German astronomer mathematician and astrologer lived in Sagan in 1628 1630 Albrecht von Wallenstein 1583 1634 duke of Sagan from 1627 to 1634 Johann Ignaz von Felbiger 1724 1788 educational reformer abbot of the Order of St Augustine in Sagan Peter von Biron 1724 1800 duke of Sagan from 1786 to 1800 Louis XVIII 1755 1824 future king of France He spent several months in 1793 in Sagan Stendhal 1783 1842 French writer spent several months in 1813 in Sagan Dorothea de Talleyrand Perigord 1793 1862 princess of Sagan from 1844 to 1862 Adolf Engler 1844 1930 German botanist Reinhold Rohricht 1842 1905 German historian studied at the Gymnasium in Sagan in 1852 1862 Wolfgang Paalen 1905 1959 Austrian painter and art philosopher member of the Surrealist Group spent part of his childhood in his father s castle St Rochusburg near Sagan from 1913 to 1928 Bronislawa Wajs 1908 1987 Polish Romani classic poet She lived in Zagan in the 50s Hans Jurgen Steinmann 1929 2008 novelist Wolfgang Samuel born 1935 German child refugee author U S Air Force pilot Ilse Kokula born 1944 educator author LGBT activist Mariusz Jurasik born 1976 handball player Lukasz Gargula born 1981 footballer Konrad Michalak born 1997 footballer Twin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Zagan is twinned with 16 nbsp Duns Scotland United Kingdom nbsp Netphen Germany nbsp Ortrand Germany nbsp Saint Omer France nbsp Teltow Germany nbsp Grumo Nevano ItalyNotable facts edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zagan Johannes Kepler started writing the early science fiction Somnium novel before his death in 1630 17 In 1769 one of the first lightning rods in Europe was installed on the Church of the Assumption in the local Augustinian monastery 18 References edit Population Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019 As of 30th June stat gov pl Statistics Poland 2019 10 15 Retrieved 2020 04 03 Egnash Martin 3 February 2017 American soldiers on reassurance mission bring life to small Polish town Stars amp Stripes Retrieved 3 February 2017 Gnauck Gerhard 13 January 2017 US forces in Poland Here to stay DW Retrieved 4 February 2017 Zagan Plan miasta Zielona Gora Zaklad Kartograficzny Sygnatura 1998 ISBN 83 87873 02 0 Studia nad poczatkami i rozplanowaniem miast nad srodkowa Odra i dolna Warta Wojewodztwo zielonogorskie Lubuskie Towarzystwo Naukowe Zielona Gora 1970 p 516 in Polish Sebastian Brather 2008 Archaologie der westlichen Slawen Siedlung Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft im fruh und hochmittelalterlichen Ostmitteleuropa in German Walter de Gruyter pp 87 ISBN 9783110206098 Informacja historyczna Dresden Warszawa in Polish Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Zagan Encyklopedia PWN in Polish Retrieved 7 February 2020 Historia obozow jenieckich Muzeum Obozow Jenieckich w Zaganiu The Museum of Prisoners of War Camps in Zagan 2004 Retrieved August 5 2011 a b Stalag Luft III Muzeum Obozow Jenieckich w Zaganiu The Museum of PoW camps in Zagan 2004 Retrieved August 5 2011 Historia Zagan town website in Polish Retrieved 4 April 2015 Holm 42nd Guards Tannenbergskiy Red Banner orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov Bomber Aviation Regiment Retrieved 2022 12 15 Muzeum Urzad Miasta Zagan in Polish Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Rozporzadzenie Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 28 lutego 2011 r w sprawie uznania za pomnik historii Zagan poaugustianski zespol klasztorny Dz U z 2011 r Nr 54 poz 280 Niedzwiedz Wojtek zamieszkal w Zaganiu Urzad Miasta Zagan in Polish Retrieved 7 November 2020 Miasta partnerskie urzadmiasta zagan pl in Polish Zagan Retrieved 2020 04 03 Pierwsza na swiecie powiesc science fiction 15 November 2004 Historia ochrony odgromowej w Polsce External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zagan Official town webpage Palace in Zagan Jewish Community in Zagan on Virtual Shtetl Heimatkreisgemeinschaft Sagan Sprottau e V Organization of refugees Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Sagan Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 1001 1002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zagan amp oldid 1225420466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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