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Lesser Poland
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Rada Miasta w Wadowicach
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Ewa Filipiak
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19500 <small>(2001)</small>
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10th Century
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1430
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49°53' N
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19°30' E
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33
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KWA
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http://wwwwadowicepl/
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Wadowice MapaPNG
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Wadowice_herbsvg
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background:#cccccc
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The first permanent settlement in the area of today's Wadowice was founded in late
10th Century or early
11th Century . According to a local legend, the town was founded by certain Wad or Wład, a short form for the Slavic name of
Ladislaus . The town is first mentioned as ''Wadowicze'' in St. Peter penny register in years
1325 -
1327 . In
1327 it is also mentioned (under the same name) in a
Fief registry sent from prince
John I Scholastyk Of Oświęcim to
Bohemia n king
John I, Count Of Luxemburg . At this time it was a trading settlement belonging to the
Dukes Of Silesia of the
Piast Dynasty , and according to some historians it was already a municipality. In
1430 a great fire destroyed the town. It was soon rebuilt and granted
City Rights , along with a
City Charter and a self-government, based on the then-popular
Chełmno Law . The privileges, granted by Prince
Kazimierz I Of Oświęcim led to a period of fast reconstruction and growth.
The administrative division of the region in the times of
Regional Division was complicated. Initially, between
1313 /
1317 and
1445 , Wadowice belonged to the
Silesia n Duchy of
Oświęcim and after
1445 to the Duchy of
Zator . In
1482 Władysław I Of Zator inherited only half of his father's lands and created a separate
Duchy Of Wadowice , which lasted until his death in
1493 . The following year his brother and successor,
Jan V Of Zator abdicated. At the same time the land was subject to
Bohemia n overlordship, which lasted until the following year, when the Duchy was bought by the
Kings Of Poland and incorporated as a
Silesian County . Finally, the County was incorporated into the
Kraków Voivodship in
1564 .
In the
16th -
17th Centuries Wadowice was a regional centre of crafts and trade. Among the most notable sons of the town was
Marcin Wadowita , a teologist, philosopher and a
Deacon of the
Kraków Academy . He was also the founder of a
Hospital and a basic school in Wadowice. However, several plagues and fires halted the prosperity and the town's growth was eventually halted as well.
In the effect of the
1st Partition Of Poland , Wadowice was annexed by
Austria and incorporated into the newly-established Kingdom of
Galicia , under direct Austrian rule. The town's growth started soon afterwards, after a road linking
Vienna with
Lwów was built. The town became a seat of a
Communal administration and since
1867 - a county site. Small industries were developing slowly during the
19th Century . New inhabitants settled in the area, attracted by the industry, new military barracks and various administrative institutions. In addition, a new hospital and a regional court were erected in the town centre. Finally, in the last 25 years of the
19th Century partial liberalisation of the
Austro-Hungarian monarchy led to creation of various Polish cultural and scientific societies.
After the
World War I and the dissolution of the monarchy, Wadowice became part of the newly-reborn
Poland . The seat of a
Powiat remained in the town and in
1919 the inhabitants of the area formed the 12th Infantry Regiment that took part in the
Polish-Bolshevik War of
1919 -
1920 . In
1920 Karol Wojtyła was born in Wadowice (later known as the bishop of
Kraków and Pope
John Paul II ).
After the
Polish Defence War of
1939 ,
Germany occupied the area and on
October 26 Wadowice was annexed to the
Third Reich . On
December 29 of the same year the town was renamed to ''Frauenstadt''. Initially the Polish
Intelligentsia was targeted by harsh German racial and cultural policies and hundreds of people from the area, most notably priests, teachers and artists, were murdered in mass executions. Hundreds more were expulsed and resettled to the
General Government in order to make place for German settlers. Between
1941 and
1943 a
Ghetto was established in the city. Almost entire local
Jewish population (more than 2.000) was exterminated, mostly in the nearby
Auschwitz Concentration Camp . In addition, the Germans set up a
POW camp for
Allied soldiers and a penal camp that served as a transfer camp for various
German Concentration Camp s. Despite German terror, the
Home Army units were active in the area, most notably in the town itself and in the Beskid mountains to the south of it.
After the war, in
1945 Wadowice retained its
Powiat town status and until
1975 served as a notable centre of commerce and transport in the
Kraków Voivodship . After that the town was transferred to the newly-created
Bielsko-Biała Voivodship . After the
Peaceful Transformation Of The Political And Economical System in
Poland (in
1989 ), most of the local industry was found inefficient and went bankrupt. However, the ecological and historical heritage of the area, as well as the place being the birthplace of Pope
John Paul II , led to a fast growth of tourist potential. Currently there are more than 200.000 people coming to Wadowice every year and this number is going higher with every year.
Wadowice is today mainly a centre for tourism and sightseeing, but also a place for small industries like machines production, food processing and production of construction materials.
- Days of Wadowice (Dni Wadowic) are held every May-June. The feast starts every May 18 to commemorate the birth of Karol Wojtyła
- Museum of the Holy Father Family House in the native home of Pope John Paul II collects remainders and relics about Karol Wojtyła and his family.
- Parochial church - the Virgin Mary's Offertory Minor Basilica - 15th Century , rebuilt in 18th Century
- Kościelna 4 street, an 18th Century house
- Classicist "Mikołaj" manor - 19th Century , named after mayor Mikołaj Komorowski
- Municipal Museum of Marcin Wadowita
- Pope John Paul II square with 19th Century burgher houses
- Monument to Emil Zegadłowicz , a writer who described the area of Wadowice in many of his books
- Marcin Wadowita ''Martinus Vadovius Campinus'' (born 1567 ), Polish teologist, philosopher and deacon of the Kraków Academy
- Emil Lask (b. 1875 ), philosopher
- Berta Lask (b. 1878 ), writer
- Ada Sari (''Jadwiga Schayer'', b. 1886 ) opera singer and actress
- Godwin Brumowski (born 1889 ), Austro-Hungarian WWI Fighter Ace and air general
- Karol Wojtyła ( 1920 - 2005 ), Polish priest and bishop of Kraków , 1978 - 2005 the Roman Catholic Pope (as John Paul II )
- Rafał Bujnowski (b. 1974 ), painter
- Saint Raphael Kalinowski (b. 1835, Vilna; d. 1906, Wadowice), founder of Wadowice college, seminary, church, monastery, and convent
- Wadowice Town Council
- http://www.it.wadowice.pl - Tourist Information
- http://www.wck.wadowice.pl/ - Wadowice Cultural Center
- http://www.wadowice.pl/dom/srodek.htm Pope's home
- http://www.wadowice-online.com/ - Wadowice Online Guide
- http://www.wadowice.com/ - info. Wadowice
- http://www.skawa.iap.pl/ - Klub Sportowy Skawa Wadowice, Football club
- http://pukskarol.pl - football, basketball, voleyball and swimming
- http://www.skawa.com.pl/ - ZPC Skawa Wadowice, sweets producer
- http://www.fumis-bumar.com.pl/ - Fumis-Bumar, producer of mechanical devices
- http://www.maspex.pl/ - Maspex Wadowice, producer of drinks and juices
- http://www.ponar-wadowice.pl/ - Ponar Wadowice, producer of hydraulics devices
- http://www.ajb.pl/ distributor of electrical products and bearings