From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Izrael Poznanski's Palace
Łódź [wut͡ɕ] (
listen), is the
third-largest city in Poland.
Located in the central part of the country, it had a population of
744,541 in June 2009. It is the capital of Łódź Voivodeship, and is approximately
135 kilometres (84 mi) south-west of Warsaw. The city's coat of arms is an example of canting: depicting a
boat, it alludes to the city's name which translates literally as
"boat".
History
Agricultural Łódź
Sigillum oppidi Lodzia 1577
Łódź first appears in the written record in a 1332 document
giving the village of Łodzia to the bishops of Włocławek. In
1423 King Władysław Jagiełło
granted city
rights to the village of Łódź. From then until the
18th century the town remained a small settlement on a trade route between Masovia and Silesia. In the 16th century the town had fewer
than 800 inhabitants, mostly working on the nearby grain farms.
With the second partition of Poland in 1793, Łódź
became part of the Kingdom of Prussia's province of South Prussia, and
was known in German as Lodsch. In 1798 the Prussians
nationalized the town, and it lost its status as a town of the
bishops of Kuyavia. In 1806
Łódź joined the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw and in 1810 it had 190
inhabitants. In 1815 Congress of Vienna treaty it became
part of Congress
Poland, a client
state of the Russian Empire.
Industrial
growth
In the 1815 treaty, it was planned to renew the dilapidated town
and with the 1816 decree by the Czar a number of German immigrants
received territory deeds for them to clear the land and to build
factories and housing. In 1820 Stanisław Staszic aided in changing
the small town into a modern industrial centre. The immigrants came
to the Promised Land (Polish Ziemia obiecana, the
city's nickname) from all over Europe. Mostly they arrived from Southern Germany, Silesia and Bohemia, but also from countries as far as
Portugal, England, France and Ireland. The first cotton mill opened in
1825, and 14 years later the first steam-powered factory in both Poland and
Russia commenced operations. In 1839 the population was 80% Germans
and German schools and churches were established.
A constant influx of workers, businessmen and craftsmen from all
over Europe transformed Łódź into the main textile production
centre of the Russian Empire. Three groups dominated the city's
population and contributed the most to the city's development:
Poles, Germans and Jews, which started to arrive since 1848. Many
of the Lodz craftspeople were weavers from Silesia.
In 1850, Russia abolished the customs barrier between Congress Poland
and Russia proper; industry in Łódź could now develop freely with a
huge Russian market not far away. Soon the city became the
second-largest city of Congress Poland. In 1865 the first railroad
line opened (to Koluszki,
branch line of the
Warsaw-Vienna Railway), and soon
the city had rail links with Warsaw and Białystok.
One of the most important industrialists of Łódź was Karl
Wilhelm Scheibler[1]. In
1852 he came to Łódź and with Julius Schwarz together started
buying property and building several factories. Scheibler later
bought out Schwarz's share and thus became sole owner of a large
business. After he died in 1881 his widow and other members of the
family decided to pay homage to his memories by erecting a chapel, intended as a
mausoleum with family crypt, in the Lutheran part of the Lodz
cemetery in ulica Ogrodowa (later known as The Old Cemetery).[2]
In the 1823–1873, the city's population doubled every ten years.
The years 1870–1890 marked the period of most intense industrial
development in the city's history. Many of the industrialists were
Jewish. Łódź soon became a major centre of the socialist movement. In 1892 a huge strike
paralysed most of the factories.
By 1897, the share of the German population had dropped from 80
to 40%. According to Russian census of 1897, out of
the total population of 315,000, Jews constituted 99,000 (so around
31% percent).[3]
During the 1905 Revolution, in what became
known as the June Days or Łódź
insurrection, Tsarist police killed more than 300 workers.
Despite the air of impending crisis preceding World War I, the city
grew constantly until 1914. By that year it had become one of the
most densely-populated industrial cities in the world
—13,280 inhabitants per square kilometer (34,395/sq mi).
A major battle was fought near the city
in late 1914, and as a result the city came under German occupation
after December 6, but with Polish independence
restored in November 1918 the local population liberated the city
and disarmed the German troops. In the aftermath of World War I,
Łódź lost approximately 40% of its inhabitants, mostly owing to
draft, diseases and because a huge part of the German population
was forced to move to Germany.
In 1922, Łódź became the capital of the Łódź Voivodeship, but the period of
rapid growth had ceased. The Great Depression of the 1930s and the
Customs War
with Germany closed western markets to Polish textiles while the Bolshevik Revolution (1917)
and the Civil War in Russia (1918–1922) put
an end to the most profitable trade with the East. The city became
a scene of a series of huge workers' protests and riots in the interbellum. On
13 September 1925 a new airport, Lublinek Airport,
started operations near the city of Łódź. In the interwar years
Łódź continued to be a diverse city, with the 1931
Polish census showing that the total population of 604,470
included 315,622 (52.21%) Poles, 202,497 (33.49%) Jews and 86,351
(14.28%) Germans (determination based on the declaration of
language used).
Also read Battle of Łódź (1939)
Prelude.
World War
II
During the Invasion of Poland the Polish forces
of the Łódź
Army of General Juliusz Rómmel defended Łódź against
initial German attacks. However, the Wehrmacht captured the city on September 8. Despite plans for the
city to become a Polish exclave, attached to the General
Government, the Nazi hierarchy respected the wishes of the
local governor of Reichsgau Wartheland, Arthur Greiser,
and of many of the ethnic Germans living in the city, and
annexed it to the Reich in November 1939. The city received the new
name of Litzmannstadt after the German general Karl Litzmann, who
captured the city during World War I. Nevertheless, many Łódź
Germans refused to sign Volksliste and become Volksdeutsche,
instead being deported to the General Government.
Soon the Nazi authorities set up the Łódź
Ghetto in the city and populated it with more than 200,000 Jews
from the Łódź area. As Jews were deported from Litzmannstadt for
"resettlement" (extermination) others were brought in. Due to the
value of the goods that the ghetto population produced for the German military and
various civilian contractors it was the last major ghetto to be
"liquidated" (destroyed); approximately 900 people survived the
liquidation of the ghetto in August 1944. Several concentration camps and
death
camps arose in the city's vicinity for the non-Jewish inhabitants of the regions, among
them the infamous Radogoszcz prison and several minor
camps for the Romani
people and for Polish children.
By the end of World War II, Łódź had lost approximately 420,000
of its pre-war inhabitants: 300,000 Polish Jews and
approximately 120,000 other Poles. In their place were thousands of
new German residents, many of whom were Volksdeutsch who had
been repatriated from Russia during the time of Hitler's alliance
with the Soviet Union. In January 1945 most of the German
population fled the city for fear of the Red Army. The city also suffered tremendous
losses due to the German policy of requisition of all factories and
machines and transporting them to Germany. Thus despite relatively small losses
due to aerial bombardment and the
fighting, Łódź had lost most of its infrastructure.
The Soviet Red
Army entered the city on January 18, 1945. According to Marshal
Katukov, whose forces participated in the operation, the Germans
retreated so suddenly that they had no time to evacuate or destroy
the Łódź factories, as they did in other cities.[4] In
time, Łódź became part of the People's Republic of
Poland.
Prior to World War
II, the Jewish population of Łódź numbered
about 233,000, accounting for one-third of the city’s population.
The community was wiped out in the Holocaust.[5]
After
1945
At the end of World War II, Łódź had fewer than 300,000
inhabitants. However the number began to grow as refugees from
Warsaw and territories
annexed by the Soviet Union immigrated. Until 1948 the city
served as a de facto capital of Poland, since events
during and after the Warsaw uprising had thoroughly
destroyed Warsaw, and most of the government and country
administration resided in Łódź. Some planned moving the capital
there permanently, however this idea did not gain popular support
and in 1948 the reconstruction of Warsaw began. Under the Polish Communist regime many of
the industrialist families lost their
wealth when the authorities nationalised private companies. Once
again the city became a major centre of industry. In mid-1981 Łódź
became famous for its massive, 50,000 hunger demonstration of local
mothers and their children (see: Summer 1981
hunger demonstrations in Poland).
After the period of economic transition during the 1990s, most
enterprises were again privatised. In 2002 the city came to
national attention due to the "Skin Hunters" scandal: doctors and
paramedics in one of the city's hospitals were caught murdering patients and selling
their details to funeral homes for them to contact the
relatives.[6] Four
men have been convicted but others are still under investigation. A
film was made of the events in 2003.[7]
Historical
population
| Year |
Population |
| 1793 |
190 |
| 1806 |
767 |
| 1830 |
4,300 |
| 1850 |
15,800 |
| 1880 |
77,600 |
| 1905 |
343,900 |
| 1925 |
538,600 |
| 1990 |
850,000 |
| 2003 |
781,900 |
| 2007 |
753,192 |
| 2009 |
744,541 |
Łódź in
literature and cinema
Three major novels depict the development of industrial Łódź. Władysław Reymont's Ziemia
Obiecana (The Promised Land) (1898), Joseph Roth's Hotel
Savoy (1924) and Israel Joshua Singer's Di
Brider Ashkenazi (The Brothers Ashkenazi) (1937).
Roth's novel depicts the city on the eve of a workers' riot in
1919. Reymont's novel was made into a film by Andrzej Wajda in
1975: see The Promised Land. In the 1990
film Europa
Europa, Solomon
Perel's family flees pre-WWII Berlin and settles in Łódź;
later, disguised as a Hitler Youth cadet, Perel attempts visit
the Łódź ghetto to search for his family. Łódź is the first city
destroyed by a nuclear attack from the USSR in John
Birmingham's Axis
of Time trilogy. Łódź also plays a major part in the WorldWar and Colonization sagas by
Harry
Turtledove. Scenes of David Lynch's 2006 film Inland
Empire were shot in Łódź.
Tourism
Piotrkowska Street is the main artery and attraction stretching
north to south for a little over five kilometres, making it (one
of) the longest commercial streets in the world. A few of the
building fronts have been renovated and date back to the 19th
century.
Although Łódź does not have any hills nor any large body of
water, one can still get close to nature in one of the city's many
parks, most notably Łagiewniki (the largest city park in Europe).
Łódź has one of the best museums of modern art in Poland,
Muzeum Sztuki on Więckowskiego Street, which displays art
by all important contemporary Polish artists. Despite insufficient
exhibition space (many very impressive paintings and sculptures lie
in storage in the basement), there are plans to move the museum to
a larger space in the near future. There is also a branch of
Muzeum Sztuki called MS2 located in
the area of Łódź largest mall "Manufaktura".
Another popular source of recreation is the Lunapark, an amusement park featuring about two dozen
attractions including an 18 metre tall roller coaster and two dozen other rides
and features, located near the city's zoo and its botanical gardens.
The largest 19th Century textile factory complex which was built
by Izrael
Poznanski has been turned into a shopping centre called "Manufaktura"
which is by far the best example on how the mall should be
incorporated into the city's architecture.
Economy
Liberty Square (Plac Wolności)
Planned motorway network around Łódź
Before 1990, Łódź's economy focused on the textile industry, which in the nineteenth
century had developed in the city owing to the favourable chemical
composition of its water. As a result, Łódź grew from a
population of 13,000 in 1840 to over 500,000 in 1913. By just
before World War I Łódź had become one of the most densely
populated industrial cities in the world, with 13,280 inhabitants
per km2. The textile industry declined dramatically in 1990 and
1991, and no major textile company survives in Łódź today. However,
countless small companies still provide a significant output of
textiles, mostly for export to Russia and other countries of the former Soviet
Union.
The city benefits from its central location in Poland. A number
of firms have located their logistics centres in the vicinity. Two
planned motorways, A1 spanning from the north to
the south of Poland, and A2 going from the east to the
west will intersect northeast of the city. When these motorways are
completed around 2012, the advantages due to the city's central
location should increase even further. Work has also began on
upgrading the railway connection with Warsaw, which reduces the 2
hours travel time to make the 137 km (85 mi) journey to
1.5 hour in 2009. In the next few years much of the track will be
modified to handle trains moving at 160 km/h (99 mph),
cutting the travel time to about 75 minutes.
Recent years has seen many foreign companies opening offices in
Lodz. Indian IT behemoth Infosys has one of its centres in Lodz
In January 2009 Dell announced
that it will shift production from its plant in Limerick, Ireland to its plant in Łódź, largely because
the labour costs in Poland are a fraction of those in Ireland.[8]
The city's investor friendly policies have attracted 980 foreign investors by
January 2009.[8]
Foreign investment was one of
the factors which decreased the unemployment rate in Łódź to 6.5 percent
in December 2008, from 20 percent four years before.[8]
Education
Currently Łódź hosts three major state-owned universities and a number of smaller schools
of higher
education. The tertiary institutes with the most students in
Łódź include:
National Film
School in Łódź
The Leon
Schiller's National Higher School of Film, Television and
Theatre in Łódź (Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Filmowa,
Telewizyjna i Teatralna im. Leona Schillera w Łodzi) is the
most notable academy for future actors, directors, photographers,
camera operators and TV staff in Poland. It was founded on March 8,
1948 and was initially planned to be moved to Warsaw as soon as the
city was rebuilt following the Warsaw Uprising. However, in the end
the school remained in Łódź and today is one of the best-known
institutions of higher education in that town.
At the end of the Second World War Łódź remained the only large
Polish town besides Kraków which war had not destroyed. The
creation of the National Film School gave
the town a role of greater importance from a cultural viewpoint,
which before the war had belonged exclusively to Warsaw and Kraków.
Early students of the School include the directors Andrzej Munk, Andrzej Wajda, Kazimierz
Karabasz (one of the founders of the so called Black Series of
Polish Documentary) and Janusz Morgenstern, who at the end of the
Fifties became famous as one of the founders of the Polish Film
School of Cinematography.
Immediately after the war, Jerzy Bossak, Wanda
Jakubowska, Stanisław Wohl, Antoni Bohdziewicz and Jerzy Toeplitz
worked as the first teachers. The internationally renowned film director Roman Polański
was among the many talented students who attended the School in the
1950s. Łódź's cinematic involvement and its Hollywood-style star
walk on Piotrkowska Street have earned it the nickname
"Holly-Łódź". The school is also associated with the Camerimage Film Festival,
which occurs annually in late November and early December. Founded
in Toruń in 1993, the
festival was specifically organised to focus on the art of cinematography
and is well-attended every year by world-renowned cinematographers, many of whom also
participate in seminars, workshops, retrospectives and Q&A
sessions. Because of both subject matter and attendee composition,
it is considered a key event for industry exhibitors, who often
make European debuts of their products here.
Politics
Łódź constituency
Members of Parliament (Sejm) elected from Łódź
constituency:
Members of Parliament (Senat) elected from
Łódź constituency:
Mayor
International relations
Twin
towns - Sister cities
Łódź is twinned with:[9
]
Łódź belongs also to the Eurocities network.
Sports
Notable
residents
- Daniel Amit,
Israeli physicist
- Grażyna Bacewicz, composer
- Aleksander Bardini, stage
director and actor
- Andrzej Bartkowiak, cameraman and
film director
- Jurek Becker
(1937–1997) writer
- Kazimierz Brandys, writer
- Artur
Brauner, film producer
- Jacob
Bronowski, writer,
- Roman Cycowski, singer, bariton, member of the Comedian
Harmonists ensemble
- Karl
Dedecius, translator
- Karl Dominik
(Born:Karol Dominik Ignaczak), China's first Chinese speaking
Polish actor
- Max Factor,
Sr., businessman, founder of the Max Factor cosmetics company
- Piotr
Fronczewski, Polish actor
- Marcin
Gortat, NBA Basketball Player for the Orlando Magic
- Mendel Grossman, Łódź ghetto photographer [1] [2]
- Avraham Halfi, Israeli Hebrew actor and poet
- Josef Joffe,
journalist
- Zdzisław Jaskuła poet, writer and director
- Günter Kahl, (1943 Litzmannstadt) journalist
- Jan Karski,
diplomat and antinazi resistant
- Paul Klecki,
conductor
- Jerzy
Kosinski, writer
- Jan
Kowalewski, Polish cryptologist who broke Soviet military codes and ciphers
during the Polish-Soviet War.
- Feliks W.
Kres, fantasy
writer
- Daniel
Libeskind, architect
- Tadeusz Miciński, poet,
- Zew Wawa
Morejno, Chief
Rabbi
- Zbigniew
Nienacki, writer
- Josef
Olechowski, Lawyer, Polish Senator, Anti-Soviet counter-espionage operative
- Josef Turko, pen name Okrutni, Author
- Władysław Pasikowski,
director
- Marian Piechal, poet and essayist
- Roman
Polanski, cinema director
- Zbigniew Rybczyński, animator and
Oscar winner
- Władysław Reymont, writer, Nobel Prize winner
- Joseph
Rotblat, Nobel Prize winner
- Stefan
Rozental, nuclear physicist
- Artur
Rubinstein, pianist, settled
- Andrzej
Sapkowski, fantasy writer
- Carl Wilhelm Scheibler
(1820–1881) one of the most important Lodz industrialists
- Piotr
Sobociński, cinematographer
- Andrzej
Sontag, track-and-field star
- Władysław Strzemiński,
painter
- Arthur Szyk,
artist
- Aleksander Tansman, composer and
pianist
- Jack Tramiel
computer manufacturer, founder of Commodore and Atari.
- Julian Tuwim,
poet
- Miś
Uszatek, cartoon character
- Marcin Mrozinski, Dancer, Choreographer
- Aleksandra
Ziółkowska-Boehm
Other
buildings
Łódź City Hall, formerly Heinzel Palace
|
|
European Institute, formerly Schweikert Palace
|
Manufaktura shopping mall
|
Music Academy, formerly Poznanski Palace
|
Łódź buildings destroyed by the Nazi German occupation
Bibliography
- Ghettostadt: Łódź and the Making of a Nazi City,
Gordon H Horwitz, Harvard University Press,
2009
- "A Stairwell in Lodz," Constance Cappel, 2004, Xlibris, (in
English).
- "Lodz – The Last Ghetto in Poland," Michal Unger, Yad Vashem, 600 pages (in
Hebrew)
External
links
References
- ^
"Neues Leben in alten
Fabriken: Lódz baut auf Kultur" (in (German)).
Weser Kurier. 22 September 2009. http://www.weser-kurier.de/Artikel/Ratgeber/Reise/36989/Neues+Leben+in+alten+Fabriken:+Lodz+baut+auf+Kultur.html. Retrieved
2009-10-02.
- ^
http://www.scheibler.org.pl/eng_fundation.htm
- ^
Joshua D. Zimmerman, Poles, Jews, and the politics of
nationality, Univ of Wisconsin Press, 2004, ISBN 0299194647,
Google Print, p.16
- ^
Blobaum, Robert. "On Strike on Łódź.
"Rewolucja: Russian Poland, 1904-1907". Cornell
University Press, 1995. p. 75.
- ^
Weiner, Rebecca. The Virtual Jewish History
Tour. American-Israeli Cooperative
Enterprise. Retrieved on January 15, 2008.
- ^
Easton, Adam (2003-12-16). "World | Europe | Paramedic
held in funeral scam". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3323663.stm. Retrieved
2009-05-06.
- ^
"Lowcy skór (2003)". Imdb.com. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0385061/. Retrieved
2009-05-06.
- ^ a
b
c
Dell seeks refuge in Poland as crisis bites, Jan 24, 2009, link
- ^
"Twin Cities".
The City of Łódź Office.
(in English and Polish) © 2007 UMŁ.
http://en.www.uml.lodz.pl/index.php?str=2029. Retrieved
2008-10-23.
- ^
Stuttgart official website, 23
Mar 2008
- ^ "Partner Cities of Lyon
and Greater Lyon". © 2008 Mairie de Lyon. http://www.lyon.fr/vdl/sections/en/villes_partenaires/villes_partenaires_2/?aIndex=1. Retrieved
2008-10-21.
- ^ "Kaliningrad -Partner
Cities". © 2000-2006 Kaliningrad City Hall. http://www.klgd.ru/en/search/index.php?q=partner+cities&where=. Retrieved
2008-12-08.
- ^ "Twin towns of
Minsk". © 2008 The department of protocol and
international relations of Minsk City Executive Committee. http://minsk.gov.by/cgi-bin/org_ps.pl?k_org=3604&mode=doc&doc=3604_2_a&lang=eng. Retrieved
2008-12-08.
- ^ "Tel Aviv sister cities"
(in Hebrew). Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality. http://www.tel-aviv.gov.il/Hebrew/Cityhall/TwinCities/Index.asp. Retrieved
2008-01-19.
- ^ Vänorter -
http://www.orebro.se/2444.html:
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| Seat (not part of the
county) |
Łódź
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