Miedzianka, Lower Silesian Voivodeship

Miedzianka [mjɛˈd͡ʑaŋka] (German: Kupferberg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Janowice Wielkie, within Jelenia Góra County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.[1]

Miedzianka
Village
Church of Saint John the Baptist
Coat of arms
Miedzianka
Location of Miedzianka, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
Miedzianka
Miedzianka (Poland)
Coordinates: 50°52′40″N 15°56′40″E
Country Poland
Voivodeship Lower Silesian
CountyJelenia Góra
GminaJanowice Wielkie
Elevation
500 m (1,600 ft)
Population
  Total80

It lies approximately 16 km (10 mi) east of Jelenia Góra, and 82 km (51 mi) west of the regional capital Wrocław and has a population of a little over eighty.[2]

History

The settlement's history begins in the 14th century, then known as Kupferberg,[3] was split from Waltersdorf (Mniszków).[2] It grew as a copper mining town, and received city rights in 1519.[2] For a time, it was home to about 160 mining excavations and several metallurgical facilities, but this boom came to a halt by the end of the 16th century, as techniques proved insufficient for further exploitation.[2] Around the 17th century the mining sector in Kupferberg began to grow again, under the patronage of a new owner, the count von Promnitz of Pszczyna.[2] The city suffered several fires, in 1637, 1643, 1728 and 1824.[3] In the early 18th century Kupferberg housed a regional mining office.[2] In addition to mining, the town also had a renowned brewery, and from the mid-19th century, it became a popular tourist destination, known as the second most highly located town in the Sudeten Mountains.[2]

Renamed Miedzianka, it became a site of a secret Red Army mining operation, as Soviet experts expected to develop a uranium mine there.[2] From 1949 to the 1950s about 600 tons of uranium were sent from Miedzianka to the USSR.[4] Extensive and wanton mining caused much damage to the town, and when the uranium deposits proved to be insufficient for continued exploitation, the local economy collapsed amid the government's attempts to hide the uranium excavation.[3][2] The mine was publicly labelled as a "paper factory"; Polish and Soviet troops and secret police guarded the mine, and the miners who could not keep the secret were executed.[4][5]

In the late 1960s, a planned destruction of Miedzianka began, with demolitions of selected buildings, and a ban on repairs of remaining ones.[3][4] Around 1972, most inhabitants were resettled to the town of Jelenia Góra.[2] As of 2012, the town of Miedzianka had only about 80 inhabitants.[2]

gollark: Maybe the design was bad or maybe people messed up the execution. But a good design factors in some degree of problems in the execution side.
gollark: The existence of working ways to modify them as needed isn't guaranteed.
gollark: Yes. It's still a bad fire extinguisher regardless of how good the designers thought/claimed they were being.
gollark: Systems have no intentions. People in them might, and the designers probably did, and the designers also likely claimed some intention, and people also probably ascribe some to them. But that doesn't mean that the system itself "wants" to do any of those.
gollark: I think you could reasonably argue that it's better to respect institutions than ignore them because it's better for social cohesion/stability, but I don't agree that you should respect them because they're meant to be fair and because you can always get them to fix problems you experience if this isn't actually true.

References

Further reading

  • Springer, Filip (2011). Miedzianka. Historia znikania.
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