Timeline of Wrocław

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Wrocław, Poland.

Historical affiliations
Silesians until the 800s

Duchy of Poland 985–1025
Kingdom of Poland 1025–1038
Duchy of Bohemia 1038–1054
Kingdom of Poland 1054–ca. 1325

 Kingdom of Bohemia 1335–1469
Kingdom of Hungary 1469–1490
 Kingdom of Bohemia 1490–1526/1742
Habsburg Monarchy 1526–1742
Kingdom of Prussia 1742–1871
German Empire 1871–1918
Weimar Germany 1918–1933
 Nazi Germany 1933–1945
People's Republic of Poland 1945–1989

 Republic of Poland 1989–present

Prior to 16th century

Romanesque church of St. Giles, the oldest preserved church of Wrocław
The oldest printed text in the Polish language in the Statuta Synodalia Episcoporum Wratislaviensis, printed in Wrocław by Kasper Elyan, 1475
  • 1475 - Kasper Elyan founded the Drukarnia Świętokrzyska (Holy Cross Printing House), the city's first printing house, which in the same year published the Statuta synodalia episcoporum Wratislaviensium, the first ever incunable in Polish.[9]
  • 1490 - City passed to Bohemia.
  • 1492 - Pillory erected at the Market Square.[4]

16th–18th centuries

  • 1523 - Protestant Reformation.[2]
  • 1527 - City annexed to Austria.[4]
  • 1530 - City coat of arms adopted.
  • 1585 - Plague.
  • 1666 - Polish Municipal School (Miejska Szkoła Polska) opened.
  • 1670 - Miscellanea Curiosa Medico-Physica, the world's first medical journal published.
  • 1672 - House of the Seven Electors built.[4]
  • 1702 - Leopoldina Jesuit college founded.[10]
  • 1717 - Palace built.
  • 1723 - Bergstadtverlag Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn (publisher) in business.
  • 1741 - Prussians in power.[10]
  • 1742 - Schlesische Zeitung begins publication.[11]
  • 1757 - Austrians in power, succeeded by Prussians.[10]
  • 1760 - City besieged.[4]

19th century

  • 1806 - December: City besieged by forces of the Confederation of the Rhine.[4]
  • 1807 - Old fortifications dismantled.[2]
  • 1811 - Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelm-Universität established.[2]
  • 1813 - Mobilization against Napoleon of France.[4]
  • 1815 - Royal Museum of Art and Antiquity established.
  • 1823 - Population: 76,813.[12]
  • 1824 - Exchange built.[13]
  • 1829 - White Stork Synagogue opens.
  • 1833 - Horse racing in Szczytnicki Park begins.
  • 1836 - Slavonic Literary Society founded.
  • 1841 - Opera House opens.
  • 1842 - Upper Silesian Train Station built.
  • 1846 - Royal Palace building renovated.[4]
  • 1854 - Jewish Theological Seminary founded.
  • 1856 - Jewish Cemetery established in Gabitz.
  • 1857 - Central Station opens.
  • 1861 - Orchestral Society founded.
  • 1863 - New City Hall built.[4]
  • 1865
    • Zoological Garden opens.
    • Theatre built.[4]
  • 1871
    • City becomes part of German Empire.
    • New Church of St. Michael consecrated.[4]
    • Opera house rebuilt.
  • 1872
  • 1873 - Population: 208,025.[4]
  • 1880 - Silesian Museum of Fine Arts established.
  • 1883
    • St. Mauritius Bridge constructed.
    • Lutheran Theological Seminar opens.
  • 1884 - Polish newspaper Nowiny Szląskie begins publication.
  • 1886 - Viadrina (Jewish student society) formed.
  • 1887 - "Government offices" built.[2]
  • 1889 - Tumski Bridge constructed.
  • 1890 - Population: 335,186.[2]
  • 1892 - Monopol Hotel built.
Market Square with the Old Town Hall around 1900

20th century

1900–1945

Monument to the Polish Olimp organization in Wrocław
  • 1941 - Olimp (organization) formed by Polish minority.
  • 1942 - AL Breslau-Lissa subcamp of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp established by the Germans, its prisoners were mostly Poles, but also Russians, Ukrainians, Germans, Frenchmen, Czechs, Yugoslavs.[20]
  • 1943 - April 23: Polish Zagra-Lin attacks Nazi troop transport.
  • 1944
    • August: City declared a Nazi fortress.
    • Three more subcamps of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp established, for prisoners of various nationalities, including one subcamp for women.[20]
  • 1945
    • January: evacuation of the prisoners of the Gross-Rosen subcamps to the main camp.[20]
    • February 13-May 6: Siege of Breslau.[21]
    • Polish Boleslaw Drobner becomes mayor.
    • Expulsion of Germans begins.

1946–1990s

21st century

See also

References

  1. "Chronology of Catholic Dioceses: Germany". Norway: Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  2. Britannica 1910.
  3. Roman Tomczak. "Gdzie jest szkielet bez głowy?". Gość Legnicki (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  4. Baedeker 1873.
  5. Agnieszka Vincenc. "Wrocławskie kamienice: Piwnica Świdnicka". KRN.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  6. Magdalena Lewandowska. "Kolegiata Świętego Krzyża". Niedziela.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  7. Karol Górski, Związek Pruski i poddanie się Prus Polsce: zbiór tekstów źródłowych, Instytut Zachodni, Poznań, 1949, p. LXXII (in Polish)
  8. Maciej Łagiewski. "Spotkanie królów". Gazeta Wrocławska (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  9. Hieronim Szczegóła, Kasper Elyan z Głogowa, pierwszy polski drukarz, Muzeum Ziemi Lubuskiej, Zielona Góra, 1968, p. 4, 6 (in Polish)
  10. Richard Brookes (1786), "Breslaw", The General Gazetteer (6th ed.), London: J.F.C. Rivington
  11. 150 Jahre Schlesische Zeitung, 1742-1892 (in German), W.G. Korn, 1892, OCLC 8658059, OL 23541958M
  12. Jedidiah Morse; Richard C. Morse (1823), "Breslau", A New Universal Gazetteer (4th ed.), New Haven: S. Converse
  13. "Breslau", Northern Germany as far as the Bavarian and Austrian frontiers (15th ed.), Leipzig: Karl Baedeker, 1910, OCLC 78390379
  14. "Historia Teatru" (in Polish). Wrocławski Teatr Lalek. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  15. "Rok Jubileuszowy – Towarzystwo Gimnastyczne „Sokół"". Ossolineum (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  16. Julius H. Greenstone (1931). "Liberal Jewish Youth Association of Breslau". Jewish Quarterly Review. New Series 21.
  17. Małgorzata Wieliczko. "100 lat niepodległości: Konsulat II RP we Wrocławiu skrywał tajemnice". www.wroclaw.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  18. "Riots in Breslau as Corn Returns". New York Times. January 25, 1933.
  19. "Nazis Hold Sport Week". New York Times. July 25, 1938.
  20. "Subcamps of KL Gross- Rosen". Gross-Rosen Museum in Rogoźnica. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  21. "Soviet Siege Army Captures Breslau; 40,000 Germans Surrender After 84-Day Struggle". New York Times. May 8, 1945.
  22. Robert R. Findlay; Halina Filipowicz (1975). "The 'Other Theatre' of Wrocław: Henryk Tomaszewski and the Pantomima". Educational Theatre Journal. 27.
  23. Rada Ochrony Pomników Walki i Męczeństwa Czesław Czubryt-Borkowski, Jerzy Michasiewicz, Przewodnik po upamiętnionych miejscach walk i męczeństwa lata wojny 1939- 1945, Wydawnictwo Sport i Turystyka, Warszawa, 1988, p. 798 (in Polish)
  24. United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistical Office (1976). "Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1975. New York. pp. 253–279.
  25. "14 lat temu Jan Paweł II gościł we Wrocławiu". Gazeta Wrocławska (in Polish). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  26. "Poles Hold Off Floodwaters in Wrocław". New York Times. July 14, 1997.

This article incorporates information from the Polish Wikipedia and German Wikipedia.

Bibliography

in English

in other languages

  • "Breslau". Allgemeine Deutsche Real-Encyclopädie für die Gebildeten Stände (in German) (7th ed.). Leipzig: Brockhaus. 1827.
  • "Breslau". Biblioteca geographica: Verzeichniss der seit der Mitte des vorigen Jahrhunderts bis zu Ende des Jahres 1856 in Deutschland (in German). Leipzig: Wilhelm Engelmann. 1858. (bibliography)
  • Ludwig Sittenfeld (1909), Geschichte des Breslauer Theaters von 1841 bis 1900 [History of the Breslau Theatre from 1841 to 1900] (in German), Breslau: Preusz, OL 23360659M
  • P. Krauss; E. Uetrecht, eds. (1913). "Breslau". Meyers Deutscher Städteatlas [Meyer's Atlas of German Cities] (in German). Leipzig: Bibliographisches Institut.
  • Institut für vergleichende Städtegeschichte, ed. (1989), Breslau, Deutscher Städteatlas (in German), 4, ISBN 978-3891150009
  • Wolfgang Adam; Siegrid Westphal, eds. (2012). "Breslau". Handbuch kultureller Zentren der Frühen Neuzeit: Städte und Residenzen im alten deutschen Sprachraum (in German). De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-029555-9.

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