Olsztyn

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Olsztyn
City centre
City centre
Flag of Olsztyn
Flag
Coat of arms of Olsztyn
Coat of arms
Motto: Olsztyn - Miasto Młode Duchem…
(Olsztyn — city of a young spirit…)
Olsztyn (Poland)
Olsztyn
Olsztyn
Coordinates: 53°47′N 20°30′E / 53.783, 20.5
Country Flag of Poland Poland
Voivodeship Warmian-Masurian
County city county
Established 14th century
Town rights 1353
Government
 - Mayor Czesław Jerzy Małkowski
Area
 - City 88.328 km² (34.1 sq mi)
Elevation 80 m (262 ft)
Population (2007)
 - City 175,241
 - Density 1,984/km² (5,138.5/sq mi)
 - Metro 270,000
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 10-001 to 11-041
Area code(s) +48 89
Car plates NO
Website: http://www.um.olsztyn.pl

Olsztyn [ˈɔlʂtɨn] (Image:Ltspkr.png listen) (German: Allenstein (Image:Ltspkr.png listen); Lithuanian: Olštynas; Old Prussian: Alnāsteini) is a city in northeastern Poland, on the River Łyna.

Historically the capital of the Warmia region, Olsztyn has been the capital of the Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship since 1999. It was previously in Olsztyn Voivodeship (1945-75 and 1975-98 in differing units).

Contents

[edit] Geography

[edit] Lakes

The city is situated in a lake region of forests and plains. There are 15 lakes inside the administrative bounds of the city (13) with an area greater than 1 ha). The overall area of lakes in Olsztyn is about 725 ha, which constitutes 8.25 % of the total city area.

Lake Area (ha) Maximum depth (m)
Lake Ukiel (Lopsided Lake, Krzywe Lake) 412 43
Kortowskie Lake 89.7 17.2
Trackie Lake 52.8 4.6
Lake Skanda 51.5 12
Lake Redykajny 29.9 20.6
Long Lake (Długie Lake) 26.8 17.2
Lake Sukiel 20.8 25
Lake Tyrsko (Gutkowskie Lake) 18.6 30.6
Lake Old Manor (Lake Stary Dwór, Old-Manor Lake, Starodworskie Lake) 6.0 23.3
Lake Siginek (Lake Hoof, Kopytko, Lake Horseshoe, Lake Podkówka, Lake Styginek) 6.0 insufficient data
Black Lake (Czarne Lake) approximately 1.3 insufficient data
Lake Wildcat (Lake Żbik) approximately 1.2 insufficient data
Lake Pereszkowo (Lake Pyszkowo) approximately 1.2 insufficient data
Lake Mummel (Lake Mumel) approximately 0.3 insufficient data
Larch Lake (Modrzewiowe Lake) 0.25 insufficient data

[edit] Greenery

More than half of the forests occupying 21.2 % of the city area form a single complex of the Municipal Forest (1050 ha) used mainly for recreation and tourism purposes. Within the Municipal Forest area are situated two sanctuaries of the peat-land flora, Mszar and Redykajny. Municipal greenery (560 ha, 6.5 % of the town area) developed in the form of numerous parks, green spots and three over a century-old cemeteries. The greenery includes 910 monuments of nature and groups of protected trees in the form of beech, oak, maple and lime-lined avenues.

[edit] History

Ordensburg castle built by the Teutonic Knights
Ordensburg castle built by the Teutonic Knights

In 1346, ancient forests along the Alna River to make way for a new settlement for German settlers in Prussian Warmia. The Teutonic Knights began construction of an Ordensburg castle in 1347 to protect against Old Prussians, and the settlement of Allenstein was first mentioned the following year. The German name Allenstein meant stone [castle] on the Alle River; this became known to Masurian settlers as Olsztyn. The settlement received municipal rights from Johannes von Leysen, on 31 October 1353, and the castle was completed in 1397. Allenstein was captured by Polish troops in 1410 during the Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War and in 1414 during the Hunger War, but was returned to the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights after hostilities ended.

Allenstein joined the Prussian Confederation in 1440. It rebelled against the Teutonic Knights in 1454 upon the outbreak of the Thirteen Years' War and requested protection from the Polish Crown. Although the Teutonic Knights captured the town in the next year, it was retaken by Polish troops in 1463. The Peace of Toruń in 1466 allocated Allenstein and the Bishopric of Warmia as part of Royal Prussia under the sovereignty of the Crown of Poland. From 1516–21, Nicolaus Copernicus lived at the castle as administrator of Allenstein and Mehlsack (Pieniężno); he was in charge of the defenses of the town and Warmia during another war with the Teutonic Knights. Allenstein was sacked by Swedish troops in 1655 and 1708 during the Polish-Swedish wars, and the town was nearly wiped out in 1710 from epidemics of bubonic plague and cholera.

Allenstein was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in 1772 during the First Partition of Poland. A Prussian census recorded a population of 1,770 people, predominantly farmers, in Allenstein, which was administered within the Province of East Prussia. It was visited by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1807 after his victories over the Prussian Army at Jena and Auerstedt. The German language Allensteiner Zeitung newspaper was first published in 1841. The town hospital was founded in 1867.

Allenstein's Kopernikusplatz (now Plac Bema) in 1917
Allenstein's Kopernikusplatz (now Plac Bema) in 1917

Allenstein became part of the German Empire in 1871 during the Prussian-led unification of Germany. Two years later the city was connected by railway to Thorn (Toruń). Its first Polish language newspaper, Gazeta Olsztyńska, was founded in 1886. Allenstein's infrastructure developed rapidly: gas was installed in 1890, telephones in 1892, public water supply in 1898, and electricity in 1907. The city became the capital of Regierungsbezirk Allenstein, a government administrative region in East Prussia, in 1905. From 1818–1910 the city was administered within the East Prussia Allenstein District, after which it became an independent city.

Shortly after the outbreak of World War I, troops of the Russian Empire captured Allenstein in 1914, but it was recovered by the Imperial German Army. In 1920 during the East Prussian plebiscite, Allenstein voted to remain in German East Prussia instead of becoming part of the Second Polish Republic. The football club SV Hindenburg Allenstein played in Allenstein from 1921–45. After the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Poles and Jews in Allenstein were increasingly persecuted. In 1935 the Wehrmacht made the city the seat of the Allenstein Militärische Bereich. It was the home of the 11th Infanterie Division, the 11th Artillery Regiment, and the 217th Infanterie Division.

On 12 October 1939, after the invasion of Poland beginning World War II, the Wehrmacht established an Area Headquarters of Wehrkreis I that controlled the sub-areas of Allenstein, Lötzen (Giżycko) and Zichenau (Ciechanów). Beginning in 1939, members of the Polish-speaking minority, especially members of the Union of Poles in Germany, were deported to Nazi concentration camps. Allenstein was plundered and burnt by the invading Soviet Red Army on 22 January 1945, as the Eastern Front reached the city. Allenstein's German population evacuated the region or were subsequently expelled. On 2 August 1945, the city was placed under Polish administration according to the Potsdam Agreement and officially renamed to the traditional Polish Olsztyn.

A tire factory was founded in Olsztyn in 1967.

[edit] Postage stamps

5-Pfennig stamp
5-Pfennig stamp

In 1920 a plebiscite was held to determine whether the city's populace wished to remain in East Prussia or became part of Poland. In order to advertise the plebiscite, special postage stamps were produced by overprinting German stamps and sold from 3 April. One kind of overprint read PLÉBISCITE / OLSZTYN / ALLENSTEIN, while the other read TRAITÉ / DE / VERSAILLES / ART. 94 et 95 inside an oval whose border gave the full name of the plebiscite commission. Each overprint was applied to 14 denominations ranging from 5 Pf to 3 M.

The plebiscite was held on 11 July, and produced 362,209 votes (97.8 %) for East Prussia and 7,980 votes (2.2 %) for Poland. The stamps became invalid on 20 August. Despite the short period of use, almost all of the stamps are cheaply available both used and unused.

[edit] Demographics

The Upper Gate (High Gate) in the Old Town
The Upper Gate (High Gate) in the Old Town
Year Population
1772 1,770
1846 4,000
1875 6,000
1885 11,555
1890 19,373
1895 25,000
1939 50,000
1941 54,300
1946 23,000
1950 45,000
1972 over 100,000
1994 165,000
2000 170,000
2005 (December 31) 174,950

[edit] Administrative division

Fish Market
Fish Market
City hall
City hall

Olsztyn is divided into 22 districts:

District Population Area Density
Brzeziny 1,456 2.25 km² 647.1/km²
Dajtki 5,863 7.5 km² 781.7/km²
Grunwaldzkie 6,027 1.46 km² 4,128.1/km²
Gutkowo 2,256 7.2 km² 313.3/km²
Jaroty 29,046 4.82 km² 6,026.1/km²
Kętrzyńskiego 7,621 4.83 km² 1,577.8/km²
Cormorant (Kormoran) 16,166 1.1 km² 14,696.4/km²
Kortowo 1,131 4.22 km² 268/km²
Kościuszki 6,704 1.18 km² 5,681.4/km²
Likusy 2,286 2.1 km² 1,088.6/km²
Mazurskie 4,615 5.98 km² 771.7/km²
Long Lake (Nad Jeziorem Długim) 2,408 4.23 km² 569.3/km²
Nagórki 12,538 1.69 km² 7,418.9/km²
Pieczewo 10,918 2.24 km² 4,874.1/km²
Podgrodzie 11,080 1.35 km² 8,207.4/km²
Podleśna 10,414 9.93 km² 1,048.7/km²
Lakeland (Pojezierze) 13,001 2.39 km² 5,439.7/km²
Redykajny 1,555 6.1 km² 254.9/km²
City Centre (Śródmieście) 3,448 0.58 km² 5,944.8/km²
Army of Poland (Wojska Polskiego) 6,759 5.03 km² 1,343.7/km²
Zatorze 6,988 0.45 km² 15,528.9/km²
Green Hillock (Zielona Górka) 1,015 6.44 km² 157.6/km²

[edit] Culture

[edit] Theatres

[edit] Museums

Olsztyn's largest museum is the Museum of Warmia and Mazury. The city also has the Gazeta Olsztyńska House, Museum of Nature, and Museum of Sports.

[edit] Architecture

St. James' Cathedral
St. James' Cathedral
  • The Old Town
  • The Gothic castle of the Bishopric of Warmia built during the 14th century
  • St. James' Cathedral
  • Old Town Hall on the Market Square - built in mid-14th century
  • Gazeta Olsztyńska House at Fish Market
  • The town walls and the Upper Gate (since the mid-19th century known as the High Gate
  • Semi-Gothic church of the Holly Heart of Jesus - built during the years 1901–03
  • The New City Hall
  • The Railway Bridge over the River Łyna gorge near Artyleryjska and Wyzwolenia streets - built during the years 1872–73
  • The Jerusalem Chapel - built in 1565
  • Church of St. Lawrence - built during the late 14th century
  • FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo - 360 metres high, since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland

[edit] Economy

The tire company Stomil is a subsidiary of Michelin. There are also other industry, food processing, plants and furniture manufacturers.

[edit] Education

University of Warmia and Mazury
University of Warmia and Mazury

[edit] Sport

[edit] Notable residents

Statue of Nicolaus Copernicus before the castle
Statue of Nicolaus Copernicus before the castle

[edit] Politics

Members of the Sejm elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005

Members of Senate elected from Olsztyn constituency in 2005

[edit] Twin cities

Planetarium of Olsztyn
Planetarium of Olsztyn

Olsztyn is twinned with:

Olsztyn belongs to the Federation of Copernicus Cities, an association of cities where Copernicus lived and worked, such as Bologna, Frombork, Kraków, and Toruń. The main office of the federation is situated at Olsztyn Planetarium and Astronomical Observatory, located on St. Andrew's Hill (143 m) in a former water tower erected in 1897.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Coordinates: 53°47′N, 20°29′E

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