Bytom (Polish pronunciation: ; Silesian: Bytōm, Bytōń, ) is a city in Upper Silesia, in southern Poland. Located in the Silesian Voivodeship, the city is northwest of Katowice, the regional capital.
It is one of the oldest cities in the Upper Silesia, and the former seat of the Silesian Piasts of the Duchy of Bytom. Until 1532, it was in the hands of the Piast dynasty, then it belonged to the Hohenzollern dynasty. After 1623 it was a state country in the hands of the Donnersmarck family. From 1742 to 1945 the town was within the borders of Prussia and Germany, and played an important role as an economic and administrative centre of the local industrial region. Until the outbreak of World War II, it was the main centre of national, social, cultural and publishing organisations fighting to preserve Polish identity in Upper Silesia. In the interbellum and during World War II, local Poles and Jews faced persecution by Germany.
After the war, decades of the Polish People's Republic were characterized by a constant emphasis on the development of heavy industry, which deeply polluted and degraded Bytom. After 1989, the city experienced a socio-economic decline. The population has also been rapidly declining since 1999. However, it is an important place in the cultural, entertainment, and industrial map of the region. Bytom is home to the Silesian Opera, the Upper Silesian Museum, and part of the Tarnowskie Góry Lead-Silver-Zinc Mine and its Underground Water Management System, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Historic Monument of Poland. The city is also known as the home of Polonia Bytom, a successful football and ice hockey club.
After the fragmentation of Poland in 1138, Bytom became part of the Seniorate Province, as it was still considered part of historic Lesser Poland. In 1177 it became part of the Silesian province of Poland, and remained within historic Silesia since.Roman Majorczyk, Historia górnictwa kruszcowego w rejonie Bytomia, Bytom, 1985, p. 9 Bytom received city rights from Prince Władysław in 1254 with its first centrally located market square. The city of Bytom benefited economically from its location on a trade route linking Kraków with Silesia from east to west, and Hungary with Moravia and Greater Poland from north to south. The first Roman Catholic Church of the Virgin Mary was built in 1231. In 1259 Bytom was raided by the Mongols. The Duchy of Opole was split and in 1281 Bytom became a separate duchy, since 1289 under overlordship of the Kingdom of Bohemia. Bytom Castle was built in around 1284-1299 and demolished in later centuries. The duchy existed until 1498, when it was re-integrated with the Piast dynasty-ruled Duchy of Opole. In 1460 a Polish–Czech friendship treaty was signed in Bytom. Due to German settlers coming to the area, the city was being Germanization.
It came under the control of the Habsburg monarchy of Austria in 1526, which increased the influence of the German language. In 1683, Polish King John III Sobieski and his wife Queen Marie Casimire, visited the city, greeted by the townspeople and clergy, on the king's way to the Battle of Vienna. The city became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1742 during the Silesian Wars and part of the German Empire in 1871. In the 19th and the first part of the 20th centuries, the city rapidly grew and industrialized.
Bytom was one of the main centers of Polish resistance against Germanization in Upper Silesia in the 19th century, up until the mid-20th century. Polish social, political and cultural organizations were formed and operated here. From 1848, the newspaper Dziennik Górnośląski was published here. Poles smuggled large amounts of gunpowder through the city to the Russian Partition of Poland during the January Uprising in 1863. According to the Prussian census of 1905, the city had a population of 60,273, of which 59% spoke German language, 38% spoke Polish language and 3% were bilingual. In 1895, a local branch of the "Sokół" Polish Gymnastic Society was established as one of the first in Silesia. The German authorities harassed Sokół members and tenants, the German police conducted searches of offices and apartments, and the German courts imposed fines and prison sentences.
In 1900, the first Polish Women's Society in Silesia was established, which also organized secret lectures on Polish history and literature and Polish sing-alongs, for which its members were persecuted by the Prussian police. In 1904, the first Polish women's rally in Silesia took place in the city, and in 1906, a Polish Reading Room for Women was established. During the Silesian uprisings, in 1919–1920, Polish football clubs Szombierki Bytom and Polonia Bytom were founded, which later on, in post-World War II Poland both won the national championship.
In the post-World War I Upper Silesian plebiscite of 1921, 74.7% of the votes in the city were for Weimar Republic, and 25.3% were for Poland. In the present-day districts of Górniki, Stolarzowice, Sucha Góra, Miechowice, Szombierki, Karb, Łagiewniki and Rozbark 88.5%, 86.0%, 82.7%, 71.9%, 71.1%, 69.4%, 57.9% and 54.5%, respectively, voted for Poland, whereas in Bobrek 51.7% voted for Germany, yet only Sucha Góra was reintegrated with Poland.
In the interwar period, Bytom was one of two cities (alongside Kwidzyn) in Weimar Germany, in which a Polish gymnasium was allowed to operate. In 1923 a branch of the Union of Poles in Germany was established in Bytom. There was also a Polish preschool,
The Germans operated a Nazi prison in the city with a forced labour subcamp in the present-day Karb district. There were also multiple forced labour camps within the present-day city limits, including six subcamps of the Stalag VIII-B prisoner-of-war camp. Dozens of prisoners were sent from the Nazi prison on a death march westwards towards Głubczyce.
In January 1945, the city was captured by the Soviet Red Army. Soviet troops then committed massacres of civilians in the present-day district of Miechowice and Stolarzowice, killing some 400 and 70 people, respectively, and raped many women. In 1945, the city was transferred to Poland as a result of the Potsdam Conference. Its German population was largely expelled by the Soviet Army and the remaining indigenous Polish inhabitants were joined mostly by Poles repatriated from the eastern provinces annexed by the Soviets.
In 2017, the Tarnowskie Góry Lead-Silver-Zinc Mine and its Underground Water Management System, located mostly in the neighboring city of Tarnowskie Góry, but also partly in Bytom, was included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Radzionków with Rojca (currently a district of Radzionków) were located within the city limits of Bytom from 1975 until 1997. Somehow there is (probably) autonomic district named "Vitor" in South Stroszek.
In 2007, Bytom and its neighbours created the Upper Silesian Metropolitan Union, the largest urban centre in Poland. The Union was superseded by Metropolis GZM in 2018.
The Szombierki district is home to another former Polish football champion Szombierki Bytom which won the title in 1980, and is one of the oldest clubs in the region.
Other areas of the city host football clubs such as Górniki which is home to lower league club Rodło Górniki, founded in 1946.
Among Bytom's art galleries are: Galeria Sztuki Użytkowej Stalowe Anioły, Galeria "Rotunda" MBP, Galeria "Suplement", Galeria "Pod Czaplą", Galeria "Platforma", Galeria "Pod Szrtychem", Galeria Sztuki "Od Nowa 2", Galeria SPAP "Plastyka" – Galeria "Kolor", Galeria "Stowarzyszenia.Rewolucja.Art.Pl", and Galeria-herbaciarnia "Fanaberia".
Festivals
Geography
Geology
Coat of arms
History
World War II and post-war period
Districts
Economy
Public transport
Demographics
Sport
Culture
Education
Politics
Bytom/Gliwice/Zabrze constituency
Notable people
Twin towns – sister cities
Gallery
External links
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