Chojnice (; or ChĂČjnice; or Conitz) is a town in northern Poland with a population of 38,789 (as of June 2023), near the Tuchola Forest. It is the capital of Chojnice County in the Pomeranian Voivodeship.
Founded in , Chojnice is a former royal city of Poland and was an important center of cloth production. It is home to one of the oldest in Poland, and played a significant role in Polish youth resistance against the Germanisation policies of Prussia following the Partitions of Poland. The town was also the site of several significant battles, and during World War II, Nazi Germany massacred approximately 2,000 Poles on its outskirts.
Chojnice is a railroad junction with connections to Brodnica, KoĆcierzyna, PiĆa, Szczecinek, and Tczew. It contains several Gothic and Baroque heritage sights, and is the largest town near the Tuchola Forest, a large forest complex in north-central Poland.
The town's name first appears in documents in 1275. Chojnice - UrzÄ d Miejski - Historia It is of Polish origin, derived from the nearby river Chojnica (now called Jarcewska Struga).Nazwy miast Pomorza GdaĆskiego - page 46 Hubert GĂłrnowicz, Zygmunt Brocki, Edward Breza - 1999 Tak wiÄc Chojnica (pĂłĆșniejsze Chojnice) jest polskÄ nazwÄ topograficznÄ , ponowionÄ od nazwy rzeki Chojnica
During the PolishâLithuanianâTeutonic War, in 1410, the town was briefly occupied by Polish forces. In 1440, Chojnice temporarily joined the Prussian Confederation, which opposed Teutonic rule. In 1454, King Casimir IV Jagiellon re-incorporated the territory into the Kingdom of Poland, and townspeople overthrew the pro-Teutonic town council. Shortly afterwards, the council, aided by the Teutonic Knights, recaptured the town. On 18 September 1454, the Polish army led by King Casimir IV Jagiellon lost the Battle of Chojnice.
During the subsequent Thirteen Years' War, townspeople tried to resist Teutonic control. In 1466, after a three-month siege, the Teutonic troops under Captain Bethe surrendered Chojnice, the last Teutonic town in GdaĆsk Pomerania,Biskup, p. 19 to the Polish troops under Piotr Dunin.
Chojnice continued to be an important center of cloth production in Poland. Cloth production was the main branch of the local economy, and in 1570, clothiers constituted 36% of all craftsmen in the town. To this day, one of the main streets in the town centre is called Ulica SukiennikĂłw ("Clothiers' Street").
In the 16th century, the city council officially accepted the Protestant Reformation, leading to Protestants taking over the parish church of St. John. The Roman Catholic priest Jan SiĆski died amid the ensuing turmoil. In 1555, King Sigismund II Augustus confirmed religious freedom for the city. In 1616, St. John's church was restored to the Catholics thanks to local parish priest Jan DorÄgowski. In 1620, the first Jesuits arrived and began the Counter Reformation. In 1622, they founded a school that, today known as Liceum OgĂłlnoksztaĆcÄ
ce im. FilomatĂłw Chojnickich w Chojnicach ("High School of the Philomaths in Chojnice"), remains one of the oldest in Poland.
In 1627, a fire destroyed parts of the town. During the Second Northern War against Sweden, the Battle of Chojnice (1656) was fought. The town suffered heavily from siege, plundering and fire, especially in 1657. Although cloth production declined due to the Swedish invasion, it soon revived.Look, p. 21 Between 1733 and 1744, the Baroque Jesuit Church of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary was built. A large fire devastated the town again in 1742.
During the Konitz Affair 1900â1902, Germans and Poles committed an antisemitic pogrom. In 1912, Gazeta Chojnicka, the first Polish-language newspaper, was published in the town.
Likely around 1830, a secret organization of Polish students formed at the local school.Szews, p. 42 Some Polish students participated in the Polish uprisings of 1830 and January Uprising in the Russian Partition of Poland. The organization probably ceased to exist in the 1860s; in 1870, a new youth philomath organization Mickiewicz was founded, named after the Polish national poet Adam Mickiewicz.Szews, p. 43 In 1901, due to the threat of repressions by the German authorities, it was dissolved but reactivated a few months later.
Among local philomaths were:Szews, p. 45-47
One of the main escape routes for insurgents of the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising from partitioned Poland to the Great Emigration led through the town. In 1911, the first Polish secret scout troop in the Prussian Partition of Poland was established in the town by . He later fought as a military officer in defense of Poland during the PolishâSoviet War (1920) and the German Siege of Warsaw (1939). Ćukowicz was murdered by Nazi Germany during World War II.Szews, p. 44. 46
From the start of the German occupation, German militiamen attacked their Jewish and Polish neighbors. On 26 September 1939, forty people were shot, followed by the murder of a priest and 208 psychiatric patients. The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939â45, Nicholas Stargardt Between late October 1939 and early 1940, mass executions were conducted by the SS and German police as part of the Intelligenzaktion, a campaign targeting the Polish intelligentsia. Witnesses of War: Children's Lives Under the Nazis, Nicholas Stargardt By January 1940, approximately 900 Poles and Jews from Chojnice and surrounding villages had been killed, including parliamentarians, teachers, merchants, postal workers, border guards, priests, and farmers. These massacres took place in the IgĆy Valley near Chojnice, later also known as the Valley of Death.Hamerska, p. 58
Hans Kruger, a Nazi activist, served as a judge in Chojnice during this period, overseeing executions of the local population.
FunktionĂ€re Mit Vergangenheit: Das GrĂŒndungsprĂ€sidium Des Bundesverbandes Der Vertriebenen Und Das "dritte Reich" 2013
During the occupation, the Church of the Annunciation of Mary was seized by Protestants and its interior was devastated.
Polish underground resistance organisations active in the area included the Pomeranian Griffin, Kashubian Griffin, and Home Army. In 1943, local Poles successfully rescued some kidnapped Polish children from the ZamoĆÄ region by ransoming them from the German occupiers at the local train station.
From 1945 to 1975, Chojnice was part of the Pomeranian Voivodeship, and between 1975â1998, the town belonged to the Bydgoszcz Voivodeship.
In 2002 a new, modern hospital was opened on the northwestern outskirts of the town.
Detailed data as of 31 December 2021:
The town also has a number of medieval and early modern buildings, including several churches. The most prominent churches are the Gothic and the Baroque .
Kingdom of Poland (1466â1772)
Prussia (1772â1871) and German Empire (1871â1920)
Infrastructure and Social Developments
Germanisation and Polish Resistance
Poland (1920â1939)
World War II and Nazi German occupation (1939â1945)
Michael Schwartz page 437 Walter de Gruyter 2013
On 18 January 1945, the Nazis carried out a large massacre in the IgĆy Valley, killing around 800 Poles.
Chojnice since 1945
Demographics
percentage 48.2% 903.0
Number of inhabitants by year
Attractions
Geography
Climate
Sport
Notable people
Twin towns
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