Sieradz () is a city on the Warta river in central Poland with 40,891 inhabitants (2021). It is the seat of the Sieradz County, situated in the Łódź Voivodeship. Sieradz is a capital of the historical Sieradz Land.
Sieradz is one of the oldest cities in Poland. It was an important city of Middle Ages Poland, thrice being a location for the election of the Polish monarchs. Polish Kings chaired six assemblies from here. Historically, it was the capital of the Duchy of Sieradz (1263-1339), Sieradz Voivodeship (1339–1793), and Sieradz Voivodeship (1975–1998). It is located on the Route of the Heroes of the Battle of Warsaw 1920, the main highway connecting Wrocław with Łódź, Warsaw and Białystok.
Sieradz was a significant royal town of Poland. In 1445 the election of King Casimir IV Jagiellon took place in Sieradz. Until the 16th century the town used to be an important trade centre. Merchants from Spanish Empire and Portugal were frequently visiting the town for trade and commerce. In the 17th century due to the Swedish Empire invasions, plagues, fires and floods the town lost its trading importance and fell from its prime. In the 18th century the reconstruction of town commenced. The residents during that time were only approximately 1,500.
Sieradz was annexed by Prussia in the Second Partition of Poland in 1793. On 13 November 1806 a Polish uprising against the Prussians took place in Sieradz, and in 1807 it was included in the short-lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw. After the duchy's dissolution, in 1815, it became part of so-called Congress Poland within the Russian Partition of Poland. It was the capital of a district within the Kalisz Governorate of the Russian Empire."Kalisz". Encyclopædia Britannica. Volume 15. p 642. Accessed via Google Books 10/6/11. During the January Uprising, on 18 September 1863, Polish insurgents attacked Russian troops stationed in the town. Further clashes between Polish insurgents and Russian troops took place on 24 January and 18 June 1864.Zieliński, pp. 218, 221 After World War I, in 1918, Poland regained independence and control of the town.
In mid-September 1939, the Germans organized a temporary prisoner-of-war camp in the local prison, in which they held nearly 3,000 Polish people soldiers, despite the prison capacity being 1,100. During the German occupation, the population was subjected to various atrocities. Already on 15 September 1939, the Germans carried out the first public execution of seven Poles in Sieradz. In early November 1939, the Germans arrested 62 members of the local elite in order to terrorize the population before the Polish Independence Day (11 November), and then on 14 November they forced local Jews to dig pits for the victims, and afterwards murdered 20 hostages. Among the victims were activists, teachers, school principals, craftsmen, policemen, pre-war mayor Ignacy Mąkowski, local officials, judges, and a boy scout. 522 Poles, families of teachers, officials, policemen, merchants, craftsmen and shop owners, were expelled in late 1939.
The town was subjected to severe Germanisation, and the Nazis destroyed traces of Polish culture, destroying historical records, monuments, and buildings. Street names were changed in an effort to wipe out any connection with a Polish identity. In 1941, the German gendarmerie carried out further expulsions of Poles from the present-day districts of Jeziory, Monice and Zapusta Mała, mostly due to the establishment of a military training ground, with the victims either deported to forced labour in Germany or to the Radom District in the more-eastern part of occupied Poland.Wardzyńska, pp. 302, 305
The local prison was one of the most important German prisons in the Reichsgau Wartheland.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 188 Its prisoners, predominantly Poles and Jews, were subjected to insults, beatings, forced labour, tortures and executions.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 189-190, 194 Prisoners were given very low food rations, and meals were even prepared from rotten vegetables, spoiled fish and dead dogs.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 191 Many prisoners died of exhaustion, starvation or torture. After the war, Polish historian Antoni Galiński was able to identify 968 people who died or were shot in the prison and its subcamps in 1940–1945, however the overall number of deaths is certainly higher.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 191-192 Despite such circumstances, the Polish resistance movement still operated in the area. The last executed prisoner was Antonina Chrystkowa, a female member of the Home Army resistance organization, who was Decapitation with an axe on 18 January 1945.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 194 Another German prison was operated in the present-day district of Chabie; it was subordinate to the main prison in Sieradz.Studnicka-Mariańczyk, p. 187
Bombed by the Soviets, more than 100 residents were killed. After an assault lasting three days, the Red Army arrived on 23 January 1945. The day before the retreat of the Germans, the historic Danielewicz Palace was burned down. The town was restored to Poland, although with a Soviet Union-installed communist regime, which remained in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s.
At the turn of the 1940s and 1950s, a hoard of 18 coins from the 17th and 18th centuries was found in the present-day neighbourhood of Monice. The coins are part of the collection of the Archaeological and Ethnographic Museum in Łódź.
Post-war economic activities included clothing manufacture, cereal-milling, spirit distillery, potato-farming and other agricultural activities. In 1957 the knitting plant "Sira" was founded. From 1975 to 1998 Sieradz was the capital of the Sieradz Voivodeship. In 1979, town limits were greatly expanded by including Męka-Jamy, Męka Księża, Mokre Wojsławskie, Woźniki-Kolonia, Zapusta Mała, and parts of the settlements of Dzigorzew, Herby, Jeziory, Kłocko, Męcka Wola, Męka, Monice, Smardzew, Wola Dzierlińska, Woźniki and Zapusta Wielka as new districts.
The natural forests on the banks of river Warta makes an ideal place for mushroom pickers.
Recent period
Politics
Sieradz constituency
President of Sieradz
Tourism
Sports and recreation
Development
Notable people
Twin cities
See also
External links
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