Łańcut

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}}Template:Main other{{#ifexpr:{{#invoke:ParameterCount|main|mapframe|image_map|image_map1|pushpin_map}} >2 |Template:Main other}} Łańcut ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}, Template:Langx; Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is a town in south-eastern Poland,Template:TERYT with 18,004 inhabitants, as of 2 June 2009.<ref name="GUS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Situated in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship (since 1999), it is the capital of Łańcut County.

History

Archeological investigations carried out in the region of Łańcut confirm the existence of human settlements from about 4000 years B.C.<ref name="Official">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The first owner of the town was Otton (z Pilczy) Pilecki, who was given the Łańcut estate by the Polish king, Casimir III the Great, in 1349, as a reward for his service. At the same time, the king also granted Łańcut its city rights according to Magdeburg law.<ref name="Official"/> In 1381 Łańcut was officially named a ‘town’ for the first time, by Template:Ill, in the foundation charter of the town. Łańcut remained under the ownership of the Pilecki family up to 1586.<ref name="Official"/>

Drużyna coat of arms of the Lubomirski family above the main entrance to the castle

The city was then owned consecutively by aristocratic Polish families of Stadnicki, Lubomirski, and Potocki.<ref name="Official"/> Łańcut was purchased by Stanisław Lubomirski in 1629, at which time he secured the services of architect Matteo (Template:Langx) Trapola and the stuccoist Giovanni Battista Falconi, in order to build a fortified residence in the town, Łańcut Castle, completed in 1641 and reconstructed many times since. Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski, fearing attack from the Swedes, further strengthened the fortifications. To perform these works he employed Tylman van Gameren, a Dutchman and one of the most prominent foreign architects to ever work in Poland.<ref name="zawierucha">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:In lang</ref>

The castle is situated in the centre of the town and constructed in the style of a grand aristocratic palace-residence. It was last owned until 1944 by the Potocki family, and made infamous in late 16th century during the times of Stanisław Stadnicki,<ref>Jacek Komuda, Warchoły i pijanice, Fabryka Słów, 2004, Template:ISBN</ref> who was known as 'the Devil of Łańcut' (Polish: diabeł łańcucki) for his violent behaviour. After 1775 the palace was owned by Izabella Lubomirska, who extended it and had the interiors remodelled. The palace is currently a museum particularly well known for its large collection of historic carriages. Since 1961, a well-known classical music festival is held there annually.<ref name="Official"/>

In 1772, after the First Partition of Poland, Łańcut became part of the Austrian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria where it remained until 1918 when it became part of reborn independent Poland. In the 1830s, Ignacy Łukasiewicz, Polish pharmacist and inventor, known as the pioneer of the world's petroleum industry, was an apprentice in a pharmacy in Łańcut.<ref name=ipsb>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At that time he joined the Polish secret resistance movement, and the Austrian police conducted the first investigation against him.<ref name=ipsb/>

Lubomirski Castle with the orangery in the foreground in the 1810s

At the end of the 18th century, Duchess Izabela Lubomirska established a distillery on the vast estate of the Lubomirski family in Łańcut. Count Alfred Wojciech Potocki, a grandson and heir of the Duchess, started to run the Łańcut and Lwów Lubomirski estates in 1823.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He modernised the management of these properties. The distillery has changed ownership several times and now exists under the name of Polmos Łańcut. It is well known for producing flavoured and sweetened vodkas.<ref>Rogala, Jan. Gorzałka czyli historia i zasady wypalania mocnych trunków, Baobab: 2004. Template:ISBN</ref>

Jews began to settle in Łańcut in the 16th century: the earliest mention of a settler is 1554. The landowner Stanisław Lubomirski employed a Jewish factor for his Łańcut estate in 1629. in 1707 the Council of Four Lands (the Polish Jewish parliament). met in Łańcut. A wooden synagogue burnt down in 1716 and new brick synagogue was commenced in 1726. The project was supported by the Lubomirski family and the synagogue, which still stands, was completed in 1761 (see below).<ref>Cicohny (2010), pp. 8-9.</ref> In the mid-18th century, the town's population consisted of 62% Roman Catholics (Poles) and 37% Jews.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Local Jewish cemeteries are the resting place of the famous Rabbi Zvi Naftali Horowitz, the Grand Rabbi of Ropczyce and Rabbi Ahron Moshe Leifer, the Grand Rabbi of Żołynia.<ref>Mańko, Sławomir. "Ropczyce: The Chassidic Route", page 11. © Polish Jews Heritage 2008.</ref> Every year, followers of the Hasidic Judaism come to pray at their graves.

Within interwar Poland, Łańcut was a county seat administratively located in the Lwów Voivodeship. Prior to World War II, Łańcut had a thriving Jewish community constituting about one-third of the city population. In 1939 there were 2,750 Jews in Łańcut. The 10th Mounted Rifle Regiment of the Polish Army was stationed in Łańcut in the interbellum.<ref name=obr>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Multiple image During the German invasion of Poland, which started World War II, on September 9, 1939, Łańcut was a place of fierce defense by Poles under the command of Colonel Stanisław Maczek, who would become one of the Polish heroes of World War II.<ref name=obr/> During the subsequent German occupation, the Einsatzgruppe I entered the town between September 17 and October 5, 1939, to commit various atrocities against Poles.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In November 1939, the Germans deceitfully requested the presence of Polish intelligentsia from the town and county at a supposed conference on the county's economic matters, at which they then arrested over 200 people, including local officials, teachers and priests (see Intelligenzaktion).<ref name=mw>Wardzyńska, p. 257</ref> Some of them were imprisoned in Rzeszów along with Poles from other towns of the region.<ref name=mw/> A temporary prisoner-of-war camp for Polish soldiers was operated in Łańcut in 1939, and around 25,000 people were held there in mid-November 1939. Nevertheless, the Polish resistance movement was organized in the town, and since May 1940, underground Polish newspaper Odwet was distributed in Łańcut.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

From 1942 onwards the German occupiers began transportation and murder of the Jewish community; very few of the community survived.<ref>Cichocki (2010), pp. 15-16.</ref> The Germans executed several Poles in the town for rescuing Jews, while at least one Polish man managed to escape and survive.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> There is also a well-known case where a Jewish family from Łańcut was hidden from the Germans by the Polish Ulma family in the nearby village of Markowa.<ref name=nwp>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1944 the Germans discovered the hideout and murdered the Polish family and two hidden Jewish families, 16 people in total, including children.<ref name=nwp/> The town's architecture avoided significant damage during the war.<ref name="Official"/>

The last owner of Łańcut, Alfred Antoni Potocki, (14 June 1886 – 30 March 1958), was one of the richest men in prewar Poland, accumulating a fantastic collection of art during his tenancy.<ref name="Potocki">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="łojek1">Łojek J. (1980, wyd. I), Potomkowie Szczęsnego. Dzieje fortuny Potockich z Tulczyna 1799–1921 s. 265, Lublin, Wydawnictwo Lubelskie, Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name="łojek2">Tamże, s. 264–274.</ref> Shortly before the arrival of the Red Army in 1944, he loaded 11 railway carriages of a specially chartered train to Vienna, with his most valuable possessions (about 700 boxes of movable property) and fled to Liechtenstein. Most of these valuables were gradually sold off to finance a lavish lifestyle.<ref name="łojek2"/>

The Music Festival in Łańcut has been an annual event since 1961. The Festival is a series of modern and classical music concerts performed by distinguished European soloists, ensembles and choirs.

Main sights

  • The Łańcut Castle, also called the Lubomirski and Potocki Palace. It was built in 1628–1641 by Stanisław Lubomirski, rebuilt in 1894–1903 in the style of French Neo-baroque. In the castle grounds there is a park with the little romantic castle, a coachhouse with a collection of carriages, a guest-house in the English style and other structures.<ref name="Info">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The castle complex is a Historic Monument of Poland.<ref>Template:Cite Polish law</ref>

  • The Łańcut Synagogue, completed in 1761. German invaders in 1939 attempted to burn the synagogue down, but were prevented by Count Alfred Antoni Potocki.<ref>Cichocki (2010), p. 15.</ref> Although plain on the exterior, the interior walls and ceiling are decorated with restorations of paintings and stuccowork from the 18th century and polychromies from the 19th – 20th centuries.<ref name="Info"/>
  • The architectural complex of the ancient Church and the Dominican monastery (Rynek) rebuilt repeatedly, the oldest phase of the construction going back to the 15th century.<ref name="Info"/>
  • The Parish Church of Saint Stanislaus (Farna Street) going back to the 15th century. Rebuilt in 1884–1900.<ref name="Info"/>

Transport

Railway station

Łańcut is located on the main West-East European E40 Highway, which goes from Calais in France via Belgium, across Germany, Poland, Ukraine and on to Russia and Kazakhstan. Other Polish cities located by the E40 highway are Wrocław, Opole, Katowice, Kraków, Tarnów, Rzeszów and Przemyśl.

The nearest airport is Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport located in the village of Jasionka, north of Rzeszów. It is about Template:Convert north-west of Łańcut on the A881 and takes about 25–30 minutes by car. Scheduled passenger services include flights to: Warsaw (WAW), Dublin, London (Stansted), Bristol, UK, Birmingham, UK, New York City (JFK Airport, and Newark Liberty International Airport).

Łańcut has a railway station, located at Kolejowa Street 1. It is on the main line, Kraków Main stationMedyka. The line then continues on to Ukraine.

The bus station is located at the crossroads of Kościuszko Street and Sikorski Street.

Sports

The most notable sports club is basketball team Template:Interlanguage link, which competes since 2022/2023 in the Polish Basketball League, Poland's highest level league.

Town hall

International relations

Template:See also

Twin towns – sister cities

Łańcut is twinned with:<ref name="Łańcut">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See also

References

Notes

Template:Reflist

Bibliography

  • Cicochny, Macin et al. (2010). Łańcut: The Hasidic route. Warsaw: FODZ. Template:Isbn
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Template:Łańcut County Template:Gmina Łańcut Template:Authority control