Szczecin (; ; ; Latin: Stetinum, Scecinum, andSedinum) is the capital city of West Pomeranian Voivodship in Poland. It is the country's sixth-largest city and the largest seaport in Poland on the Baltic Sea. As of the 2005 census the city has a total population of 420,638.
Szczecin is located on the Oder River (Odra), south of the Lagoon of Szczecin and the Bay of Pomerania. The city is situated along the southwestern shore of Dąbie Lake, on both sides of Oder and on several large islands between western and eastern branch of the river.
Early medieval sources show: Stetin 1133, Stetyn 1188, Priznoborus vir nobilis in Stetin, Symon nobilis Stettinensis 1234, in vico Stetin 1240, Barnim Dei gratia dux Pomeranorum... civitati nostri Stetin 1243, Stityn 1251, Sigillum Burgoncium de Stitin municipal seal of the 13th century, which is the same to the modern Polish spelling of Szczecin. The name is almost certainly of the same origin as others Polish names such as Szczytno, Szczucin and Szczuczyn. In Latin, the city was known as Stetinum.
There are several possible etymologies of the city name:
Because in 1310 Duke Warcislaw IV of Pomerania had founded a new city called New Szczecin and Szczecinek is modelled after the Szczecin municipality, the original Szczecin was sometimes called Old Szczecin (Latin: Stetinum Antiqua, ; )
In the 16th century Polish literature used two alternative spellings: Szczecin (seems to be the exact pronunciation of the city name used by its Slavonic inhabitants, previously spelled in Latin as Stetin since the 12th century) and Sztetyn (seems to be a copy of the German pronunciation). The first form of Szczecin prevailed in the following years and was officially confirmed in the 19th century, long before the city became Polish in 1945.
Prior to 1945, the city, inhabited almost entirely by Germans from the Late Middle Ages, was known internationally and locally as Stettin, its German name.
A stronghold of the Lusatian culture was here in the early Iron Age period. Another stronghold of the Slavic Pomeranians was built in the 8th century at the ford of the Oder River. The city was already a flourishing trading centre with 10,000 inhabitants when it was subjugated and baptized by Duke Boleslaus III of Poland. A medieval municipality was granted autonomy in 1243. Till the 1630s Stettin was the capital of the Duchy of Pomerania ruled by the Griffin dynasty, of Slavic origins, while the city and western Pomerania became gradually German. For centuries the Slavic dukes, oriented towards the west, invited West and Central German settlers to colonize Pomeranian wastelands and to found villages.
After the extinction of the Griffin dynasty, Stettin, along with the rest of western Pomerania, was granted to Sweden at the Peace of Westphalia (1648), despite the protests of the Elector of Brandenburg, who had a legal claim to inherit all of Pomerania. In 1720 after the Great Northern War, the Swedes were forced to cede the city to King Frederick William I of Prussia. Stettin became a major Prussian (and, after 1871 German) city. In 1939 Stettin had about 400,000 inhabitants and was Germany's third-biggest naval port (after Hamburg and Bremen) and of great importance for the supply and trade of Berlin.
In 1935 the German Wehrmacht established Stettin as the headquarters for Wehrkreis II, which controlled the military units in all of Mecklenburg and Pomerania. It was also the Area Headquarters for units stationed at Stettin I and II; Swinemünde; Greifswald; and Stralsund. Stettin was the home Station for the German 2nd Motorized Infantry Division, which took part in invasion of Poland in 1939 cutting across the Polish Corridor.
Stettin remained under Nazi control until 1945, when the Soviet Red Army seized the city. Many of the city's German inhabitants escaped in fear of revenge. In the aftermath of World War II the city became, unexpectedly and contrary to the Potsdam Conference, part of Poland due to the Polish army simply taking it. Subsequently the remaining German population was expelled to Germany. Stettin was resettled with Poles, mainly from the area around Poznań, where their homes had been destroyed during the Nazi German occupation and during fighting on the Eastern Front. The city was also resettled with Poles from Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union. Szczecin was rebuilt and made a major industrial centre, the capital of Szczecin Voivodship. It witnessed anti-communist revolts in 1970 and 1980 and participated in the birth of Solidarity movement. Since 1999 Szczecin has been the capital of Western Pomeranian Voivodship.
Urban planning of Szczecin is unusual. The first thing observed by a newcomer is abundance of green areas: parks and avenues – wide streets with trees planted in the island separating opposite traffic (where often tram tracks are laid); and roundabouts. This makes Szczecin's city project quite similar to that of Paris. The reason is, Szczecin (like Paris) was rebuilt in the 1880s using a design by Georges-Eugène Haussmann.
This course of designing streets in Szczecin is still used, as many recently built (or modified) city areas include roundabouts and avenues.
Marian Jurczyk, Solidarity icon, is Szczecin's mayor. His achievements are however widely criticised and he is blamed for over 10 millions zlotys compensations which city must pay for canceling the land selling deal, his lack of formal education, and his apparent cluelessness in many important matters. Jurczyk's famous errors includes forgetting the name of his own deputy he just nominated or quoting Jesus in his speech to the council.
Because of this criticism recall voices of recall were raised. On 23 March 2004 necessary 32,000 signatures were received by Recall Committee. Recall referendum took place on 23 May 2004. However the necessary 30% turnout wasn't reached as only 19% of voters cast their ballots. An overwhelming majority of those voting (92%), supported mayor's recall. This means that current political situation is quite difficult.
Szczecin has the biggest shipyard in Poland, which recently went bankrupt and was successfully reinstated. It has a fishing industry and a steel mill. It is served by Szczecin-Goleniów Airport and by the Port of Szczecin, third biggest port of Poland. It is also home to several major companies. Among them is the major food producer Drobimex, Polish Steamship Company, producer of construction materials Komfort, Bosman brewery and Cefarm drug factory. It also houses several of the new business firms of the IT branch, among them the Vobis Microcomputer group and the home.pl web portal.
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