Wrocław, (, , , Latin: Wratislavia or Vratislavia) is the capital of Lower Silesia in southwestern Poland, situated on the Oder River (Odra). As of 2004, the city's population was estimated to be 638,000. It is the principal city of the Lower Silesia region and the administrative seat of the Lower Silesian Voivodship (since 1999), previously of Wrocław Voivodship. The city is also a separate city-county.
Early records show that the medieval city name was Wrocisław in Polish, Vratislav in Czech, which means Wrocisław/Vratislav's town. The Polish name was later phonetically simplified in two stages: Wrocisław->Wrotsław->Wrocław, and this simplified name has been used since the 12th century. The Czech spelling was used in Latin documents, Wratislavia or Vratislavia, but Polish pronunciation was also influential as shown in the spelling of Wracislavia. At that time, in Middle High German, Prezla was used, then Preßlau. The German version of the name —Breslau— was used as the official name when the city was part of Austria, Prussia and finally Germany for over 400 years.
The city is traditionally believed to be named after a person called Wrocisław/Vratislaw, although it is unclear what, if any, connection exists to a Czech duke called Vratislav I. It is also possible the city was named after the tribal duke of the Silesians, or after the early owner of the city, called Vratislav. There is also another version that city was named after Polish duke Wrócisław, in old Polish language it means "he will be back famous".
The name of the city may be an issue among German and Polish nationalists. Despite claims that the use of Breslau is considered as highly unpopular or even offensive among the present Polish inhabitants, the city's website says Willkommen in Wrocław/Breslau in its German version *, and uses only Breslau in the following text.
Name variations used in other languages:
Documents of that time refer to the town by many variants of the name, including Bresslau, Presslau, Breslau and Wratislaw. The restored Wrocław town was given Magdeburg Rights in 1262, the population loss was compensated by a large influx of Germans from the west. The first illustration of the city was published in the Schedelsche Weltchronik in 1493.
Under direct overlordship of the Holy Roman Empire, the emperors granted government positions to members of various ducal and royal dynasties. The city was a member of the Hanseatic League of northern European trading cities. During much of the Middle Ages Wrocław was ruled by its dukes from the Piast dynasty. Although the city was not part of its principality, the bishop of Breslau was a prince-bishop since Bishop Preczlaus of Pogarell (1341-1376) bought the Duchy of Grottkau from Duke Bolesław of Brieg and added it to the episcopal territory of Neisse, after this the bishops of Breslau had the titles of Prince of Neisse and Duke of Grottkau, and took precedence of the other Silesian rulers.
In 1335, it was incorporated with almost the entirety of Silesia into the Kingdom of Bohemia and was part of it until the 1740s; from 1526, it was ruled by the Empire's Habsburg dynasty. By this time the inhabitants, although often of Polish ancestory, had become mainly linguistically German. The overwhelming majority became Lutheran Protestants during the Reformation as did most of Lower Silesia, but they were forcibly suppressed during the Catholic Reformation by Austrian and Polish Jesuits, who were working with the support of the Habsburg rulers. After the extinction of local Piast rulers in 1675, the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria inherited the city of Breslau. They resorted to forceful conversion of the city to back to Catholicism. During the War of the Austrian Succession in the 1740s, Silesia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia. Prussia's claims were derived from the agreement, rejected by Habsburgs, between the Piast rulers of the Duchy and the Hohenzollerns who secured the Prussian succession after the extinction of the Piasts.
To re-supply the fortress, the population was given the order to construct a military airfield. A modern residential district, around the Kaiserstraße (now known as Plac Grunwaldzki) was razed for that purpose. Those of the people who refused to work there were threatened with being shot as deserters. According to the estimation of an eyewitness, approximately 13,000 died under enemy fire on the airfield alone. In the end, the only plane to take off was that of a fleeing Gauleiter Hanke.
Following the Battle of Breslau, two thirds of the city were destroyed. Some 40,000 Breslauers and forced labourers lay dead in the ruins of their homes and factories. After a siege of nearly three months, the strategically relatively unimportant "Festung Breslau" surrendered on May 7, the last major city in historical Eastern Germany to fall.
Like almost all of Lower Silesia, Breslau was placed under Polish administration according to the terms of the agreement reached at the Potsdam Conference. Most of the surviving German inhabitants were forcibly expelled to one of the post-war German states between 1945 and 1949; the ones not directly "evacuated" left due to Polish repression or poverty later on. However, as with other Lower Silesian cities a considerable German presence remained until the late 1950s. In fact, the last German school in the city was not closed until 1963. Wrocław was resettled by Poles either from the small towns and villages of central Poland or those expelled by the Soviets from territories lost by Poland to the USSR. Many of these were from Lwów (now L'viv, Ukraine), Wilno (now Vilnius, Lithuania) and Grodno (now Hrodna, Belarus).
Gradually the old city was restored to its beauty. Nearly all of the monumental buildings were preserved. Now it is a uniquely European city of present-day Poland, with its architecture echoing that in Austria, Bohemia, or Prussia. Wrocław's Gothic style is originally Silesian; its Baroque style owes much to court builders of Habsburg Austria (Fischer von Erlach, Ch. Tausch); and Wrocław still has a number of buildings by eminent German modernist architects, such as Hans Poelzig or Max Berg, the famous Jahrhunderthalle (Hala Ludowa) by Berg (1911–13) being the most important.
In July 1997, the city was hit by a severe flooding of the Oder River. In 2005, the city was hit by a freak storm that felled a number of trees and killed three people. The storm was local and did not affect any other major cities.
Вроцлав | Vratislav (město) | Wrocław | Breslau | Wrocław | Vroclavo | Wroclaw | Wrocław | 브로츠와프 | Wrocław | Wrocław | Breslavia | ורוצלב | Wrocław | Vratislavia | Vroclava | Vroclavas | Wrocław | Wrocław | Wrocław | Wrocław | ヴロツワフ | Wrocław | Wrocław | Breslau | Wrocław | Wrocław | Wrocław | Вроцлав | Wrocław | Vroclav | Wrocław | Вроцлав | Wrocław | Wrocław | 弗罗茨瓦夫