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POLAND : Gdansk -
History
A Slavic settlement,
Gdansk was first mentioned in 997. It soon became the capital of
Pomerelia (see Pomerania ). After its settlement by German
merchants, it joined (13th cent.) the Hanseatic League and
developed as an important Baltic trading port. In 1308 it was
conquered by the Teutonic Knights and became an object of struggle
between them and Poland. Pomerelia and Gdansk passed to Poland in
1466. Gdansk was granted local autonomy under the Polish crown. In
1576, Gdansk withstood a siege by Stephen Báthory and thus
preserved its established privileges against domination by the
Polish crown.
After the Thirty Years War the city began to decline. In
the War of the Polish Succession , King Stanislaus I took refuge in
Gdansk until it fell (1734) after a heroic defense. The first
partition of Poland in 1772 made Gdansk a free city; the second
partition (1793) gave it to Prussia .
Napoleon I restored its status as a free city (1807).
Reverting to Prussia in 1814, it was fortified and, as Danzig, was
the provincial capital of West Prussia until 1919, when by the
Treaty of Versailles it once more became a free city with its own
legislature. In order to give the newly reestablished nation of
Poland a seaport, Danzig was included in the Polish customs
territory and was placed under a high commissioner appointed by the
League of Nations.
As the League's authority waned after 1935, Gdansk came
under Nazi control. Hitler's demand (1939) for the city's return to
Germany was the principal immediate excuse for the German invasion
of Poland and thus of World War II. Gdansk was annexed to Germany
from Sept. 1, 1939, until its fall to the Soviet army early in
1945. The Allies returned the city to Poland, which restored the
name Gdansk. In 1970 workers' grievances sparked riots in Gdansk
that spread to other cities and led to changes in Poland's national
leadership. Further labor unrest in the Gdansk shipyard led to the
formation of the Solidarity union in 1980.
Tensions
arising from quarrels between Germany and Poland over control of
the Free City served as a pretext for the German invasion of Poland
on September 1, 1939 and the outbreak of World War II. The Jewish
community in Gdansk took the opportunity to escape from the Nazis
soon before the outbreak of the war. Polish defenders at the
Westerplatte peninsula defended against the battleship
Schleswig-Holstein for nearly a week, while the Polish Post Office
was bravely defended until its capture; its overwhelmed defenders
were executed instead of imprisoned for the war's duration. Many
members of Gdansk's Polish population were deported to the
concentration camp in Stutthof or were directly executed at
Piasnica. The Nazis' capture of the city resulted in its annexation
into Nazi Germany and its incorporation into the Reichsgau
Danzig-Westpreussen.
The city was occupied by Polish and Soviet forces on
March 30, 1945 after a fierce battle with defending Germans which
left 90% of the old city reduced to ruins. At the Yalta and the
Potsdam conferences, Gdansk was transferred to Poland along with
the whole territory of the Free City. According to the terms of the
Potsdam conference, Germans remaining in the city were expelled.
Out of the Free City's pre-war population of 385,000, 285,000 lived
in exile in Germany after the post-war migrations were
over.
Many Poles impressed with Gdansk's historic prosperity
came to rebuild the city from throughout Poland, especially from
the regions of eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union. The Old
City was rebuilt from its ruins during the 1950s and 1960s. Because
of the development of its port and 3 major shipyards, Gdansk was a
major shipping and industrial center of the Communist People's
Republic of Poland.
Gdansk was the scene of anti-government demonstrations
which led to the downfall of Poland's communist leader Wladyslaw
Gomulka in December 1970. Ten years later the Gdansk Shipyard was
the birthplace of the Solidarity trade union movement, whose
opposition to the government led to the end of communist party rule
(1989); Solidarity's leader Lech Walesa became the Polish president
in 1990. Today Gdansk remains a major industrial city and shipping
port..
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