Warsaw New Town

The Warsaw New Town (Polish: Nowe Miasto) is a neighborhood dating from the 15th century in Warsaw, Poland. It lies just north of the Old Town and is connected to it by ulica Freta (English: Freta Street), which begins at the Warsaw Barbican. Like the Old Town, the New Town was almost completely destroyed by the Germans during World War II and rebuilt after the war.

New Town
Warsaw neighbourhood
Freta Street, which runs through the center of New Town
Coat of arms
Location in Śródmieście
CountryPoland
VoivodeshipMasovian
County/CityWarsaw
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
The New Town Market Square, St. Kazimierz Church and the fountain with the Lady and the Unicorn

History

The historic district of the New Town was formed at the turn of the 14th century as an independent city.[1] The official recognition of the New Town occurred in 1408, when it was separated from the Old Town by an act issued by Janusz I the Old, Duke of Masovia.[2] At that time the new city encompassed the territory of the New Town Market Square and streets - Freta, Kościelna, Koźla, Przyrynek, Stara and Zakroczymska. It was independent from the Old Town authorities and had its own vogt, council and a town hall. In 1411 the Parish Church of St. Mary was erected, and according to the 1546 mensuration there were 204 estates in the Warsaw New Town. The largest investment of that time was the Sigismund Augustus bridge built between 1568-1573 by Erazm Cziotko (c. 500 m (1,600 ft) long).[3] Unfortunately it was destroyed in 1603 by the drifting ice floes.

The disastrous time of the Swedish-Brandenburgian invasion (1655–1660), left the predominantly timber buildings of the New Town burned, but because of those events many beautiful and more permanent buildings were erected (the Town Hall, built in 1680; St. Kazimierz Church, 1688–1692; the Kotowski Palace, 1682–1684; the Holy Spirit Church, 1707–1717; and the ornate chapel of the Kotowski family, constructed between 1691-1694) by the most prominent Warsaw architects (especially Tylman Gamerski).[2] After 1791, due to the tenets of the Constitution of May 3, 1791, the New Town was incorporated into the city of Warsaw. That is why the Town Hall was pulled down in 1818.

During the Warsaw Uprising (1 August – 2 October 1944) the New Town was completely destroyed due to the extensive bombardment of the insurgent positions by the Germans.[2][4] Many historic edifices, that served as hospitals and shelters for the inhabitants were razed to the ground.[2][4] The reconstruction of the New Town started in 1954, but some of the significant buildings were not restored by the Communist authorities (e.g. Kotowski Palace).[5]

Symbols

As a separate territorial entity, the New Town was using its own seal with a coat of arms. A version known from 1648 features a female figure with a unicorn. It can be found in the Central Archive of Historical Records. The inscription in the rim is in Latin: SIGILLUM * NOVA * CIVITATIS * VARSCHOVIENSIS.[6][7][8] In the Middle Ages, the image of a virgin with a unicorn on her knees was a frequent motif of Christian art as a symbol of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the unicorn itself symbolized Christ.

After the incorporation of the New Town into Warsaw, the Warsaw Mermaid began to be used as the coat of arms. The image of a girl with a unicorn can still be found in the main square, it decorates the top of the well in front of the St. Kazimierz Church. An eclectic cast-iron well from the second half of the nineteenth century set up there around 1957.

Historical images

Churches

Others

See also

References

  1. "The New Town". www.um.warszawa.pl. Retrieved 2010-01-26.
  2. Neil Wilson; Tom Parkinson; Richard Watkins (2005). Poland. Lonely Planet. p. 67. ISBN 1-74059-522-X.
  3. Jerzy S. Majewski (2004-04-29). "Most Zygmunta Augusta". miasta.gazeta.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  4. Joanna K. M. Hanson (2004). The Civilian Population and the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. Cambridge University Press. p. 99. ISBN 0-521-53119-5.
  5. "Zespół kościelno-klasztorny Sakramentek na Rynku Nowego Miasta". www.varsovia.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  6. https://www.dziendobrywarszawo.pl/zad7/
  7. https://histmag.org/Nowe-Miasto-w-Warszawie-obchodzi-600-urodziny-2084/
  8. https://www.srodmiescie.warszawa.pl/ulica-214.html

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