Torun
The medieval town of Toruń is on the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites.
The city of Torun creates a bipolar aglomeration Bydgoszcz-Torun with the city of Bydgoszcz, only 30 km away. Those 2 cities are integrating gradually. in 2003 Medical Academy in Bydgoszcz joined Torun University.
| Table of contents |
|
2 Famous people 3 Education 4 Economy 5 Major corporations 6 Politics 7 Toruń constituency 8 Municipal politics 9 Architecture 10 History 11 External links |
Early documents record the city name as Thorn, Thorun (1226, 1466), Turon, Turun, Toron, Thoron, and after 15th century the Polish name: Toruń
Points of view diverge on the origin of Thorn/Toruń's name.
There are several possible etymologies:
Name of the city
However, others claim that neither name Toruń nor Thorn has any etymological meaning. (reference: Professor Jan Miodek)
The Teutonic Knights spelled the city usually Thorun, and later when the city was a royal city subject to Polish Kings, the Latin documents and coins usually spelled Thorun, Thorunium, civitas Thorunensis or civitas Torunensis. Later it was spelled Thorn, and after the second world war the official name was changed to Toruń when the city became part of Poland.
Famous people
Toruń was the birthplace of the Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473).
to be written yetEducation
Economy
Major corporations
Politics
Toruń constituency
Members of Parliament (Sejm) elected from Toruń constituencyMunicipal politics
![]() Baroque facade of Dambski Palace (18th c.) |
![]() Part of medieval city walls |
![]() Gothic building from 15th c. with Guard Keep (13 c.), both rebuild in 19th c. |
Partial view of Teutonic Knights' castle |
Torun was a small settlement in Chelmno Land (Ziemia Chelminska), a western part of Mazovia. in 1266 it was awarded by the duke Conrad of Mazovia as a fief to the Teutonic Knights to be a safeguard against the heathen Prussians.
The Teutonic Knights built a castle there (1230-31), and the settlement acquired town rights in 1233, relocating from its original site to what is called today "Old Town" in 1236. The city soon became an important medieval trade center, and a member of the Hanseatic League. In 1263, Franciscan monks settled in Torun, and they were followed in 1239 by Dominicans. In 1264 the neighboring Torun New Town was founded. It was a separate town until 1454, when the old and new cities were amalgamated.
During the 14th century, Torun joined the Hanseatic League.
History
External links
| Poland | |
|---|---|
| Voivodships of Poland | |
| Greater Poland | Kuyavia-Pomerania | Lesser Poland | Lodz | Lower Silesia | Lublin | Lubusz | Masovia | Opole | Podlachia | Pomerania Swietokrzyskie | Silesia | Subcarpathia | Warmia and Masuria | West Pomerania | |
| Principal cities | |
| Warsaw | ŁÃ³dź | Kraków | Wrocław | Poznań | Gdańsk | Szczecin | Bydgoszcz | Lublin | Katowice | Białystok | Częstochowa | Gdynia | Toruń Radom | Kielce | Rzeszów | Olsztyn | |


