Zwierzyniec

Coordinates: 50°37′N 22°58′E / 50.617°N 22.967°E / 50.617; 22.967
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Zwierzyniec
Church of Saint John of Nepomuk on an island
Church of Saint John of Nepomuk on an island
Coat of arms of Zwierzyniec
Zwierzyniec is located in Poland
Zwierzyniec
Zwierzyniec
Coordinates: 50°37′N 22°58′E / 50.617°N 22.967°E / 50.617; 22.967
Country Poland
Voivodeship Lublin
CountyZamość
GminaZwierzyniec
Government
 • MayorUrszula Kolman
Area
 • Total4.82 km2 (1.86 sq mi)
Elevation
215 m (705 ft)
Population
 (2006)
 • Total3,344
 • Density690/km2 (1,800/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
22-470
Car platesLZA
Websitewww.zwierzyniec.info.pl

Zwierzyniec (Polish: [zvjɛˈʐɨɲɛt͡s]; Ukrainian: Звежинець, romanizedZvezhynetsʹ) is a town on the Wieprz river in the Zamość County, Lublin Voivodeship, Poland. It has 3,324 inhabitants (2004).

Zwierzyniec is the northernmost town of the Roztocze National Park. The park comprises some of the last remaining sections of the primordial forest of Central Europe, especially spectacular stand of ancient beech trees (Bukowa Gora). It also is a rail junction, located along the Rejowiec Fabryczny - Hrebenne - Munina connection, with a branch line going westwards, to Stalowa Wola, via Biłgoraj.

History[edit]

The Zwierzyniec settlement was established in the 16th century by the Zamoyski family. One of the features here is an artificial lake with a number of small islands - one of them contains monuments of the hounds belonging to the Polish Queen Marysieńka Sobieska (primo voto Zamoyska).

On another island, the Zamoyskis built a baroque chapel, which became later the main church of the local Catholic parish. It is now known as the St John Nepomucene's parish church - renovated and expanded in the early 1960s by father Dutkowski. The access to the chapel island is now via a bridge.

World War II[edit]

During the occupation of Poland in World War Two, Nazi Germans set up a transit camp in Zwierzyniec for the province-wide Action Zamość. The camp processed 20,000-24,000 Poles, with many victims sent to death camps at Auschwitz and Majdanek.[1]

Race selections based on forcible abduction of children were conducted at Zwierzyniec.[2] The term "Children of Zamojszczyzna" originates from this programme.[1]

The town also had a Jewish population of between 1,000 and 1,500 Jews. The first transport of Jews during the Holocaust, numbering approximately 52 Jews from Zwierzyniec, Rudka and other surrounding villages, was sent to a death camp in Bełżec in September 1942. A mass extermination of the Jewish population from Zwierzyniec started on October 21, 1942. Some of the Jews were shot dead on the spot; the remaining residents were sent to the railway station at Szczebrzeszyn, from where, together with the Szczebrzeszyn Jews, were sent to a death camp in Bełżec.[3]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Jaczyńska, Agnieszka (2012). "Aktion Zamosc" (PDF). Pamięć.pl. No. 8. OBEP IPN, Lublin: Institute of National Remembrance. 30-35 (1-5 in PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2015. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. ^ Bolesław Szymanik, Zarząd Stowarzyszenia Dzieci Zamojszczyzny w Biłgoraju (17 August 2015). "72. rocznica likwidacji obozu przesiedleńczego w Zwierzyńcu". Dzieci zamojszczyzny. Bilgoraj.com. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  3. ^ H Matławska. Virtual Sztetl. Lublin: Virtual Sztetl. Retrieved 21 July 2018.