- Kruszwica
Infobox Settlement
name = Kruszwica
image_shield = POL Kruszwica COA.svg
pushpin_
subdivision_type = Country
subdivision_name = POL
subdivision_type1 = Voivodeship
subdivision_name1 = Kuyavian-Pomeranian
subdivision_type2 = County
subdivision_name2 = Inowrocław
subdivision_type3 =Gmina
subdivision_name3 = Kruszwica
area_total_km2 = 6.64
population_as_of = 2006
population_total = 9373
population_density_km2 = auto
latd = 52 | latm = 40 | lats = 38 | latNS = N | longd = 18 | longm = 19 | longs = 45 | longEW = E
elevation_m =
postal_code_type = Postal code
postal_code = 88-150
website = http://www.kruszwica.um.gov.plKruszwica [IPA-pl|k|r|u|sz|'|f|i|c|a] ( _de. Kruschwitz) is a town in central
Poland and is situated in theKuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship (since 1999), previously inBydgoszcz Voivodeship (1975-1998).It has a population of 9,412 people (2004).History
Owing to the frequent raids of the
Norsemen , the people of this region early organized an effective military force of defense. Under the protection of the military bands and their chiefs, the fields could safely be cultivated and the little, fortified towns (grody), which became places for the transaction of intertribal business and barter, for common worship, and for the storage of goods during a foreign invasion could be successfully defended and the wrongs of the people redressed. The military bands and their leaders soon became the unifying force, and thefortified town s, the centers of a larger political organization, with the freeman (Kmiec or Kmeton) as its base.The first historical town of this nature was that of Kruszwica, [ [http://www.gminy.cps.pl/kruszwica/2e.htm Kruszwica, historic profile] at www.gminy.cps.pl] on the Lake of
Gopło . It soon gave place to that ofGniezno or Knezno, further west, which by its very name indicates that it was the residence of a Knez, or prince or duke. In timePoznań became the princely town, and the principality began to assert itself and to grow westward to theOder , southward to the Barycza and eastward to thePilica Rivers. In the east this territorial expansion met with the armed opposition of another large tribe, the Lenczanians, which was similarly organized under a military ruler and which occupied the plains between theWarta ,Bzura and Pilica Rivers. Further east, in the forests of the middle course of theVistula to the north of Pilica, lived the most savage of the Polish tribes, the Mazurs. This tribe was the latest to come under the sovereignty of the principality and began its political existence on the bank of the Gopło Lake under the leadership of the Piast, whose dynasty ruled the country until1370 . To the north of theNetze River between the Oder and the Baltic, lived the northernmost of the Polish tribes known as Pomorzanie (in the Polish: "people living by the sea"); hence the name of the province Pomorze.Some historical writers attribute the change in the political organization of the primitive Polanie tribe to the influence of foreign commerce, which for geographic reasons had early centered around the Gopło. At that period the lake was a very large body of water with a level at least ten feet higher than at present. The many small lakes now existing in the region were in all probability a part of Gopło, and the valleys of the vicinity constituted the bottom of the lake. There are many reasons to believe that such was the
hydrography of the section in that remote age. In his description of Gopło, written five hundred years ago,Jan Długosz , a Polish historian, speaks of a vast body of water, leading us to believe that the lake then was much larger than it is at the present time. There is reason to believe that five hundred years previous to this historian's time, before the primeval forests were cut, the lake was still larger. The supposition that Gopło at the time of its highest level was connected by means of small navigable streams with the river's Warta, Oder and the Vistula is quite plausible.The constructive fancy of the economic historian sees
flotilla s of Pomeranian merchants moving to and fro from Szczecin (Stettin) down the Oder and Netze. Here they metmerchant s from the east, the southeast and the southwest of Europe. The Byzantine, Roman and Scandinavian cultures met at Kruszwica, the largest town on the banks of this vast internal sea of Poland, and exercised a revolutionary effect upon the modes of thought and the political institutions of the tribe. Otherwise the sudden transformation which took place from the tribal and communal organization of the people, which still existed in the second half of the eighth century, to the militaristic structure of society with a strong princely power, as is known to have existed in the ninth century, becomes almost unaccountable. The pressure from the west and north was, no doubt, an important element, but it alone would hardly seem sufficient to explain the change. Economic and cultural reasons had unquestionably exercised a great influence in the rapid molding of a new form of political life which was more adapted to conditions that had arisen since the change from nomadic pursuits to settled agriculture.Major corporations
* Zakłady Tłuszczowe Kruszwica SA manufacturing Kujawski Oil and Tina Margarine. [http://www.gminy.cps.pl/kruszwica/7e.htm Kruszwica industies] as per www.gminy.cps.pl.]
* Kruszwica Sugar Works.References
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