Łódź: Difference between revisions
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}} |
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}} |
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{{Infobox settlement |
{{Infobox settlement |
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| name = Łódź |
| name = Łódź |
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| motto = {{lang|la|Ex navicula navis}} ("From a boat a ship") |
| motto = {{lang|la|Ex navicula navis}} ("From a boat a ship") |
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| image_blank_emblem = Logo_of_Łódź_11.svg |
| image_blank_emblem = Logo_of_Łódź_11.svg |
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| blank_emblem_type = [[Wordmark]] |
| blank_emblem_type = [[Wordmark]] |
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| image_skyline |
| image_skyline = {{multiple image |
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| border = infobox |
| border = infobox |
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| perrow = 2/2/2/1 |
| perrow = 2/2/2/1 |
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| image7 = Rynek Manufaktury (cropped).jpg |
| image7 = Rynek Manufaktury (cropped).jpg |
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| caption7 = [[Manufaktura]]}} |
| caption7 = [[Manufaktura]]}} |
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| image_flag = POL Łódź flag.svg |
| image_flag = POL Łódź flag.svg |
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| image_shield = [[File:POL Łódź COA.svg|75px]] |
| image_shield = [[File:POL Łódź COA.svg|75px]] |
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| map_caption = Location of Łódź in Łódź Voivodeship |
| map_caption = Location of Łódź in Łódź Voivodeship |
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| pushpin_map = Poland |
| pushpin_map = Poland |
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| pushpin_label_position = bottom |
| pushpin_label_position = bottom |
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| pushpin_label = Łódź |
| pushpin_label = Łódź |
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| subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] |
| subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] |
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| subdivision_name = {{POL}} |
| subdivision_name = {{POL}} |
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| subdivision_type1 = [[Voivodeships of Poland|Voivodeship]] |
| subdivision_type1 = [[Voivodeships of Poland|Voivodeship]] |
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| subdivision_name1 = {{flag|Łódź Voivodeship|name=Łódź}} |
| subdivision_name1 = {{flag|Łódź Voivodeship|name=Łódź}} |
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| subdivision_type2 = [[Powiat|County]] |
| subdivision_type2 = [[Powiat|County]] |
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| subdivision_name2 = ''city county'' |
| subdivision_name2 = ''city county'' |
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| leader_title = City mayor |
| leader_title = City mayor |
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| leader_name = [[Hanna Zdanowska]] |
| leader_name = [[Hanna Zdanowska]] |
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| leader_party = [[Civic |
| leader_party = [[Civic Coalition (Poland)|KO]] |
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| leader_title1 = [[Sejm|Sejm of Poland]] |
| leader_title1 = [[Sejm|Sejm of Poland]] |
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| leader_name1 = [[Łódź (parliamentary constituency)|Łódź]] |
| leader_name1 = [[Łódź (parliamentary constituency)|Łódź]] |
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| governing_body = Łódź City Council |
| governing_body = [[Łódź City Council]] |
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| parts_type = [[Dzielnica|Districts]] |
| parts_type = [[Dzielnica|Districts]] |
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| seat_type = [[Seat of local government|City Hall]] |
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| parts = 5 boroughs |
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| seat = [[Juliusz Heinzl Palace]] |
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| seat_type = [[Seat of local government|City Hall]] |
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| established_title = First mentioned |
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| seat = [[Juliusz Heinzl Palace]] |
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| established_date = 1332 |
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| established_title = First mentioned |
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| established_date = 1332 |
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| established_title2 = City rights |
| established_title2 = City rights |
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| established_date2 = 1423 |
| established_date2 = 1423 |
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| area_total_km2 = 293.25 |
| area_total_km2 = 293.25 |
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| area_metro_km2 = 2496 |
| area_metro_km2 = 2496 |
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| population_as_of = 30 June 2023 |
| population_as_of = 30 June 2023 |
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| population_total = 655,279 {{decreaseNeutral}} ([[List of cities and towns in Poland|4th]])<ref name="population">{{cite web|url=https://stat.gov.pl/obszary-tematyczne/ludnosc/ludnosc/ludnosc-stan-i-struktura-ludnosci-oraz-ruch-naturalny-w-przekroju-terytorialnym-stan-w-dniu-31-grudnia,6,34.html|title=Local Data Bank|access-date=10 July 2023|publisher=Statistics Poland|archive-date=19 June 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230619151352/https://stat.gov.pl/obszary-tematyczne/ludnosc/ludnosc/ludnosc-stan-i-struktura-ludnosci-oraz-ruch-naturalny-w-przekroju-terytorialnym-stan-w-dniu-31-grudnia,6,34.html|url-status=live}} Data for territorial unit 1061000.</ref> |
| population_total = 655,279 {{decreaseNeutral}} ([[List of cities and towns in Poland|4th]])<ref name="population">{{cite web|url=https://stat.gov.pl/obszary-tematyczne/ludnosc/ludnosc/ludnosc-stan-i-struktura-ludnosci-oraz-ruch-naturalny-w-przekroju-terytorialnym-stan-w-dniu-31-grudnia,6,34.html|title=Local Data Bank|access-date=10 July 2023|publisher=Statistics Poland|archive-date=19 June 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230619151352/https://stat.gov.pl/obszary-tematyczne/ludnosc/ludnosc/ludnosc-stan-i-struktura-ludnosci-oraz-ruch-naturalny-w-przekroju-terytorialnym-stan-w-dniu-31-grudnia,6,34.html|url-status=live}} Data for territorial unit 1061000.</ref> |
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| population_density_km2 = 2245 |
| population_density_km2 = 2245 |
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| population_density_metro_km2 = auto |
| population_density_metro_km2 = auto |
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| population_metro = 1100000 |
| population_metro = 1100000 |
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| population_demonym = łodzianin (male) <br/> łodzianka (female) ([[Polish language|pl]]) |
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| demographics_type2 = GDP |
| demographics_type2 = GDP |
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| demographics2_footnotes = <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/met_10r_3gdp/default/table?lang=en|title=Gross domestic product (GDP) at current market prices by metropolitan regions|last=|first=|date=|website=ec.europa.eu|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230215185052/https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/met_10r_3gdp/default/table?lang=en|archive-date=15 February 2023|access-date=|url-status=live}}</ref> |
| demographics2_footnotes = <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/met_10r_3gdp/default/table?lang=en|title=Gross domestic product (GDP) at current market prices by metropolitan regions|last=|first=|date=|website=ec.europa.eu|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230215185052/https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/met_10r_3gdp/default/table?lang=en|archive-date=15 February 2023|access-date=|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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| demographics2_title1 = [[Łódź metropolitan area|Metro]] |
| demographics2_title1 = [[Łódź metropolitan area|Metro]] |
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| demographics2_info1 = €16.839 billion (2020) |
| demographics2_info1 = €16.839 billion (2020) |
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| timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]] |
| timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]] |
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| utc_offset = +1 |
| utc_offset = +1 |
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| timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] |
| timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] |
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| utc_offset_DST = +2 |
| utc_offset_DST = +2 |
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| coordinates = {{Coord|51|46|37|N|19|27|17|E|region:PL-10_type:city(672,000)|display=title,inline}} |
| coordinates = {{Coord|51|46|37|N|19|27|17|E|region:PL-10_type:city(672,000)|display=title,inline}} |
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| elevation_max_m = 278 |
| elevation_max_m = 278 |
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| elevation_min_m = 162 |
| elevation_min_m = 162 |
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| postal_code_type = Postal code |
| postal_code_type = Postal code |
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| postal_code = 90-001 to 94–413 |
| postal_code = 90-001 to 94–413 |
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| area_code = +48 42 |
| area_code = +48 42 |
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| website = {{URL|http://www.uml.lodz.pl/}} |
| website = {{URL|http://www.uml.lodz.pl/}} |
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| registration_plate = EL |
| registration_plate = EL |
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| blank_name_sec2 = Primary airport |
| blank_name_sec2 = Primary airport |
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| blank_info_sec2 = [[Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport]] |
| blank_info_sec2 = [[Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport]] |
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| blank1_name_sec2 = [[Highways in Poland|Highways]] |
| blank1_name_sec2 = [[Highways in Poland|Highways]] |
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| blank1_info_sec2 = [[File:A1-PL.svg|32px|link=A1 autostrada (Poland)]] [[File:A2-PL.svg|32px|link=A2 autostrada (Poland)]] [[File:S8-PL.svg|32px|link=Expressway S8 (Poland)]] [[File:S14-PL.svg|32px|link=Expressway S14 (Poland)]] |
| blank1_info_sec2 = [[File:A1-PL.svg|32px|link=A1 autostrada (Poland)]] [[File:A2-PL.svg|32px|link=A2 autostrada (Poland)]] [[File:S8-PL.svg|32px|link=Expressway S8 (Poland)]] [[File:S14-PL.svg|32px|link=Expressway S14 (Poland)]] |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Łódź'''{{Efn| |
'''Łódź'''{{Efn| |
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** British English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|w|ʊ|tʃ}} {{respell|WUUTCH}};<ref>{{Cite Oxford Dictionaries|Łódź|accessdate=16 September 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite Merriam-Webster|Lodz|accessdate=16 September 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/lodz|title=Łódź|work=[[Collins English Dictionary]]|publisher=[[HarperCollins]]|access-date=16 September 2018|archive-date=16 September 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180916202646/https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/lodz|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite American Heritage Dictionary|Łódź|accessdate=11 April 2019}}</ref> |
** British English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|w|ʊ|tʃ}} {{respell|WUUTCH}};<ref>{{Cite Oxford Dictionaries|Łódź|accessdate=16 September 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite Merriam-Webster|Lodz|accessdate=16 September 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/lodz|title=Łódź|work=[[Collins English Dictionary]]|publisher=[[HarperCollins]]|access-date=16 September 2018|archive-date=16 September 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180916202646/https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/lodz|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite American Heritage Dictionary|Łódź|accessdate=11 April 2019}}</ref> |
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** American English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|w|uː|tʃ|,_|ˈ|l|uː|dʒ}} {{respell|WOOTCH|,_|LOOJ}};<ref>[https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/us/Lodz "Łódź"]{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
** American English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|w|uː|tʃ|,_|ˈ|l|uː|dʒ}} {{respell|WOOTCH|,_|LOOJ}};<ref>[https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/us/Lodz "Łódź"]{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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** Polish: {{IPA |
** Polish: {{IPA|pl|wut͡ɕ||Pl-łódź.ogg}}. |
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* Other names: |
* Other names: |
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** {{ |
** {{langx|de|Lodz}} {{IPA|de|lɔt͜ʃ |
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||De-Lodz.ogg}} or {{lang|de|Lodsch}} {{IPA |
||De-Lodz.ogg}} or {{lang|de|Lodsch}} {{IPA|de|lɔtʃ||De-Lodsch.ogg}} |
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** {{ |
** {{langx|la|Lodzia}}.}} is a city in central [[Poland]] and a former industrial centre. It is the capital of [[Łódź Voivodeship]], and is located {{convert|120|km|mi|sp=us|abbr=on}} south-west of [[Warsaw]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.trasa.info/wyznaczanie-trasy/lodz-warszawa|title=Łódź – Warszawa trasa i odległość na mapie • dojazd PKP, BUS, PKS|publisher=www.trasa.info|access-date=2 August 2018|archive-date=2 August 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180802041104/https://www.trasa.info/wyznaczanie-trasy/lodz-warszawa|url-status=live}}</ref> {{As of|2023|post=,}} Łódź has a population of 655,279,<ref name="population" /> making it the country's [[List of cities and towns in Poland|fourth largest city]]. |
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Łódź first appears in records in 14th-century. It was granted [[city rights|town rights]] in 1423 by the Polish King [[Władysław II Jagiełło]] and it remained a private town of the [[Kuyavia]]n bishops and clergy until the late 18th century. In the [[Second Partition of Poland]] in 1793, Łódź was annexed to [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]] before becoming part of the [[Napoleon]]ic [[Duchy of Warsaw]]; the city joined [[Congress Poland]], a [[Russian Empire|Russian]] client state, at the 1815 [[Congress of Vienna]]. The [[Second Industrial Revolution]] (from 1870) brought rapid growth in textile manufacturing and in population owing to the inflow of migrants, notably Germans and Jews. Ever since the industrialization of the area, the city has been [[multinational state|multinational]] and struggled with social inequalities, as documented in the novel ''[[The Promised Land (novel)|The Promised Land]]'' by [[Nobel Prize]]–winning author [[Władysław Reymont]]. The contrasts greatly reflected on the architecture of the city, where luxurious mansions coexisted with red-brick factories and dilapidated tenement houses.<ref name="staypoland.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.staypoland.com/about_lodz.htm|title=Lodz Tourism: Tourist Information Lodz, Poland|publisher=eTravel S.A.|department=staypoland.com|access-date=3 July 2016|archive-date=12 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160512021414/http://www.staypoland.com/about_lodz.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> |
Łódź first appears in records in 14th-century. It was granted [[city rights|town rights]] in 1423 by the Polish King [[Władysław II Jagiełło]] and it remained a private town of the [[Kuyavia]]n bishops and clergy until the late 18th century. In the [[Second Partition of Poland]] in 1793, Łódź was annexed to [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]] before becoming part of the [[Napoleon]]ic [[Duchy of Warsaw]]; the city joined [[Congress Poland]], a [[Russian Empire|Russian]] client state, at the 1815 [[Congress of Vienna]]. The [[Second Industrial Revolution]] (from 1870) brought rapid growth in textile manufacturing and in population owing to the inflow of migrants, notably Germans and Jews. Ever since the industrialization of the area, the city has been [[multinational state|multinational]] and struggled with social inequalities, as documented in the novel ''[[The Promised Land (novel)|The Promised Land]]'' by [[Nobel Prize]]–winning author [[Władysław Reymont]]. The contrasts greatly reflected on the architecture of the city, where luxurious mansions coexisted with red-brick factories and dilapidated tenement houses.<ref name="staypoland.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.staypoland.com/about_lodz.htm|title=Lodz Tourism: Tourist Information Lodz, Poland|publisher=eTravel S.A.|department=staypoland.com|access-date=3 July 2016|archive-date=12 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160512021414/http://www.staypoland.com/about_lodz.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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Łódź also experienced an influx of refugees from [[Kresy]]. Many migrated into the suburbs and occupied the empty properties.{{sfn|Cudny|Kunc|2021}} Under the [[Polish People's Republic]], the city's industry and private companies were subject to [[nationalisation]].{{sfn|Cudny|Kunc|2021}} On 24 May 1945, the [[University of Łódź]] was inaugurated.{{sfn|Werra|Woźny|2018|p=481}} On 8 March 1948, the [[Łódź Film School|National Film School]] was opened, later becoming Poland's primary academy of drama and cinema.{{sfn|Dixon|2015|p=207}} |
Łódź also experienced an influx of refugees from [[Kresy]]. Many migrated into the suburbs and occupied the empty properties.{{sfn|Cudny|Kunc|2021}} Under the [[Polish People's Republic]], the city's industry and private companies were subject to [[nationalisation]].{{sfn|Cudny|Kunc|2021}} On 24 May 1945, the [[University of Łódź]] was inaugurated.{{sfn|Werra|Woźny|2018|p=481}} On 8 March 1948, the [[Łódź Film School|National Film School]] was opened, later becoming Poland's primary academy of drama and cinema.{{sfn|Dixon|2015|p=207}} |
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The spatial and [[urban planning]] after World War II was conducted in accordance with the [[Athens Charter]], where the population from the old core was relocated into new [[residential area]]s.{{sfn|Müller|2005|p=172}} However, as a result, the inner-city and historical areas fell in significance and degenerated into a [[slum]].{{sfn|Müller|2005|p=172}} A number of extensive [[panel building|panel]] block housing estates, including [[Retkinia]], Teofilów, Widzew, Radogoszcz, and Chojny. These block housing estates were constructed between 1960 and 1990, covering an area of almost {{convert|30|km2|sqmi}} and accommodating a large part of the populace.{{sfn|Kłysik|1998|p=175}} |
The spatial and [[urban planning]] after World War II was conducted in accordance with the [[Athens Charter]], where the population from the old core was relocated into new [[residential area]]s.{{sfn|Müller|2005|p=172}} However, as a result, the inner-city and historical areas fell in significance and degenerated into a [[slum]].{{sfn|Müller|2005|p=172}} A number of extensive [[panel building|panel]] block housing estates were constructed, including [[Retkinia]], Teofilów, Widzew, Radogoszcz, and Chojny. These block housing estates were constructed between 1960 and 1990, covering an area of almost {{convert|30|km2|sqmi}} and accommodating a large part of the populace.{{sfn|Kłysik|1998|p=175}} |
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In mid-1981 Łódź became famous for its massive [[summer 1981 hunger demonstrations in Poland|hunger demonstration of local mothers and their children]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Polish Revolution: Solidarity |first=Timothy Garton |last=Ash |date=1 January 1999 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=0300095686 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/07/28/world/polish-minister-and-union-reach-compromise-on-meat-ration-cut.html?sec=health | title=Polish Minister and Union Reach Compromise on Meat Ration Cut | author1=James M. Markham | work=The New York Times | date=1981-07-28 | access-date=13 August 2022 | archive-date=13 May 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220513142104/https://www.nytimes.com/1981/07/28/world/polish-minister-and-union-reach-compromise-on-meat-ration-cut.html?sec=health | url-status=live }}</ref> |
In mid-1981 Łódź became famous for its massive [[summer 1981 hunger demonstrations in Poland|hunger demonstration of local mothers and their children]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Polish Revolution: Solidarity |first=Timothy Garton |last=Ash |date=1 January 1999 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=0300095686 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/07/28/world/polish-minister-and-union-reach-compromise-on-meat-ration-cut.html?sec=health | title=Polish Minister and Union Reach Compromise on Meat Ration Cut | author1=James M. Markham | work=The New York Times | date=1981-07-28 | access-date=13 August 2022 | archive-date=13 May 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220513142104/https://www.nytimes.com/1981/07/28/world/polish-minister-and-union-reach-compromise-on-meat-ration-cut.html?sec=health | url-status=live }}</ref> |
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== Geography == |
== Geography == |
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[[File:Lodz plac Wolnosci (dron 1) (cropped).jpg|thumb|320px|Panorama of the Łódź city center]] |
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Łódź covers an area of approximately {{convert|293|km2|abbr=out}} and is located in the centre of Poland.{{sfn|Cudny|2016|p=120}} The city lies in the [[upland and lowland|lowlands]] of the [[North European Plain|Central European Plain]], not exceeding 300 metres in elevation.{{sfn|Cudny|2016|p=120}} Topographically, the Łódź region is generally characterised by a flat landscape, with only several highlands which do not exceed 50 metres above the terrain level.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|p=90}} The soil is predominantly sandy (62%) followed by [[clay]] (24%), [[silt]] (8%), and organogenic formations (6%) from regional wetlands.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|p=91}} The [[forest cover]] (equivalent to 4.2% of the whole country) is considerably low compared to other cities, regions, and provinces of Poland.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|pp=91–92}} |
Łódź covers an area of approximately {{convert|293|km2|abbr=out}} and is located in the centre of Poland.{{sfn|Cudny|2016|p=120}} The city lies in the [[upland and lowland|lowlands]] of the [[North European Plain|Central European Plain]], not exceeding 300 metres in elevation.{{sfn|Cudny|2016|p=120}} Topographically, the Łódź region is generally characterised by a flat landscape, with only several highlands which do not exceed 50 metres above the terrain level.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|p=90}} The soil is predominantly sandy (62%) followed by [[clay]] (24%), [[silt]] (8%), and organogenic formations (6%) from regional wetlands.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|p=91}} The [[forest cover]] (equivalent to 4.2% of the whole country) is considerably low compared to other cities, regions, and provinces of Poland.{{sfn|Marszał|Kobojek|Niewiadomski|Tołoczko|2014|pp=91–92}} |
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{{Weather box|location = Łódź, elevation: {{convert|68|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}, 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present |
{{Weather box|location = Łódź, elevation: {{convert|68|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}, 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present |
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== |
==Administration== |
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===Government=== |
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Łódź was previously{{Clarify|reason=From when? Till when? During which period?|date=January 2024}} subdivided into five boroughs ({{lang|pl|[[dzielnica]]}}): Bałuty, Widzew, Śródmieście, Polesie, Górna. |
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[[File:20180913 182134 Pałac Juliusza Heinzla.jpg|thumb|right|[[Juliusz Heinzl Palace]] (left) serves as the seat of city authorities and the local council.]] |
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The city's governance is executed by ''Urząd Miasta Łodzi'', a local council or [[town hall]], currently based at [[Juliusz Heinzl Palace]].<ref name="Bip1">{{cite web |url=https://bip.uml.lodz.pl/urzad-miasta/ |title=Urząd Miasta |date=2024 |website=bip.uml.lodz.pl |publisher=Biuletyn Informacji Publicznej |access-date=14 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> The power is divided between the [[List of mayors of Łódź|President of Łódź]] (''Prezydent Łodzi''), a title held by the [[mayor]], and the ''Rada Miejska'' assembly comprising 37 elected deputies.<ref name="Bip2">{{cite web |url=https://bip.uml.lodz.pl/wladze/rada-miejska-w-lodzi/ |title=Rada Miejska w Łodzi |date=2024 |website=bip.uml.lodz.pl |publisher=Biuletyn Informacji Publicznej |access-date=14 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> The term in office for deputies is 5 years.<ref name="Bip2"/> Łódź also acts as a [[city with powiat rights]], exercising the powers and duties of a local [[powiat]] county.<ref name="Bip3">{{cite web |url=https://bip.uml.lodz.pl/wladze/ |title=Władze |date=2024 |website=bip.uml.lodz.pl |publisher=Biuletyn Informacji Publicznej |access-date=14 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> |
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Łódź is the capital of [[Łódź Voivodeship]], one of Poland's 16 provinces, and hosts the [[voivodeship sejmik]] – a regional assembly.{{sfn|Badziak|Łapa|2009}}{{pn|date=September 2024}} The city is also the seat of the [[voivode]], the province's governor who is the representative of the [[Council of Ministers (Poland)|Polish Council of Ministers]] in the voivodeship, is the head of the combined government administration, acts as supervisory authority over local government units and as a higher-level authority within the meaning of the provisions on administrative proceedings.{{sfn|Badziak|Łapa|2009}}{{pn|date=September 2024}} |
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However, the city has since been divided into 36 {{lang|pl|[[osiedle|osiedla]]}} ('districts'): Bałuty-Centrum, Bałuty-Doły, Bałuty Zachodnie, Julianów-Marysin-Rogi, Łagiewniki, Radogoszcz, Teofilów-Wielkopolska, Osiedle Wzniesień Łódzkich, Chojny, Chojny-Dąbrowa, Górniak, Nad Nerem, Piastów-Kurak, Rokicie, Ruda, Wiskitno, Osiedle im. Józefa Montwiłła-Mireckiego, Karolew-Retkinia Wschód, Koziny, Lublinek-Pienista, Retkinia Zachód-Smulsko, Stare Polesie, Zdrowie-Mania, Złotno, Śródmieście-Wschód, Osiedle Katedralna, Andrzejów, Dolina Łódki, Mileszki, Nowosolna, Olechów-Janów, Stary Widzew, Stoki, Widzew-Wschód, Zarzew, and Osiedle nr 33. |
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In medieval times, the town was governed by the [[burgomaster]], who began his term as early as 1470. The first individual who held the title of |
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"president" was Karol Tangermann, a close aide of [[Rajmund Rembieliński]], when it was still a part of [[Congress Poland]].<ref name="Podolska">{{cite book |last1=Podolska |first1=Joanna |last2=Waingertner |first2=Przemysław |date=2008 |title=Prezydenci miasta Łodzi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZA0sAQAAIAAJ&q=karol%20tangermann |location=Łódź |publisher=Tow. Naukowe |page=6 |isbn=9788387749866 |language=pl}}</ref> The first president of Łódź under the independent [[Second Polish Republic]] was [[Leopold Skulski]] (1917–1919), who subsequently became the [[prime minister of Poland]].{{sfn|Badziak|Łapa|2009}}{{pn|date=September 2024}} The incumbent president since 2010 is [[Hanna Zdanowska]] from the [[Civic Coalition (Poland)|Civic Coalition]] party. |
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===Administrative division=== |
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Łódź was previously divided into 5 major boroughs (''[[dzielnica]]'') – Bałuty, Górna, Polesie, Śródmieście, and Widzew. In January 1993, the system of boroughs was abolished and the city became a single entity with no real subdivisions. In April 2000, a system of 36{{efn|List of the 36 units or neighbourhoods: Bałuty-Centrum, Bałuty-Doły, Bałuty Zachodnie, Julianów-Marysin-Rogi, Łagiewniki, Radogoszcz, Teofilów-Wielkopolska, Osiedle Wzniesień Łódzkich, Chojny, Chojny-Dąbrowa, Górniak, Nad Nerem, Piastów-Kurak, Rokicie, Ruda, Wiskitno, Osiedle im. Józefa Montwiłła-Mireckiego, Karolew-Retkinia Wschód, Koziny, Lublinek-Pienista, Retkinia Zachód-Smulsko, Stare Polesie, Zdrowie-Mania, Złotno, Śródmieście-Wschód, Osiedle Katedralna, Andrzejów, Dolina Łódki, Mileszki, Nowosolna, Olechów-Janów, Stary Widzew, Stoki, Widzew-Wschód, Zarzew, and Osiedle nr 33.}} neighbourhoods or dependent units (''[[osiedle]]'') was imposed by the City Council for administrative purposes only; these units have no local governing or regulatory authority. |
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==Demographics== |
==Demographics== |
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[[File:Ignacy Płażewski, Prządki przy pracy, I-4717-4.jpg|thumb|Female employees at a textile factory in Łódź, 1950s]] |
[[File:Ignacy Płażewski, Prządki przy pracy, I-4717-4.jpg|thumb|left|Female employees at a textile factory in Łódź, 1950s]] |
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{{Historical populations|1950|620273|1960|709698|1970|762699|1980|835658|1990|848258|2000|798418|2010|737098|2020|672185|footnote=source<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.polskawliczbach.pl/Lodz | title=Łódź (łódzkie) » mapy, nieruchomości, GUS, noclegi, szkoły, regon, atrakcje, kody pocztowe, wypadki drogowe, bezrobocie, wynagrodzenie, zarobki, tabele, edukacja, demografia | access-date=8 June 2022 | archive-date=8 June 2022 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220608214512/https://www.polskawliczbach.pl/Lodz | url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
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According to [[Statistics Poland]] (GUS), Łódź was inhabited by 672,185 people and had a [[population density]] of 2,292 persons per square kilometre (5,940/sq mi), {{as of|2020|12|lc=y|post=.}}{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=3, 7}} Approximately 55.7 per cent of inhabitants are of working age (18–64 years), which is a considerable decrease from 64.1 per cent in 2010.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|p=7}} An estimated 29.1 per cent is of post-working age compared to 21.8 per cent ten years earlier.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=7, 8}} In 2020, 54.39 per cent (365,500) of all residents were women.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=7, 8}} Łódź has one of the highest [[feminization (sociology)|feminisation]] rates among Poland's major cities, a legacy of the city's industrial past, when the textile factories attracted large numbers of female employees.{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} |
According to [[Statistics Poland]] (GUS), Łódź was inhabited by 672,185 people and had a [[population density]] of 2,292 persons per square kilometre (5,940/sq mi), {{as of|2020|12|lc=y|post=.}}{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=3, 7}} Approximately 55.7 per cent of inhabitants are of working age (18–64 years), which is a considerable decrease from 64.1 per cent in 2010.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|p=7}} An estimated 29.1 per cent is of post-working age compared to 21.8 per cent ten years earlier.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=7, 8}} In 2020, 54.39 per cent (365,500) of all residents were women.{{sfn|Statistical Office in Łódź – Łódzkie Centre for Regional Surveys|2021|pp=7, 8}} Łódź has one of the highest [[feminization (sociology)|feminisation]] rates among Poland's major cities, a legacy of the city's industrial past, when the textile factories attracted large numbers of female employees.{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} |
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{{Historical populations|1950|620183|1960|709698|1970|762454|1978|823326|1988|854261|2002|789318|2011|728892|2021|670642|source=<ref>{{cite web |title=1950 census|url=https://statlibr.stat.gov.pl/exlibris/aleph/a22_1/apache_media/V23BYCLDIL473QC8MPYRQGUYFKVYDV.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=1960 census|url=https://statlibr.stat.gov.pl/exlibris/aleph/a22_1/apache_media/81YKKICKRTXKV5LAER54LARGAJ6BEJ.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=1970 census|url=https://statlibr.stat.gov.pl/exlibris/aleph/a22_1/apache_media/76EMNHPUX2B49GMQEDMCT2V3K4HFFT.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Demographic and occupational structure and housing conditions of the urban population in 1978-1988|url=https://statlibr.stat.gov.pl/exlibris/aleph/a22_1/apache_media/RQ1U9XAX48KJJDQ54QSAFQKQ6AK6GS.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Statistics Poland - National Censuses|url=https://bdl.stat.gov.pl/bdl/dane/podgrup/temat/}}</ref>}} |
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At its peak in 1988 the population was around 854,000;{{sfn|Obraniak|2007|p=5}} however, this has since declined due to low [[fertility]] rates, [[emigration|outward migration]] and a lower life expectancy than in other parts of Poland.{{sfn|Szukalski|Martinez-Fernandez|Weyman|2013|p=7}} Łódź was the country's second largest city until 2007, when it lost its position to [[Kraków]].{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} A major contributing factor was the abrupt transition from [[planned economy|socialist]] to [[market economy|market-based]] economy after 1989 and the resulting economic crisis,{{sfn|Cox|2014|p=14}} but the economic growth which followed has not reversed the trend.{{sfn|Holm|Marcińczak|Ogrodowczyk|2015|pp=169–170}} [[Depopulation]] and ageing are major impediments for the future development of the city, putting strain on social infrastructure and medical services.{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} |
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At its peak in 1988 the population was around 854,000;{{sfn|Obraniak|2007|p=5}} however, this has since declined due to low [[fertility]] rates, [[emigration|outward migration]] and a lower life expectancy than in other parts of Poland.{{sfn|Szukalski|Martinez-Fernandez|Weyman|2013|p=7}} Łódź was the country's second largest city until 2007, when it lost its position to [[Kraków]].{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} A major contributing factor was the abrupt transition from [[planned economy|socialist]] to [[market economy|market-based]] economy after 1989 and the resulting economic crisis,{{sfn|Cox|2014|p=14}} but the economic growth which followed has not reversed the trend.{{sfn|Holm|Marcińczak|Ogrodowczyk|2015|pp=169–170}} [[Depopulation]] and ageing are major impediments for the future development of the city, putting strain on social infrastructure and medical services.{{sfn|Cudny|2012|pp=11–12}} As a result of the continuing demographic crisis and rapid population loss, Łódź was overtaken by [[Wrocław]] and dropped to become the country's fourth-largest city in 2022.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.wroclaw.pl/dla-mieszkanca/wroclaw-trzecim-najwiekszym-miastem-polski-spis-powszechny#:~:text=GUS%3A%20w%202021%20roku%20Wroc%C5%82aw,najwi%C4%99kszym%20miastem%20Polski%2C%20wyprzedzaj%C4%85c%20%C5%81%C3%B3d%C5%BA |title=GUS: Wrocław stał się trzecim największym miastem Polski, wyprzedzając Łódź |last=Wołodko |first=Maciej |date=20 September 2022 |website=Wrocław.pl |access-date=14 August 2024}}</ref> |
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Historically, Łódź was multi-ethnic and its diverse population comprised migrants from other regions of [[Europe]]. In 1839, approximately 78 per cent (6,648) of the total population was [[Germans|German]]. In 1913, Łódź had a population of 506,100 people, of whom 251,700 (49.7%) were [[Polish people|Poles]], 171,900 (34%) were [[History of Jews in Poland|Jews]], 75,000 (14.8%) were Germans, and 6,300 (1.3%) were [[Russians]].{{Sfn|Kossert|2010|p=40}} According to the [[Polish census of 1931|1931 Polish census]], the total population of 604,000 included 375,000 (59%) Poles, 192,000 (32%) Jews and 54,000 (9%) Germans. By 1939, the Jewish minority had grown to well over 200,000.<ref>Gordon J Horwitz. ''Ghettostadt: Łódź and the Making of a Nazi City''. [[Harvard University Press]]. 2009. p. 3.</ref> |
Historically, Łódź was multi-ethnic and its diverse population comprised migrants from other regions of [[Europe]]. In 1839, approximately 78 per cent (6,648) of the total population was [[Germans|German]]. In 1913, Łódź had a population of 506,100 people, of whom 251,700 (49.7%) were [[Polish people|Poles]], 171,900 (34%) were [[History of Jews in Poland|Jews]], 75,000 (14.8%) were Germans, and 6,300 (1.3%) were [[Russians]].{{Sfn|Kossert|2010|p=40}} According to the [[Polish census of 1931|1931 Polish census]], the total population of 604,000 included 375,000 (59%) Poles, 192,000 (32%) Jews and 54,000 (9%) Germans. By 1939, the Jewish minority had grown to well over 200,000.<ref>Gordon J Horwitz. ''Ghettostadt: Łódź and the Making of a Nazi City''. [[Harvard University Press]]. 2009. p. 3.</ref> |
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===Religion=== |
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==Places of interest== |
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{{multiple image |
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[[File:78 Piotrkowska Street.jpg|thumb|Sculpture of [[Artur Rubinstein]] and his childhood home at [[Piotrkowska Street]]]] |
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| width1 = 140 |
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| image1 = SM Łódź Bazylika archikatedralna św. Stanisława Kostki (2017) (2) ID 613028.jpg |
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| alt1 = Catholic Cathedral |
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| width2 = 176 |
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| image2 = SM Łódź Kościół św Mateusza 2017 (2) ID 613039.jpg |
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| alt2 = Lutheran Church |
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| footer = [[Łódź Cathedral|Catholic Basilica of St. Stanislaus Kostka]] (left) and [[St. Matthew's Church, Łódź|St. Matthew's Lutheran Church]] (right) |
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}} |
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The majority of believers in Łódź adhere to [[Roman Catholicism]], the largest [[religious denomination]] in Poland.<ref name="niedziela">{{cite web |url=https://www.niedziela.pl/artykul/89241/Lodz-Koscielne-statystyki |title=Łódź: Kościelne statystyki |last=Bugaj |first=Marcin |date=2023 |website=niedziela.pl |publisher=Instytut Niedziela |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> The first Catholic [[bishopric]] was established in December 1920 and has been elevated to the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Łódź]] in 1992 by [[Pope John Paul II]].<ref name="JakSto">{{cite book |last1=Jakubowski |first1=Wojciech |last2=Stolarczyk |first2=Marek |date=2011 |title=Organizacja Kościoła Rzymskokatolickiego na ziemiach polskich od X do XXI wieku |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WkRSAQAAIAAJ&q=lodzka%20diecezja%201920%201992 |location=Warszawa (Warsaw) |publisher=Aspra-JR |page=288 |isbn=9788375452624 |lang=pl}}</ref> The primary church for Catholic worship is the [[Łódź Cathedral|Basilica of St. Stanislaus Kostka]], which is often reserved for special occasions or during religious holidays.<ref name="JakSto"/> Constructed in 1912 in the [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]] style, it is the tallest building in the city and one of Poland's tallest churches since the completion of the tower in 1927.<ref name="Arch">{{cite web |url=https://www.archidiecezja.lodz.pl/parafia/swietego-stanislawa-kostki |title=Parafia Świętego Stanisława Kostki w Łodzi |date=2024 |website=archidiecezja.lodz.pl |publisher=Kuria Metropolitalna Łódzka |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> The [[Feast of Corpus Christi]] is widely celebrated and annual marches take place on Piotrkowska Street, in front of the Cathedral. Despite this, [[church attendance]] in Łódź is one of the lowest in Poland; mass attendance was estimated at 26% in 2013 and fell to 17% by 2023.<ref name="niedziela"/> Statistics also show that the city and its environs have one of the highest concentration of [[atheists]] in Poland.<ref name"pomorska">{{cite web |url=https://pomorska.pl/polskie-zaglebie-ateizmu-zaczyna-sie-we-wloclawku-poznaj-tajemnice-zakletego-kregu/ar/c1-17938065 |title=Polskie zagłębie ateizmu zaczyna się we Włocławku? Poznaj tajemnice "zaklętego kręgu" |date=2023 |website=pomorska.pl |publisher=Gazeta Pomorska |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> |
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The most notable and recognizable landmark of the city is [[Piotrkowska Street]], which remains the high-street and main tourist attraction in the city, runs north to south for a little over {{convert|5|km|mi|spell=in|abbr=off}}. This makes it one of the longest commercial streets in the world. Most of the building façades, many of which date back to the 19th century, have been renovated.<ref>[https://www.poland.travel/en/lodz/piotrkowska-street-stroll "Piotrkowska Street Stroll."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729004747/https://www.poland.travel/en/lodz/piotrkowska-street-stroll |date=29 July 2017 }} ''Poland's Official Travel Website''. Retrieved 18 July 2017.</ref> It is the site of most restaurants, bars and cafes in Łódź's city centre. Important monuments of achitecture along Piotrkowska Street are the Old Town Hall, the Descent Of The Holy Spirit Church, the [[Łódź Cathedral|Łódź Catholic Cathedral]] and the [[St. Matthew's Church, Łódź|St. Matthew's Lutheran Church]]. Other important churches in the city center include the [[Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Łódź|Alexander Nevsky Orthodox Cathedral]] and the [[Karol Scheibler's Chapel]] in the Lutheran part of the Old Cemetery at Ogrodowa Street. |
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Historically, Łódź had a strong and influential [[Protestant]] population (11% in 1921, 9.2% in 1931) that had its origins with the migration of German-speaking weavers and textile workers throughout the 19th century.<ref name="Rzepkowski">{{cite journal |last1=Rzepkowski |first1=Arkadiusz |date=2008 |title=Skład narodowościowy, wyznaniowy i językowy ludności Łodzi w Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej |url=https://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.hdl_11089_19440/c/3-087_104-Rzepkowski.pdf |journal=Przegląd Nauk Historycznych |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=87–104 |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> The [[Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland|Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession]] representing [[Lutherans]] is the largest of the Protestant denominations. The city falls under the [[Lutheran Diocese of Warsaw]], though the congregation is headquartered at the [[Church of St. Peter and St. Paul, Pabianice|Church of St. Peter and St. Paul]] in [[Pabianice]]. The only active Lutheran church in Łódź is the historic [[St. Matthew's Church, Łódź|St. Matthew's Church]], which seasonally serves as a concert hall. There is also a [[parish]] of the [[Polish Reformed Church]] ([[Reformed Christianity|Calvinist]]), dating back to 1888, as well as [[Methodism|Methodist]] and [[Evangelicalism|Evangelical]] temples. Łódź is considered to be one of the centres of [[Jehovah's Witnesses]]' activity in Poland. |
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Many neglected tenement houses and factories throughout the entire city centre have been renovated in recent years as part of the ongoing revitalization project run by the local authorities.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Krakowiak |first1=Beata |date=2015 |title=Museums in Łódź as an Element of Tourism Space and the Connection Between Museums and the City's Tourism Image |journal=Tourism |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=87–96 |doi=10.1515/tour-2015-0008 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/tour.2015.25.issue-2/tour-2015-0008/tour-2015-0008.xml |issn=0867-5856 |eissn=2080-6922 |access-date=18 July 2017 |doi-access=free |hdl=11089/20697 |hdl-access=free }}{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (p. 93).</ref> The best example of urban regeneration in Łódź is the [[Manufaktura]] complex, occupying a large area of a former cotton factory dating back to the nineteenth century.<ref name="Kaczmarek">{{cite book |last1=Kaczmarek |first1=Sylwia |last2=Marcinczak |first2=Szymon |editor1-last=Leary |editor1-first=Michael E. |editor2-last=McCarthy |editor2-first=John |title=The Routledge Companion to Urban Regeneration |publisher=Routledge |date=2013 |pages=98–106 |chapter= The Blessing in Disguise: Urban Regeneration in Poland in a Neo-Liberal Milieu |isbn=978-0-415-53904-3}} (p. 103).</ref> The site, which was the heart of [[Izrael Poznański]]'s industrial empire, hosts a shopping mall, numerous restaurants, 4-star hotel, multiplex cinema, factory museum, bowling and fitness facilities and a science exhibition centre.<ref name="Strumiłło">{{cite book |last=Strumiłło |first=Krystyna |editor-last=Charytonowicz |editor-first=Jerzy |title=Advances in Human Factors and Sustainable Infrastructure |publisher=Springer |date=2016 |pages=51–59 |chapter=Adaptive Reuse of Buildings as an Important Factor of Sustainable Development |isbn=978-3-319-41940-4}} (p. 56).</ref> Opened in 2006, it quickly became a centre of cultural entertainment and shopping,<ref name="Strumiłło" /> as well as a recognizable city landmark attracting both domestic and foreign tourists.<ref name="Kaczmarek" /> Another example is the former factory of [[Karl Wilhelm Scheibler|Karl Scheibler]] on [[Księży Młyn (Łódź)|Księży Młyn]], which was turned into a mixed-use complex of offices and housing. |
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[[Judaism]] was once the city's second largest denomination (33.4% in 1931), with up to 250 [[synagogue]]s and [[shtiebel]]s in existence prior to 1939 and a strong cultural output.<ref name="Rzepkowski"/> The [[Stara Synagogue (Łódź)|Stara Synagogue]], commonly known as Alte Szil, and [[Ezras Israel Synagogue]] were the primary places of worship for [[Orthodox Jews]]. The [[Great Synagogue (Łódź)|Great Synagogue]], the largest of its kind, served the [[Reform Judaism|Reformed Jewish community]]. All were destroyed during the Second World War, except for the defunct 19th-century Synagoga Reicherów. The [[Union of Jewish Religious Communities in Poland]] (ZGWŻ) manages the Łódź municipality; the local base is situated at a newer synagogue on Pomorska Street where the Community maintains kosher facilities and a [[mikveh]].<ref name="kehila">{{cite web |url=http://kehilalodz.com/o-nas/#:~:text=Synagoga%20przy%20ul.,wymogi%20koszerno%C5%9Bci%20oraz%20wszelkie%20standardy. |title=O nas |date=2024 |website=kehilalodz.com |publisher=Gmina Wyznaniowa Żydowska |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> |
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[[File:Light Move Festival35(js).jpg|thumb|left|Light Move Festival in Łódź]] |
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Łódź has one of the best museums of modern art in Poland. {{lang|pl|[[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|Muzeum Sztuki]]|italic=no}} has three branches, two of which (ms1 and ms2) display collections of 20th and 21st-century art. The newest addition to the museum, ms2 was opened in 2008 in the Manufaktura complex.<ref name="Krakowiak, p. 88">Krakowiak, p. 88.</ref> The unique collection of the Museum is presented in an unconventional way. Instead of a chronological lecture on the development of art, works of art representing various periods and movements are arranged into a story touching themes and motifs important for the contemporary public. The third branch of {{lang|pl|Muzeum Sztuki|italic=no}}, located in one of the city's many industrial palaces, also has more traditional art on display, presenting works by European and Polish masters such as [[Stanisław Wyspiański]] and [[Henryk Rodakowski]].<ref>Krakowiak, p 91</ref> |
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Łódź is the seat of a [[Mariavite Church]] diocese, initially created in 1910.<ref name="Górecki">{{cite book |last=Górecki |first=Artur |date=2010 |title=Próby odnowy życia religijnego w Królestwie Polskim po powstaniu styczniowym |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ooBPAQAAIAAJ&q=mariawici%20lodz%201910 |location=Toruń |publisher=Europejskie Centrum Edukacyjne |page=140 |isbn=9788362363100 |lang=pl}}</ref> The Marivites are followers of [[Old Catholicism]] and a considerable minority; there are only three Mariavite [[diocese]]s across the country.<ref name="Saładaj">{{cite web |url=https://um.pabianice.pl/artykul/110/2972/mariawici |title=Mariawici |last=Saładaj |first=Sławomir |date= |website=um.pabianice.pl |publisher=Biuletyn Informacji Publicznej |access-date=15 August 2024 |lang=pl |archive-date=18 August 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230818141705/https://um.pabianice.pl/artykul/110/2972/mariawici |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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[[File:Łódź, ul. Ogrodowa 17, tkalnia wysoka (ob. ms2), 1895 -4.JPG|thumb|right|[[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|Muzeum Sztuki]], ms2 branch, a museum and gallery of modern art]] |
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Among the 14 registered museums to be found in Łódź,<ref>Krakowiak, p. 88. Krakowiak also lists 13 more institutions that operate as museums but are not registered with the National Institute for Museums and Public Collections (p. 95), bringing the total number of museums in Łódź to 27.</ref> there is the independent Book Art Museum, awarded the American Printing History Association's Institutional Award for 2015 for its outstanding contribution to the study, recording, preservation, and dissemination of printing history in Poland over the last 35 years.<ref>[http://www.aepm.eu/news/discover-the-book-art-museum-lodz-poland/ "Discover the Book Art Museum, Łódź, Poland."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180724093553/http://www.aepm.eu/news/discover-the-book-art-museum-lodz-poland/ |date=24 July 2018 }} ''AEPM: Association of European Printing Museums''. January 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2017.</ref> Other notable museums include the [[Central Museum of Textiles]] with its open-air display of wooden architecture, the Cinematography Museum, located in Scheibler Palace, and the Museum of Independence Traditions, occupying the building of a historical Tsarist prison from the late 19th century.<ref name="Krakowiak, p. 88"/> A more unusual establishment, the {{lang|pl|Dętka|italic=no}} museum offers tourists a chance to visit the municipal sewer designed in the early years of the 20th century by the British engineer [[William Heerlein Lindley]]. |
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[[File:ZOO Lodz tunel.jpg|left|thumb|Orientarium in the [[Łódź Zoo]] opened in 2022]] |
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Łódź also provides plenty of green spaces for recreation. Woodland areas cover 9.61% of the city, with parks taking up an additional 2.37% of the area of Łódź ({{as of|2014|lc=y|post=).}}<ref name="dlugonski">{{cite journal |last1=Długoński |first1=Andrzej |last2=Szumański |first2=Marek |date=2015 |title=Analysis of Green Infrastructure in Lodz, Poland |journal= Journal of Urban Planning and Development |volume=141 |issue=3 |pages=n. pag |issn=0733-9488 |eissn=1943-5444 |doi=10.1061/(ASCE)UP.1943-5444.0000242}}</ref> {{lang|pl|Las Łagiewnicki}} ('Łagiewnicki Forest') is recognized as the largest forested area within the administrative borders of any city in Europe.<ref name="jaskulski">{{cite journal |last1=Jaskulski |first1=Marcin |last2=Szmidt |first2=Aleksander |date=2015 |title=The Tourism Attractiveness of Landforms in Łagiewnicki Forest, Łódź |journal=Tourism |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=27–35 |access-date=28 July 2017 |issn=0867-5856 |eissn=2080-6922 |doi=10.1515/tour-2015-0003 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/tour.2015.25.issue-2/tour-2015-0003/tour-2015-0003.xml |doi-access=free |hdl=11089/20692 |hdl-access=free }}{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (p. 27)</ref> It has an area of 1,245 ha<ref name="dlugonski" /> and is cut across by a number of hiking trails that traverse the hilly landscape on the western edge of [[Łódź Hills Landscape Park]].<ref>See Jaskulski and Szmidt, p. 29, for a map of tourism trails in the forest.</ref> A "natural complex which has remained nearly intact as oak-hornbeam and oak woodland,"<ref name="jaskulski" /> the forest is also rich in history, and its attractions include a [[Franciscan]] friary dating back to the early 18th century and two 17th-century wooden chapels.<ref>{{cite book |title=Ilustrowana Encyklopedia Historii Łodzi |date=2015 |publisher=MyDesign |isbn=978-83-939822-0-2 |editor1-last=Grzegorczyk |editor1-first=Arkadiusz |location=Łódź |pages=59–61}}</ref> |
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Out of a total of 44 parks in Łódź ({{as of|2014|lc=y|post=),}} 11 have historical status, the oldest of them dating back to the middle of the 19th century.<ref>Kaniewska, Anna. [http://www.lodz.ap.gov.pl/art,58,najstarsze-lodzkie-parki "Najstarsze łódzkie parki.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220131071740/https://www.lodz.ap.gov.pl/art,58,najstarsze-lodzkie-parki |date=31 January 2022 }} ''Archiwum Państwowe w Łodzi''. [''The State Archive in Łódź'']. 3 April 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2017.</ref> The largest of these, Józef Piłsudski Park ({{convert|188.21|ha|sqmi}}),<ref name="dlugonski" /> is located near the [[Łódź Zoo]] and the city's botanical garden, and together with them it comprises an extensive green complex known as {{lang|pl|Zdrowie}} serving the recreational needs of the city. Another notable park located in Łódź is the [[Józef Poniatowski Park in Łódź|Józef Poniatowski Park]]. |
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[[File:Pałac Edwarda Herbsta.jpg|thumb|right|Herbst Palace, designed by [[Hilary Majewski]], an art gallery within a historical mansion, which holds paintings from all over Europe]] |
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The [[Jewish Cemetery, Łódź|Jewish Cemetery at Bracka Street]], one of the largest of its kind in Europe, was established in 1892. After the [[invasion of Poland]] by [[Nazi Germany]] in 1939, this cemetery became a part of Łódź's ''eastern territory'' known as the enclosed Łódź ghetto (''Ghetto Field''). Between 1940 and 1944, approximately 43,000 burials took place within the grounds of this rounded-up cemetery.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishlodzcemetery.org/EN/AboutCemetery/AboutCemeteryAtBrackaStreet/Default.aspx|title=Jewish Lodz Cemetery – About Cemetery At Bracka Street|access-date=25 January 2017|archive-date=7 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161107091938/http://www.jewishlodzcemetery.org/EN/AboutCemetery/AboutCemeteryAtBrackaStreet/Default.aspx|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1956, a monument by Muszko in memory of the victims of the [[Łódź Ghetto]] was erected at the cemetery. It features a smooth obelisk, a [[menorah (Temple)|menorah]], and a broken oak tree with leaves stemming from the tree (symbolizing death, especially death at a young age). {{As of|2014|post=,}} the cemetery has an area of {{convert|39.6|ha}}. It contains approximately 180,000 graves, approximately 65,000 labelled tombstones, ohels and mausoleums. Many of these monuments have significant architectural value; 100 of these have been declared historical monuments and have been in various stages of restoration. The mausoleum of [[Izrael Poznański|Izrael and Eleanora Poznański]] is perhaps the largest Jewish tombstone in the world and the only one decorated with mosaics.<ref>{{cite web |title=The New Cemetery in Łódź |url=http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/lodz/newcem.htm |publisher=Lodz ShtetLinks |access-date=12 January 2013 |archive-date=13 March 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130313232301/http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/lodz/newcem.htm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jewish Cemetery |url=http://www.lodzjews.org/root/form/en/cmentarz/index.asp |publisher=Fundacja Monumentum Iudaicum Lodzese |access-date=12 January 2013 |archive-date=18 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120418053651/http://www.lodzjews.org/root/form/en/cmentarz/index.asp |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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File:Plac Wolnosci 7 - Ratusz.jpg|Old town hall |
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File:Kościół Zesłania Ducha Świętego w Łodzi 01.jpg|Descent Of The Holy Spirit Church |
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File:SM Łódź Bazylika archikatedralna św. Stanisława Kostki (2017) (1) ID 613028.jpg|[[Łódź Cathedral|Łódź Catholic Cathedral]] |
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File:SM Łódź Kościół św Mateusza 2017 (2) ID 613039.jpg|St. Matthew's Lutheran Church |
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File:SM Łódź Cerkiew katedralna św Aleksandra Newskiego 2017 (1) ID 613040.jpg|Alexander Nevsky Orthodox Cathedral |
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File:Lodz Biala Fabryka (4).jpg|[[Central Museum of Textiles, Łódź|Central Museum of Textiles]] - former Ludwik Geyer's factory |
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File:Lodz manufaktura 01.jpg|[[Manufaktura]] complex - former Poznanski's factory |
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File:ŁÓDŹ 20190716 195624-025.jpg|[[Izrael Poznański Palace]] |
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File:ODNOWIONY POMNIK NA CMENTARZU ŻYDOWSKIM W ŁODZI.JPG|Poznanski's Mausoleum in Jewish Cemetery |
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File:Lodz Fabryka Scheiblera Tymienieckiego 2010-05.jpg|[[Księży Młyn (Łódź)|Księży Młyn]] - former Scheibler's factory |
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File:Łódź-Karol Scheibler's Chapel (3).jpg|[[Karol Scheibler's Chapel]] in the Lutheran part of the Old Cemetery at Ogrodowa Street |
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File:Pomnik Czynu Rewolucyjnego Lodz 1.jpg|Monument of the [[Russian Revolution of 1905|Revolution of 1905]] |
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</gallery> |
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==Economy and infrastructure== |
==Economy and infrastructure== |
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===Transport=== |
===Transport=== |
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[[File:LodzDocelowyUkladDrog.svg|thumb|right|Major road network in the city]] |
[[File:LodzDocelowyUkladDrog.svg|thumb|right|Major road network in the city (2009)]] |
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[[File:Łódź tramway network.svg|thumb|right|Łódź tram network]] |
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Łódź is situated near the geographical centre of Poland, only a short distance away from the motorway junction in [[Stryków]] where the two main north–south ([[National road 1 (Poland)|A1]]) and east–west ([[A2 autostrada (Poland)|A2]]) Polish transport corridors meet, which positions the city on two of the ten major trans-European routes: from [[Gdańsk]] to [[Žilina]] and [[Brno]] and from [[Berlin]] to [[Moscow]] via [[Warsaw]].<ref name="Wiśniewski">{{cite journal |last1=Wiśniewski |first1=Szymon |date=2017 |title=Łódź in the Regional and National Transportation System |journal=Space-Society-Economy |volume=19 |issue=19 |pages=65–86 |doi=10.18778/1733-3180.19.04 |url=http://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11089/22640/0_4_%5b65%5d-86_Wi%c5%9bniewski.pdf |issn=1733-3180 |access-date=17 July 2018 |doi-access=free |archive-date=17 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180717212553/http://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11089/22640/0_4_%5b65%5d-86_Wi%c5%9bniewski.pdf |url-status=live }} p. 66.</ref> It is also part of the [[Eurasian Land Bridge|New Silk Road]],<ref>{{cite news |last=Shepard |first=Wade |title=Europe Finally Wakes Up To The New Silk Road, And This Could Be Big |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/11/10/europe-finally-wakes-up-to-the-new-silk-road |work=Forbes |date=10 November 2016 |access-date=22 July 2018 |archive-date=22 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722130308/https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/11/10/europe-finally-wakes-up-to-the-new-silk-road |url-status=live }}</ref> a regular cargo rail connection with the Chinese city of [[Chengdu]] operating since 2013.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bentyn |first1=Zbigniew |date=2016 |title=Poland as a Regional Logistic Hub Serving the Development of the Northern Corridor of the New Silk Route |journal=Journal of Management, Marketing and Logistics |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=135–44 |url=http://dergipark.ulakbim.gov.tr/jmml/article/download/5000196803/5000170450 |issn=2148-6670 |access-date=20 July 2018 |archive-date=22 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722132124/http://dergipark.ulakbim.gov.tr/jmml/article/download/5000196803/5000170450 |url-status=dead }} (p. 142).</ref> Łódź is served by the [[national roads in Poland|national motorway network]], an international airport, and long-distance and regional railways. It is at the centre of a [[regional rail|regional]] and [[commuter rail]] network operating from the city's various train stations. Bus and tram services are operated by a municipal public transport company. There are {{convert|193|km|abbr=on}} of bicycle routes throughout the city (as in January 2019).<ref>{{cite web| url=https://rowerowalodz.pl/infrastruktura/statystyki-rowerowek| title=Statystyki rowerówek| trans-title=Bike roads statistics| website=rowerowalodz.pl| access-date=2020-11-10| language=pl| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190815195139/https://rowerowalodz.pl/infrastruktura/statystyki-rowerowek| archive-date=2019-08-15| url-status=live}}</ref> |
Łódź is situated near the geographical centre of Poland, only a short distance away from the motorway junction in [[Stryków]] where the two main north–south ([[National road 1 (Poland)|A1]]) and east–west ([[A2 autostrada (Poland)|A2]]) Polish transport corridors meet, which positions the city on two of the ten major trans-European routes: from [[Gdańsk]] to [[Žilina]] and [[Brno]] and from [[Berlin]] to [[Moscow]] via [[Warsaw]].<ref name="Wiśniewski">{{cite journal |last1=Wiśniewski |first1=Szymon |date=2017 |title=Łódź in the Regional and National Transportation System |journal=Space-Society-Economy |volume=19 |issue=19 |pages=65–86 |doi=10.18778/1733-3180.19.04 |url=http://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11089/22640/0_4_%5b65%5d-86_Wi%c5%9bniewski.pdf |issn=1733-3180 |access-date=17 July 2018 |doi-access=free |archive-date=17 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180717212553/http://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11089/22640/0_4_%5b65%5d-86_Wi%c5%9bniewski.pdf |url-status=live }} p. 66.</ref> It is also part of the [[Eurasian Land Bridge|New Silk Road]],<ref>{{cite news |last=Shepard |first=Wade |title=Europe Finally Wakes Up To The New Silk Road, And This Could Be Big |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/11/10/europe-finally-wakes-up-to-the-new-silk-road |work=Forbes |date=10 November 2016 |access-date=22 July 2018 |archive-date=22 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722130308/https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/11/10/europe-finally-wakes-up-to-the-new-silk-road |url-status=live }}</ref> a regular cargo rail connection with the Chinese city of [[Chengdu]] operating since 2013.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bentyn |first1=Zbigniew |date=2016 |title=Poland as a Regional Logistic Hub Serving the Development of the Northern Corridor of the New Silk Route |journal=Journal of Management, Marketing and Logistics |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=135–44 |url=http://dergipark.ulakbim.gov.tr/jmml/article/download/5000196803/5000170450 |issn=2148-6670 |access-date=20 July 2018 |archive-date=22 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722132124/http://dergipark.ulakbim.gov.tr/jmml/article/download/5000196803/5000170450 |url-status=dead }} (p. 142).</ref> Łódź is served by the [[national roads in Poland|national motorway network]], an international airport, and long-distance and regional railways. It is at the centre of a [[regional rail|regional]] and [[commuter rail]] network operating from the city's various train stations. Bus and tram services are operated by a municipal public transport company. There are {{convert|193|km|abbr=on}} of bicycle routes throughout the city (as in January 2019).<ref>{{cite web| url=https://rowerowalodz.pl/infrastruktura/statystyki-rowerowek| title=Statystyki rowerówek| trans-title=Bike roads statistics| website=rowerowalodz.pl| access-date=2020-11-10| language=pl| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190815195139/https://rowerowalodz.pl/infrastruktura/statystyki-rowerowek| archive-date=2019-08-15| url-status=live}}</ref> |
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====Public transport==== |
====Public transport==== |
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{{see also|Trams in Łódź}} |
{{see also|Trams in Łódź}} |
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[[File:Olechow (Lodz) 55 to Airport.JPG|thumb|right|Mercedes Conecto LF buses are heavily utilised in Łódź]] |
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[[File:Transfer station Piotrkowska-Centrum, Łódź Piłsudskiego Av. November 2015 01.jpg|thumb|right|Piotrkowska Centrum tram station, also known as "The Unicorn Stable"]] |
[[File:Transfer station Piotrkowska-Centrum, Łódź Piłsudskiego Av. November 2015 01.jpg|thumb|right|Piotrkowska Centrum tram station, also known as "The Unicorn Stable"]] |
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The Municipal Transport Company – Łódź (Miejskie Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacyjne – Łódź), owned by the Łódź City Government, is responsible for operating 58 bus routes and 19 tram lines.<ref>Sourced from the Łódź article on the Polish Wikipedia site on 19 July 2015</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mpk.lodz.pl/showarticleslist.action?category=1079&About%20MPK|title=About MPK – MPK-Lodz Spolka z o.o.|work=lodz.pl|access-date=12 October 2016|archive-date=8 April 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220408125533/http://www.mpk.lodz.pl/showarticleslist.action?category=1079&About%20MPK|url-status=live}}</ref> |
The Municipal Transport Company – Łódź (Miejskie Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacyjne – Łódź), owned by the Łódź City Government, is responsible for operating 58 bus routes and 19 tram lines.<ref>Sourced from the Łódź article on the Polish Wikipedia site on 19 July 2015</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mpk.lodz.pl/showarticleslist.action?category=1079&About%20MPK|title=About MPK – MPK-Lodz Spolka z o.o.|work=lodz.pl|access-date=12 October 2016|archive-date=8 April 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220408125533/http://www.mpk.lodz.pl/showarticleslist.action?category=1079&About%20MPK|url-status=live}}</ref> The tram network is one of the longest in the country and was the first electrified cable tramway in [[Congress Poland]], beginning its operation on 23 December 1898. The regional tramway network also connects Łódź with the adjacent cities of [[Pabianice]] (since 2023) and [[Konstantynów Łódzki]] (since 2024), which are within the Łódź Agglomeration. The rolling stock largely comprises older but modernised wagons by [[Konstal]] and newer Polish-manufactured types such as [[Pesa Swing]] and [[Moderus Gamma]]. Among the popular models for buses are Mercedes Conecto LF and [[Solaris Urbino 18]]. |
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====Rail==== |
====Rail==== |
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Łódź has a number of long distance and local railway stations. There are two main stations in the city, but with no direct rail connection between them—a legacy of 19th-century railway network planning. Originally constructed in 1866, the centrally-located [[Łódź Fabryczna]] was a [[terminus station]] for a branch line of the [[Warsaw-Vienna railway]],<ref>Grzegorczyk, p. 144.</ref> whereas [[Łódź Kaliska railway station|Łódź Kaliska]] was built more than thirty years later on the central section of the [[Warsaw-Kalisz Railway|Warsaw-Kalisz railway]]. For this reason most intercity train traffic goes to this day through Łódź Kaliska station, despite its relative distance from the city centre, and Łódź Fabryczna serves mainly as a terminal station for trains to [[Warsaw]]. The situation will be remedied in 2026 after the construction of a tunnel connecting the two,<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.rynek-kolejowy.pl/wiadomosci/lodz-tunel-srednicowy--kolejne-dwa-lata-opoznienia-117918.html |title= Łódź: Tunel średnicowy – kolejne dwa lata opóźnienia |access-date= 26 April 2024 |archive-date= 11 April 2024 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240411125402/https://www.rynek-kolejowy.pl/wiadomosci/lodz-tunel-srednicowy--kolejne-dwa-lata-opoznienia-117918.html |url-status= live }}</ref> which is likely to make Łódź Poland's main railway hub.<ref name="dworzec">{{cite news |url=http://www.tvn24.pl/lodz,69/tak-bedzie-wygladalo-lodzkie-prawie-metro,696399.html |title=Superdworzec już jest, będzie (prawie) metro. Łódź ma być komunikacyjnym centrum kraju |date=2 December 2016 |website=TVN24 |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=9 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180709010217/https://www.tvn24.pl/lodz,69/tak-bedzie-wygladalo-lodzkie-prawie-metro,696399.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The tunnel will additionally serve [[Łódzka Kolej Aglomeracyjna|Łódź Commuter Railway]], providing a [[rapid transit]] system for the city, dubbed the Łódź Metro by the media and local authorities.<ref name="metro">{{cite web |url=http://lodz.wyborcza.pl/lodz/1,44788,20093817,lodz-bedzie-miala-metro-i-to-juz-niedlugo.html |title=Łódź będzie miała 'metro'. I to już niedługo |date=18 May 2016 |website=Wyborcza.pl: Magazyn Łódź. |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=19 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170919090758/http://lodz.wyborcza.pl/lodz/1,44788,20093817,lodz-bedzie-miala-metro-i-to-juz-niedlugo.html? |url-status=live }}</ref> Three new stations are being constructed on the underground line, one serving the needs of the [[Manufaktura]] complex, another one serving Koziny |
Łódź has a number of long distance and local railway stations. There are two main stations in the city, but with no direct rail connection between them—a legacy of 19th-century railway network planning. Originally constructed in 1866, the centrally-located [[Łódź Fabryczna]] was a [[terminus station]] for a branch line of the [[Warsaw-Vienna railway]],<ref>Grzegorczyk, p. 144.</ref> whereas [[Łódź Kaliska railway station|Łódź Kaliska]] was built more than thirty years later on the central section of the [[Warsaw-Kalisz Railway|Warsaw-Kalisz railway]]. For this reason most intercity train traffic goes to this day through Łódź Kaliska station, despite its relative distance from the city centre, and Łódź Fabryczna serves mainly as a terminal station for trains to [[Warsaw]]. The situation will be remedied in 2026 after the construction of a tunnel connecting the two,<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.rynek-kolejowy.pl/wiadomosci/lodz-tunel-srednicowy--kolejne-dwa-lata-opoznienia-117918.html |title= Łódź: Tunel średnicowy – kolejne dwa lata opóźnienia |access-date= 26 April 2024 |archive-date= 11 April 2024 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240411125402/https://www.rynek-kolejowy.pl/wiadomosci/lodz-tunel-srednicowy--kolejne-dwa-lata-opoznienia-117918.html |url-status= live }}</ref> which is likely to make Łódź Poland's main railway hub.<ref name="dworzec">{{cite news |url=http://www.tvn24.pl/lodz,69/tak-bedzie-wygladalo-lodzkie-prawie-metro,696399.html |title=Superdworzec już jest, będzie (prawie) metro. Łódź ma być komunikacyjnym centrum kraju |date=2 December 2016 |website=TVN24 |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=9 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180709010217/https://www.tvn24.pl/lodz,69/tak-bedzie-wygladalo-lodzkie-prawie-metro,696399.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The tunnel will additionally serve [[Łódzka Kolej Aglomeracyjna|Łódź Commuter Railway]], providing a [[rapid transit]] system for the city, dubbed the Łódź Metro by the media and local authorities.<ref name="metro">{{cite web |url=http://lodz.wyborcza.pl/lodz/1,44788,20093817,lodz-bedzie-miala-metro-i-to-juz-niedlugo.html |title=Łódź będzie miała 'metro'. I to już niedługo |date=18 May 2016 |website=Wyborcza.pl: Magazyn Łódź. |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=19 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170919090758/http://lodz.wyborcza.pl/lodz/1,44788,20093817,lodz-bedzie-miala-metro-i-to-juz-niedlugo.html? |url-status=live }}</ref> Three new stations are being constructed on the underground line, one serving the needs of the [[Manufaktura]] complex, another one serving Koziny neighbourhood and the third one located in the area of [[Piotrkowska Street]].<ref name="metro" /> |
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In December 2016, a few years after the demolition of the old building of {{lang|pl|Łódź Fabryczna|italic=no}} station, a [[Łódź Fabryczna|new underground station]] was opened.<ref name="dworzec" /> It is considered to be the largest and most modern of all train stations in Poland and is designed to handle increased traffic after the construction of the tunnel.<ref>{{cite web |last=Rogaczewska |first=Beata |url=http://www.rp.pl/Zycie-Ziemi-Lodzkiej/311019890-Lodz-Fabryczna-najwiekszy-podziemny-dworzec-kolejowy-w-Polsce-i-trzeci-w-Europie.html |title=Łódź Fabryczna: największy podziemny dworzec kolejowy w Polsce i trzeci w Europie |date=1 November 2016 |website=rp.pl |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=4 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170804052923/http://www.rp.pl/Zycie-Ziemi-Lodzkiej/311019890-Lodz-Fabryczna-najwiekszy-podziemny-dworzec-kolejowy-w-Polsce-i-trzeci-w-Europie.html |url-status=live }}</ref> It also serves as a multimodal transport hub, featuring an underground intercity bus station, and is integrated with a new transport interchange serving taxis and local trams and buses.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kozlowski |first1=Remigiusz |last2=Palczewska |first2=Anna |last3=Jablonski |first3=Jakub |chapter=The Scope and Capabilities of ITS – The Case of Łódź |editor1-last=Mikulski |editor1-first=Jerzy |date=2016 |title=Challenge of Transport Telematics |publisher=Springer |pages=305–16 |isbn=9783319496450}} (p. 308)</ref> The construction of the new Łódź Fabryczna station was part of a broader project of [[urban renewal]] known as [[Nowe Centrum Łodzi]] (New Centre of Łódź).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://urbact.eu/new-centre-%C5%82%C3%B3d%C5%BA-has-local-action-plan-0|title=The New Centre of Łódź has a Local Action Plan – URBACT|work=urbact.eu|access-date=19 July 2015|archive-date=8 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308031712/https://urbact.eu/new-centre-%C5%82%C3%B3d%C5%BA-has-local-action-plan-0|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
In December 2016, a few years after the demolition of the old building of {{lang|pl|Łódź Fabryczna|italic=no}} station, a [[Łódź Fabryczna|new underground station]] was opened.<ref name="dworzec" /> It is considered to be the largest and most modern of all train stations in Poland and is designed to handle increased traffic after the construction of the tunnel.<ref>{{cite web |last=Rogaczewska |first=Beata |url=http://www.rp.pl/Zycie-Ziemi-Lodzkiej/311019890-Lodz-Fabryczna-najwiekszy-podziemny-dworzec-kolejowy-w-Polsce-i-trzeci-w-Europie.html |title=Łódź Fabryczna: największy podziemny dworzec kolejowy w Polsce i trzeci w Europie |date=1 November 2016 |website=rp.pl |access-date=3 August 2017 |archive-date=4 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170804052923/http://www.rp.pl/Zycie-Ziemi-Lodzkiej/311019890-Lodz-Fabryczna-najwiekszy-podziemny-dworzec-kolejowy-w-Polsce-i-trzeci-w-Europie.html |url-status=live }}</ref> It also serves as a multimodal transport hub, featuring an underground intercity bus station, and is integrated with a new transport interchange serving taxis and local trams and buses.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kozlowski |first1=Remigiusz |last2=Palczewska |first2=Anna |last3=Jablonski |first3=Jakub |chapter=The Scope and Capabilities of ITS – The Case of Łódź |editor1-last=Mikulski |editor1-first=Jerzy |date=2016 |title=Challenge of Transport Telematics |publisher=Springer |pages=305–16 |isbn=9783319496450}} (p. 308)</ref> The construction of the new Łódź Fabryczna station was part of a broader project of [[urban renewal]] known as [[Nowe Centrum Łodzi]] (New Centre of Łódź).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://urbact.eu/new-centre-%C5%82%C3%B3d%C5%BA-has-local-action-plan-0|title=The New Centre of Łódź has a Local Action Plan – URBACT|work=urbact.eu|access-date=19 July 2015|archive-date=8 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308031712/https://urbact.eu/new-centre-%C5%82%C3%B3d%C5%BA-has-local-action-plan-0|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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| image1 = Łódź, Uniwersytet Łódzki Rektorat Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego - nowy - panoramio (1).jpg |
| image1 = Łódź, Uniwersytet Łódzki Rektorat Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego - nowy - panoramio (1).jpg |
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| image2 = Wille Łodzi.jpg |
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| image3 = Palac Oskara Kona Lodz.jpg |
| image3 = Palac Oskara Kona Lodz.jpg |
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| image4 = Pałac K.Poznańskiego.jpg |
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| caption1 = [[University of Łódź]] rector's office |
| caption1 = [[University of Łódź]] rector's office |
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| caption2 = [[Lodz University of Technology|Łódź University of Technology]] rector's office |
| caption2 = [[Lodz University of Technology|Łódź University of Technology]] rector's office |
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At the end of the Second World War Łódź was the only large Polish city besides Kraków which war had not destroyed. The creation of the [[National Film School in Łódź|National Film School]] gave Łódź a role of greater importance from a cultural viewpoint, which before the war had belonged exclusively to Warsaw and Kraków. Early students of the School include the directors [[Andrzej Munk]], [[Roman Polanski]], [[Andrzej Wajda]], [[Kazimierz Karabasz]] (one of the founders of the so-called Black Series of Polish Documentary) and [[Janusz Morgenstern]], who at the end of the 1950s became famous as one of the founders of the [[Polish Film School]] of Cinematography.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lodz.naszemiasto.pl/artykul/janusz-morgenstern-rezyser-m-in-stawki-wiekszej-niz-zycie,3181307,art,t,id,tm.html|title=Janusz Morgenstern, reżyser m.in. "Stawki większej niż życie" nie żyje|first=Przemek|last=Dana|date=16 January 2015|access-date=14 February 2018|archive-date=15 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180215023331/http://lodz.naszemiasto.pl/artykul/janusz-morgenstern-rezyser-m-in-stawki-wiekszej-niz-zycie,3181307,art,t,id,tm.html|url-status=live}}</ref> |
At the end of the Second World War Łódź was the only large Polish city besides Kraków which war had not destroyed. The creation of the [[National Film School in Łódź|National Film School]] gave Łódź a role of greater importance from a cultural viewpoint, which before the war had belonged exclusively to Warsaw and Kraków. Early students of the School include the directors [[Andrzej Munk]], [[Roman Polanski]], [[Andrzej Wajda]], [[Kazimierz Karabasz]] (one of the founders of the so-called Black Series of Polish Documentary) and [[Janusz Morgenstern]], who at the end of the 1950s became famous as one of the founders of the [[Polish Film School]] of Cinematography.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lodz.naszemiasto.pl/artykul/janusz-morgenstern-rezyser-m-in-stawki-wiekszej-niz-zycie,3181307,art,t,id,tm.html|title=Janusz Morgenstern, reżyser m.in. "Stawki większej niż życie" nie żyje|first=Przemek|last=Dana|date=16 January 2015|access-date=14 February 2018|archive-date=15 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180215023331/http://lodz.naszemiasto.pl/artykul/janusz-morgenstern-rezyser-m-in-stawki-wiekszej-niz-zycie,3181307,art,t,id,tm.html|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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== |
==Culture== |
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===Landmarks and events=== |
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[[File:78 Piotrkowska Street.jpg|thumb|Sculpture of [[Artur Rubinstein]] and his childhood home at [[Piotrkowska Street]]]] |
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[[File:Light Move Festival35(js).jpg|thumb|right|Light Move Festival in Łódź]] |
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[[File:ZOO Lodz tunel.jpg|right|thumb|Orientarium in the [[Łódź Zoo]], opened in 2022]] |
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The most notable and recognizable landmark of the city is [[Piotrkowska Street]], which remains the high-street and main tourist attraction in the city, runs north to south for a little over {{convert|5|km|mi|spell=in|abbr=off}}. This makes it one of the longest commercial streets in the world. Most of the building façades, many of which date back to the 19th century, have been renovated.<ref>[https://www.poland.travel/en/lodz/piotrkowska-street-stroll "Piotrkowska Street Stroll."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729004747/https://www.poland.travel/en/lodz/piotrkowska-street-stroll |date=29 July 2017 }} ''Poland's Official Travel Website''. Retrieved 18 July 2017.</ref> It is the site of most restaurants, bars and cafes in Łódź's city centre. Important monuments of architecture along Piotrkowska Street are the Old Town Hall, the Descent Of The Holy Spirit Church, the [[Łódź Cathedral|Łódź Catholic Cathedral]] and the [[St. Matthew's Church, Łódź|St. Matthew's Lutheran Church]]. Other important churches in the city center include the [[Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Łódź|Alexander Nevsky Orthodox Cathedral]] and the [[Karol Scheibler's Chapel]], Lutheran part of Ogrodowa Street Cemetery. |
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Many neglected tenement houses and factories throughout the entire city centre have been renovated in recent years as part of the ongoing revitalization project run by the local authorities.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Krakowiak |first1=Beata |date=2015 |title=Museums in Łódź as an Element of Tourism Space and the Connection Between Museums and the City's Tourism Image |journal=Tourism |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=87–96 |doi=10.1515/tour-2015-0008 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/tour.2015.25.issue-2/tour-2015-0008/tour-2015-0008.xml |issn=0867-5856 |eissn=2080-6922 |access-date=18 July 2017 |doi-access=free |hdl=11089/20697 |hdl-access=free }}{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (p. 93).</ref> The best example of urban regeneration in Łódź is the [[Manufaktura]] complex, occupying a large area of a former cotton factory dating back to the nineteenth century.<ref name="Kaczmarek">{{cite book |last1=Kaczmarek |first1=Sylwia |last2=Marcinczak |first2=Szymon |editor1-last=Leary |editor1-first=Michael E. |editor2-last=McCarthy |editor2-first=John |title=The Routledge Companion to Urban Regeneration |publisher=Routledge |date=2013 |pages=98–106 |chapter= The Blessing in Disguise: Urban Regeneration in Poland in a Neo-Liberal Milieu |isbn=978-0-415-53904-3}} (p. 103).</ref> The site, which was the heart of [[Izrael Poznański]]'s industrial empire, hosts a shopping mall, numerous restaurants, 4-star hotel, multiplex cinema, factory museum, bowling and fitness facilities and a science exhibition centre.<ref name="Strumiłło">{{cite book |last=Strumiłło |first=Krystyna |editor-last=Charytonowicz |editor-first=Jerzy |title=Advances in Human Factors and Sustainable Infrastructure |publisher=Springer |date=2016 |pages=51–59 |chapter=Adaptive Reuse of Buildings as an Important Factor of Sustainable Development |isbn=978-3-319-41940-4}} (p. 56).</ref> Opened in 2006, it quickly became a centre of cultural entertainment and shopping,<ref name="Strumiłło" /> as well as a recognizable city landmark attracting both domestic and foreign tourists.<ref name="Kaczmarek" /> Another example is the former factory of [[Karl Wilhelm Scheibler|Karl Scheibler]] on [[Księży Młyn (Łódź)|Księży Młyn]], which was turned into a mixed-use complex of offices and housing. |
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Łódź also provides plenty of green spaces for recreation. Woodland areas cover 9.61% of the city, with parks taking up an additional 2.37% of the area of Łódź ({{as of|2014|lc=y|post=).}}<ref name="dlugonski">{{cite journal |last1=Długoński |first1=Andrzej |last2=Szumański |first2=Marek |date=2015 |title=Analysis of Green Infrastructure in Lodz, Poland |journal= Journal of Urban Planning and Development |volume=141 |issue=3 |pages=n. pag |issn=0733-9488 |eissn=1943-5444 |doi=10.1061/(ASCE)UP.1943-5444.0000242}}</ref> {{lang|pl|Las Łagiewnicki}} ('Łagiewnicki Forest') is recognized as the largest forested area within the administrative borders of any city in Europe.<ref name="jaskulski">{{cite journal |last1=Jaskulski |first1=Marcin |last2=Szmidt |first2=Aleksander |date=2015 |title=The Tourism Attractiveness of Landforms in Łagiewnicki Forest, Łódź |journal=Tourism |volume=25 |issue=2 |pages=27–35 |access-date=28 July 2017 |issn=0867-5856 |eissn=2080-6922 |doi=10.1515/tour-2015-0003 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/tour.2015.25.issue-2/tour-2015-0003/tour-2015-0003.xml |doi-access=free |hdl=11089/20692 |hdl-access=free }}{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (p. 27)</ref> It has an area of 1,245 ha<ref name="dlugonski" /> and is cut across by a number of hiking trails that traverse the hilly landscape on the western edge of [[Łódź Hills Landscape Park]].<ref>See Jaskulski and Szmidt, p. 29, for a map of tourism trails in the forest.</ref> A "natural complex which has remained nearly intact as oak-hornbeam and oak woodland,"<ref name="jaskulski" /> the forest is also rich in history, and its attractions include a [[Franciscan]] friary dating back to the early 18th century and two 17th-century wooden chapels.<ref>{{cite book |title=Ilustrowana Encyklopedia Historii Łodzi |date=2015 |publisher=MyDesign |isbn=978-83-939822-0-2 |editor1-last=Grzegorczyk |editor1-first=Arkadiusz |location=Łódź |pages=59–61}}</ref> |
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Out of a total of 44 parks in Łódź ({{as of|2014|lc=y|post=),}} 11 have historical status, the oldest of them dating back to the middle of the 19th century.<ref>Kaniewska, Anna. [http://www.lodz.ap.gov.pl/art,58,najstarsze-lodzkie-parki "Najstarsze łódzkie parki.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220131071740/https://www.lodz.ap.gov.pl/art,58,najstarsze-lodzkie-parki |date=31 January 2022 }} ''Archiwum Państwowe w Łodzi''. [''The State Archive in Łódź'']. 3 April 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2017.</ref> The largest of these, Józef Piłsudski Park ({{convert|188.21|ha|sqmi}}),<ref name="dlugonski" /> is located near the [[Łódź Zoo]] and the city's botanical garden, and together with them it comprises an extensive green complex known as {{lang|pl|Zdrowie}} serving the recreational needs of the city. Another notable park located in Łódź is the [[Józef Poniatowski Park in Łódź|Józef Poniatowski Park]]. |
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The [[Jewish Cemetery, Łódź|Jewish Cemetery at Bracka Street]], one of the largest of its kind in Europe, was established in 1892. After the [[invasion of Poland]] by [[Nazi Germany]] in 1939, this cemetery became a part of Łódź's ''eastern territory'' known as the enclosed Łódź ghetto (''Ghetto Field''). Between 1940 and 1944, approximately 43,000 burials took place within the grounds of this rounded-up cemetery.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishlodzcemetery.org/EN/AboutCemetery/AboutCemeteryAtBrackaStreet/Default.aspx|title=Jewish Lodz Cemetery – About Cemetery At Bracka Street|access-date=25 January 2017|archive-date=7 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161107091938/http://www.jewishlodzcemetery.org/EN/AboutCemetery/AboutCemeteryAtBrackaStreet/Default.aspx|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1956, a monument by Muszko in memory of the victims of the [[Łódź Ghetto]] was erected at the cemetery. It features a smooth obelisk, a [[menorah (Temple)|menorah]], and a broken oak tree with leaves stemming from the tree (symbolizing death, especially death at a young age). {{As of|2014|post=,}} the cemetery has an area of {{convert|39.6|ha}}. It contains approximately 180,000 graves, approximately 65,000 labelled tombstones, ohels and mausoleums. Many of these monuments have significant architectural value; 100 of these have been declared historical monuments and have been in various stages of restoration. The mausoleum of [[Izrael Poznański|Izrael and Eleanora Poznański]] is perhaps the largest Jewish tombstone in the world and the only one decorated with mosaics.<ref>{{cite web |title=The New Cemetery in Łódź |url=http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/lodz/newcem.htm |publisher=Lodz ShtetLinks |access-date=12 January 2013 |archive-date=13 March 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130313232301/http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org/lodz/newcem.htm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jewish Cemetery |url=http://www.lodzjews.org/root/form/en/cmentarz/index.asp |publisher=Fundacja Monumentum Iudaicum Lodzese |access-date=12 January 2013 |archive-date=18 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120418053651/http://www.lodzjews.org/root/form/en/cmentarz/index.asp |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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===Museums in Łódź=== |
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{{multiple image |align=right |caption_align=center |perrow=2 |total_width=400 |header=Primary cultural institutions |
{{multiple image |align=right |caption_align=center |perrow=2 |total_width=400 |header=Primary cultural institutions |
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| image1 = Pałac Maurycego Poznańskiego z 1896 r, obecnie muzeum sztuki - panoramio.jpg |
| image1 = Pałac Maurycego Poznańskiego z 1896 r, obecnie muzeum sztuki - panoramio.jpg |
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| image2 = Łódź, ul. Ogrodowa 17, tkalnia wysoka (ob. ms2), 1895 -4.JPG |
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| image2 = Teatr Wielki w Łodzi.jpg |
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| image3 = Lodz Biala Fabryka 2(pischmak).JPG |
| image3 = Lodz Biala Fabryka 2(pischmak).JPG |
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| image4 = Filharmonia Łódzka im. Artura Rubinsteina - panoramio (1).jpg |
| image4 = Filharmonia Łódzka im. Artura Rubinsteina - panoramio (1).jpg |
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| caption1 = [[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|Museum of Art]] |
| caption1 = [[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|Museum of Art]] |
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| caption2 = [[ |
| caption2 = [[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|ms2 Muzeum Sztuki]], gallery of modern art |
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| caption3 = [[Central Museum of Textiles, Łódź|Central Museum of Textiles]] |
| caption3 = [[Central Museum of Textiles, Łódź|Central Museum of Textiles]] |
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| caption4 = [[Łódź Philharmonic]] |
| caption4 = [[Łódź Philharmonic]] |
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}} |
}} |
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* Archaeological and Ethnographic Museum |
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===Museums in Łódź=== |
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* Archaeological and Ethnographical Museum |
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* Book Art Museum |
* Book Art Museum |
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* [[Central Museum of Textiles, Łódź|Central Museum of Textiles]] |
* [[Central Museum of Textiles, Łódź|Central Museum of Textiles]] |
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* [[Se-ma-for]] museum of stop-motion film animation |
* [[Se-ma-for]] museum of stop-motion film animation |
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* The Centre for Science and Technology EC1 in former Łódź [[power plant]] |
* The Centre for Science and Technology EC1 in former Łódź [[power plant]] |
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Łódź has one of the best museums of modern art in Poland. {{lang|pl|[[Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź|Muzeum Sztuki]]|italic=no}} has three branches, two of which (ms1 and ms2) display collections of 20th and 21st-century art. The newest addition to the museum, ms2 was opened in 2008 in the Manufaktura complex.<ref name="Krakowiak, p. 88">Krakowiak, p. 88.</ref> The unique collection of the Museum is presented in an unconventional way. Instead of a chronological lecture on the development of art, works of art representing various periods and movements are arranged into a story touching themes and motifs important for the contemporary public. The third branch of {{lang|pl|Muzeum Sztuki|italic=no}}, located in one of the city's many industrial palaces, also has more traditional art on display, presenting works by European and Polish masters such as [[Stanisław Wyspiański]] and [[Henryk Rodakowski]].<ref>Krakowiak, p 91</ref> |
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[[File:Pałac Edwarda Herbsta.jpg|thumb|right|Herbst Palace, designed by [[Hilary Majewski]], an art gallery within a historical mansion, which holds paintings from all over Europe]] |
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Among the 14 registered museums to be found in Łódź,<ref>Krakowiak, p. 88. Krakowiak also lists 13 more institutions that operate as museums but are not registered with the National Institute for Museums and Public Collections (p. 95), bringing the total number of museums in Łódź to 27.</ref> there is the independent Book Art Museum, awarded the American Printing History Association's Institutional Award for 2015 for its outstanding contribution to the study, recording, preservation, and dissemination of printing history in Poland over the last 35 years.<ref>[http://www.aepm.eu/news/discover-the-book-art-museum-lodz-poland/ "Discover the Book Art Museum, Łódź, Poland."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180724093553/http://www.aepm.eu/news/discover-the-book-art-museum-lodz-poland/ |date=24 July 2018 }} ''AEPM: Association of European Printing Museums''. January 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2017.</ref> Other notable museums include the [[Central Museum of Textiles]] with its open-air display of wooden architecture, the Cinematography Museum, located in Scheibler Palace, and the Museum of Independence Traditions, occupying the building of a historical Tsarist prison from the late 19th century.<ref name="Krakowiak, p. 88"/> A more unusual establishment, the {{lang|pl|Dętka|italic=no}} museum offers tourists a chance to visit the municipal sewer designed in the early years of the 20th century by the British engineer [[William Heerlein Lindley]]. |
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===Łódź in literature and cinema=== |
===Łódź in literature and cinema=== |
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Three major novels depict the development of industrial Łódź: [[Władysław Reymont]]'s ''[[The Promised Land (novel)|The Promised Land]]'' (1898), [[Joseph Roth]]'s ''[[Hotel Savoy (novel)|Hotel Savoy]]'' (1924) and [[Israel Joshua Singer]]'s ''[[The Brothers Ashkenazi]]'' (1937). Roth's novel depicts the city on the eve of a workers' riot in 1919. Reymont's novel was [[The Promised Land (1975 film)|made into a film]] by [[Andrzej Wajda]] in 1975.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://culture.pl/en/article/hollylodz-a-film-lovers-guide-to-polands-most-cinematic-city |title='HollyŁódź': A Film Lover's Guide to Poland's Most Cinematic City |website=culture.pl |author=Alena Aniskiewicz |date=21 June 2017 |access-date=30 March 2024 |archive-date=30 March 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240330125820/https://culture.pl/en/article/hollylodz-a-film-lovers-guide-to-polands-most-cinematic-city |url-status=live }}</ref> In the 1990 film ''[[Europa Europa]]'', [[Solomon Perel]]'s family flees pre-World War II Berlin and settles in Łódź. [[Paweł Pawlikowski]]'s film ''[[Ida (film)|Ida]]'' was partially shot in Łódź.<ref |
Three major novels depict the development of industrial Łódź: [[Władysław Reymont]]'s ''[[The Promised Land (novel)|The Promised Land]]'' (1898), [[Joseph Roth]]'s ''[[Hotel Savoy (novel)|Hotel Savoy]]'' (1924) and [[Israel Joshua Singer]]'s ''[[The Brothers Ashkenazi]]'' (1937). Roth's novel depicts the city on the eve of a workers' riot in 1919. Reymont's novel was [[The Promised Land (1975 film)|made into a film]] by [[Andrzej Wajda]] in 1975.<ref name="Alena Aniskiewicz">{{Cite web |url=https://culture.pl/en/article/hollylodz-a-film-lovers-guide-to-polands-most-cinematic-city |title='HollyŁódź': A Film Lover's Guide to Poland's Most Cinematic City |website=culture.pl |author=Alena Aniskiewicz |date=21 June 2017 |access-date=30 March 2024 |archive-date=30 March 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240330125820/https://culture.pl/en/article/hollylodz-a-film-lovers-guide-to-polands-most-cinematic-city |url-status=live }}</ref> In the 1990 film ''[[Europa Europa]]'', [[Solomon Perel]]'s family flees pre-World War II Berlin and settles in Łódź. [[Paweł Pawlikowski]]'s film ''[[Ida (film)|Ida]]'' was partially shot in Łódź.<ref name="Alena Aniskiewicz"/> Chava Rosenfarb's Yiddish trilogy "The Tree of Life" (1972; English translation 1985) portrays life within the Łódź Ghetto. |
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===Theatre=== |
===Theatre=== |
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*[[ |
*[[Grand Theatre, Łódź|Grand Theatre]] (''Teatr Wielki'') |
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*[[Stefan Jaracz Theatre]] (''Teatr Stefana Jaracza'') |
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*[[Studio Theatre, Łódź|Schiller's Studio Theatre]] (''Teatr Studyjny Schillera'') |
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===Cuisine and food=== |
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[[File:Zalewajka pomorska from Pila.JPG|thumb|right|''[[Zalewajka]]'' sour potato soup.]] |
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Among the traditional dishes of Łódź and the [[Łódź Voivodeship]] are ''[[zalewajka]]'' – a [[sour cereal soup|sour cereal]] and potato soup, often served with mushrooms, [[kielbasa]] sausage and bread – and [[cabbage soup]] (''kapuśniak'') served with potato dumplings and pork [[cracklings]].<ref name="lodzpl">{{cite web |url=https://lodz.pl/galeria/czy-warto-odwiedzic-lodz-te-powody-rozwieja-wszelkie-watpliwosci-przewodnik-56641/?imgNum=10&cHash=e0b3053d371388702c61cea70e990af3 |title=Czy warto odwiedzić Łódź? Te powody rozwieją wszelkie wątpliwości |last=Salamon |first=Natalia |date=12 May 2023 |website=Lodz.pl |access-date=14 August 2024 |lang=pl}}</ref> These were once the staples of the working-class population employed in textile factories. Popular breads and baked goods include the ''[[Veka (pastry)|angielka]]'' baguette roll and ''żulik'' bun with [[raisin]]s.<ref name="lodzpl"/> [[Aspic]] in various forms (''galareta'', ''zimne nóżki'' or ''drygle'') was once a well-established comfort and party food in the city. Łódź and the surrounding region is also known for having a strong preference for [[mushroom soup]] over [[barszcz]] (borscht) for the Polish [[Wigilia]] [[Christmas Eve]] supper.<ref name="onet">{{cite web |url=https://gotowanie.onet.pl/artykuly/barszcz-czy-grzybowa-wiemy-co-wola-polacy/bccrcpj |title=Barszcz czy grzybowa? Wiemy, co wolą Polacy |last= |first= |date=22 December 2022 |website=Onet.pl |publisher= |access-date=14 August 2024 |quote=}}</ref> |
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Major food venues are primarily located at Piotrkowska Street, for example the [[OFF Piotrkowska]], a mixed-use development complex situated in a heritage-listed red brick factory. [[Food truck]]s are a common sight around the city centre and several neighbourhoods. |
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=== Sport === |
=== Sport === |
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[[File:Atlas Arena - Łódź.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|[[Atlas Arena]], the main indoor arena of Łódź]] |
[[File:Atlas Arena - Łódź.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|[[Atlas Arena]], the main indoor arena of Łódź]] |
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[[File:Stadion Widzewa, Widok z lotu drona. Łódź Widzew 29-07-2017.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|[[ |
[[File:Stadion Widzewa, Widok z lotu drona. Łódź Widzew 29-07-2017.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|[[Widzew Łódź Stadium]]]] |
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The city has experience as a host for international sporting events such as the [[2009 EuroBasket]],<ref>[https://archive.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/event/p/sid/6328/_/index.html 2009 EuroBasket] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160807052744/http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/event/p/sid/6328/_/index.html |date=7 August 2016 }}, ARCHIVE.FIBA.com, Retrieved 5 June 2016.</ref> the [[EuroBasket Women 2011|2011 EuroBasket Women]], the [[2014 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship]] and the [[2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup]], with the opening and final of the latter taking place at [[ |
The city has experience as a host for international sporting events such as the [[2009 EuroBasket]],<ref>[https://archive.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/event/p/sid/6328/_/index.html 2009 EuroBasket] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160807052744/http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/event/p/sid/6328/_/index.html |date=7 August 2016 }}, ARCHIVE.FIBA.com, Retrieved 5 June 2016.</ref> the [[EuroBasket Women 2011|2011 EuroBasket Women]], the [[2014 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship]] and the [[2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup]], with the opening and final of the latter taking place at [[Widzew Łódź Stadium|Widzew Stadium]]. Łódź will also host the sixth edition of the [[European Universities Games]] in 2022.<ref>{{cite news |last=Pavitt |first=Michael |date=13 April 2018 |title=Poland and Hungary awarded upcoming editions of European Universities Games |url=https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1063929/poland-and-hungary-awarded-upcoming-editions-of-european-universities-games |work=insidethegames.biz |access-date=14 April 2018 |archive-date=14 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180414234512/https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1063929/poland-and-hungary-awarded-upcoming-editions-of-european-universities-games |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Under [[communism]] it was common for [[sports club|clubs]] to participate in many different sports for all ages and sexes. Many of these traditional clubs still survive. Originally they were owned directly by a public body, but have become independently operated by clubs or private companies. However, they get public support through the cheap rent of land and other subsidies from the city. Some of their sections have gone professional and separated from the clubs as private companies. For example, Budowlani S.A is a private company that owns the only professional rugby team in Łódź, while Klub Sportowy Budowlani remains a community amateur club. |
Under [[communism]] it was common for [[sports club|clubs]] to participate in many different sports for all ages and sexes. Many of these traditional clubs still survive. Originally they were owned directly by a public body, but have become independently operated by clubs or private companies. However, they get public support through the cheap rent of land and other subsidies from the city. Some of their sections have gone professional and separated from the clubs as private companies. For example, Budowlani S.A is a private company that owns the only professional rugby team in Łódź, while Klub Sportowy Budowlani remains a community amateur club. |
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==Notable residents== |
==Notable residents== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Artur Rubenstein 1968.JPG|thumb|upright|right|[[Arthur Rubinstein]], one of the greatest pianists of the 20th century, was born in Łódź]] |
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[[File: |
[[File:Marcin Gortat 13.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Marcin Gortat]], former [[NBA]] player]] |
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[[File:Marcin Gortat 13.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Marcin Gortat]], Polish former [[NBA]] player]] |
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[[File:Jerzy Kosiński (by Rob Mieremet, 1973).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Jerzy Kosiński]], Polish-American writer]] |
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[[File:Festakt zur Neueröffnung des Militärhistorischen Museums der Bundeswehr - Daniel Libeskind.jpg|thumb|upright|right|[[Daniel Libeskind]], notable architect and designer]] |
[[File:Festakt zur Neueröffnung des Militärhistorischen Museums der Bundeswehr - Daniel Libeskind.jpg|thumb|upright|right|[[Daniel Libeskind]], notable architect and designer]] |
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[[File:Artur Rubenstein 1968.JPG|thumb|upright|right|[[Arthur Rubinstein]], one of the greatest pianists of the 20th century, was born in Łódź.]] |
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[[File:Andrzej Sapkowski - Book World Fair 2010 Prague.jpg|thumb|upright|right|[[Andrzej Sapkowski]], best known for ''[[The Witcher]]'' book series]] |
[[File:Andrzej Sapkowski - Book World Fair 2010 Prague.jpg|thumb|upright|right|[[Andrzej Sapkowski]], best known for ''[[The Witcher]]'' book series]] |
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[[File:Strzemiński.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Władysław Strzemiński]], painter]] |
[[File:Strzemiński.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Władysław Strzemiński]], painter]] |
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*[[Izabella Miko]] (born 1981), actress |
*[[Izabella Miko]] (born 1981), actress |
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*[[Stanisław Mikulski]] (1929–2014), actor |
*[[Stanisław Mikulski]] (1929–2014), actor |
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*[[Ruth Minsky Sender]] ( |
*[[Ruth Minsky Sender]] (1926–2024), author and survivor |
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*[[Zew Wawa Morejno]] (1916–2011), [[Chief Rabbi]] |
*[[Zew Wawa Morejno]] (1916–2011), [[Chief Rabbi]] |
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*[[Henry Morgentaler]] (1923–2013), physician |
*[[Henry Morgentaler]] (1923–2013), physician |
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==International relations== |
==International relations== |
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{{multiple image|align=right|caption_align=center|perrow=2|total_width=300 |
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Łódź is home to nine foreign consulates, all of which are Honorary. They are subordinate to the following states' main representation in Poland: French, Danish, German, Austrian, British, Belgian, Latvian, Hungarian and Moldavian. |
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|image1=Consulate of Denmark in Łódź 1.jpg |
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|image2=Willa Oskara Zieglera, ul. Marii Skłodowskiej-Curie 11.jpg |
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|image3=Pałac Maksymiliana Goldfedera w Łodzi.jpg |
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|image4=Konsulat Republikii Albanii w Łodzi 3.jpg |
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|footer=From top, left to right: honorary consulates of Denmark, Czechia, Ukraine and Albania}} |
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Łódź is home to fourteen foreign consulates, i.e. honorary consulates general of [[Hungary]] and [[Turkey]], and honorary consulates of [[Albania]], [[Armenia]], [[Austria]], [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]], [[Czech Republic]], [[Denmark]], [[France]], [[Lithuania]], [[Luxembourg]], [[Malta]], [[Moldova]] and [[Ukraine]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.gov.pl/web/dyplomacja/misje-dyplomatyczne-urzedy-konsularne-i-organizacje-miedzynarodowe-w-polsce|title=Misje dyplomatyczne, urzędy konsularne i organizacje międzynarodowe w Polsce|website=Portal Gov.pl|language=pl|access-date=20 September 2024}}</ref> |
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===Twin towns – sister cities=== |
===Twin towns – sister cities=== |
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* [[Łódź Design Festival]] |
* [[Łódź Design Festival]] |
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* [[International Festival of Comics and Games]] in Łódź |
* [[International Festival of Comics and Games]] in Łódź |
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* [[Bednarska Street, Łódź]] |
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== Explanatory notes == |
== Explanatory notes == |
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| title = Articles related to Łódź |
| title = Articles related to Łódź |
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| list = |
| list = |
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{{ |
{{Cities of Poland |state=show}} |
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{{Łódź Voivodeship}} |
{{Łódź Voivodeship}} |
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{{Łódź East County|state=autocollapse}} |
{{Łódź East County|state=autocollapse}} |
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[[Category:City counties of Poland]] |
[[Category:City counties of Poland]] |
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[[Category:Holocaust locations in Poland]] |
[[Category:Holocaust locations in Poland]] |
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[[Category:Łódź Voivodeship (1919–1939)]] |
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[[Category:Magdeburg rights]] |
[[Category:Magdeburg rights]] |
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[[Category:Piotrków Governorate]] |
Latest revision as of 07:12, 29 October 2024
Łódź | |
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Łódź Fabryczna railway station Poznański Palace, Museum of Łódź Church of the Descent of the Holy Spirit | |
Motto: Ex navicula navis ("From a boat a ship") | |
Coordinates: 51°46′37″N 19°27′17″E / 51.77694°N 19.45472°E | |
Country | Poland |
Voivodeship | Łódź |
County | city county |
First mentioned | 1332 |
City rights | 1423 |
City Hall | Juliusz Heinzl Palace |
Government | |
• Body | Łódź City Council |
• City mayor | Hanna Zdanowska (KO) |
• Sejm of Poland | Łódź |
Area | |
• City | 293.25 km2 (113.22 sq mi) |
• Metro | 2,496 km2 (964 sq mi) |
Highest elevation | 278 m (912 ft) |
Lowest elevation | 162 m (531 ft) |
Population (30 June 2023) | |
• City | 655,279 (4th)[1] |
• Density | 2,245/km2 (5,810/sq mi) |
• Metro | 1,100,000 |
• Metro density | 440/km2 (1,100/sq mi) |
Demonym(s) | łodzianin (male) łodzianka (female) (pl) |
GDP | |
• Metro | €16.839 billion (2020) |
Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
Postal code | 90-001 to 94–413 |
Area code | +48 42 |
Vehicle registration | EL |
Primary airport | Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport |
Highways | |
Website | www |
Łódź[a] is a city in central Poland and a former industrial centre. It is the capital of Łódź Voivodeship, and is located 120 km (75 mi) south-west of Warsaw.[8] As of 2023,[update] Łódź has a population of 655,279,[1] making it the country's fourth largest city.
Łódź first appears in records in 14th-century. It was granted town rights in 1423 by the Polish King Władysław II Jagiełło and it remained a private town of the Kuyavian bishops and clergy until the late 18th century. In the Second Partition of Poland in 1793, Łódź was annexed to Prussia before becoming part of the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw; the city joined Congress Poland, a Russian client state, at the 1815 Congress of Vienna. The Second Industrial Revolution (from 1870) brought rapid growth in textile manufacturing and in population owing to the inflow of migrants, notably Germans and Jews. Ever since the industrialization of the area, the city has been multinational and struggled with social inequalities, as documented in the novel The Promised Land by Nobel Prize–winning author Władysław Reymont. The contrasts greatly reflected on the architecture of the city, where luxurious mansions coexisted with red-brick factories and dilapidated tenement houses.[9]
The industrial development and demographic surge made Łódź one of the largest cities in Poland. Under the German occupation during World War II Łódź was briefly renamed Litzmannstadt after Karl Litzmann. The city's population was persecuted and its large Jewish minority was forced into a walled zone known as the Łódź Ghetto, from where they were sent to German concentration and extermination camps. The city became Poland's temporary seat of power in 1945.
Łódź experienced a sharp demographic and economic decline after 1989. It was only in the 2010s that the city began to experience revitalization of its neglected downtown area.[10][11] Łódź is ranked by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network on the "Sufficiency" level of global influence[12] and is internationally known for its National Film School, a cradle for the most renowned Polish actors and directors, including Andrzej Wajda and Roman Polanski.[9] In 2017, the city was inducted into the UNESCO Creative Cities Network and named UNESCO City of Film.[13]
Name and toponymy
[edit]The Polish name for the city, Łódź, directly translates to 'boat' in the English language.[14][15] There is no unanimous consensus on its precise origin, but popular theories link it with the medieval village of Łodzia and the canalised River Łódka on which the modern city was founded.[16] It may have also derived from the term łoza denoting a willow tree and the personal Old Polish name Włodzisław.[17]
History
[edit]Early beginnings (1332–1815)
[edit]Łódź first appears in a 1332 written record issued by Władysław the Hunchback, Duke of Łęczyca, which transferred the village of Łodzia to the Bishopric of Włocławek.[18] The document enumerated the privileges of its inhabitants, notably the right to graze land, establish pastures and engage in logging.[19] In 1423, King of Poland Władysław II Jagiełło officially granted town rights to the village under Magdeburg Law.[20] For centuries, it remained a small remote settlement situated among woodlands and marshes, which was privately held by the Kuyavian bishops.[21] It was administratively located in the Brzeziny County in the Łęczyca Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland.[22] The economy was predominantly driven by agriculture and farming until the 19th century.[23] The earliest two versions of the coat of arms appeared on seal emblems in 1535 and 1577, with the latter illustrating a boat-like vessel and a turned oar.[24]
With the Second Partition of Poland in 1793, Łódź was annexed by Prussia.[25] In 1798, the Kuyavian bishops' ownership over the region was formally revoked during the secularisation of church property.[26] The town, governed by a burgomaster (burmistrz), at the time had only 190 residents, 44 occupied dwellings, a church and a prison.[19] In 1806, Łódź was incorporated into the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw.[25] In the aftermath of the 1815 Congress of Vienna, the duchy was dissolved and the town became part of the Congress Kingdom of Poland, a client state of the Russian Empire.[27]
Partitions and development (1815–1918)
[edit]In 1820, the government of the Congress Kingdom designated Łódź and its rural surroundings for centrally planned industrial development.[28] Rajmund Rembieliński, head of the Administrative Council and prefect of Masovia, became the president of a commission that subdivided the works two major phases; the first (1821–23) comprised the creation of a new city centre with an octagonal square (contemporary plac Wolności; Liberty Square) and arranged housing allotments on greenfield land situated south of the old marketplace; the second stage (1824–28) involved the establishment of cotton mill colonies and a linear street system along with an arterial north-south thoroughfare, Piotrkowska.[28] Many of the early dwellings were timber cottages built for housing weavers (domy tkaczy).[29]
During this time, a sizeable number of German craftsmen settled in the city,[29] encouraged by exemptions from tax obligations.[30] Their settlement in Poland was encouraged by renowned philosopher and statesman Stanisław Staszic, who acted as the director of the Department of Trade, Crafts and Industry.[31]
In 1851, the Imperial authorities abolished a customs barrier which was imposed on Congress Poland following the failed November Uprising (1830–1831).[32] The suppression of tariffs allowed the city to freely export its goods to Russia, where the demand for textiles was high.[32] Poland's first steam-powered loom commenced operations at Ludwik Geyer's White Factory in 1839.[33] During the first weeks of the January Uprising (1863–1864), a unit of 300 Polish insurgents entered the city without resistance and seized weapons, and later on, there were also clashes between Polish insurgents and Russian troops in the city.[34] In 1864, the inhabitants of adjacent villages were permitted to settle in Łódź without restrictions.[35] The development of railways in the region was also instrumental in expanding the textile industry; in 1865 the Łódź–Koluszki line, a branch of the Warsaw–Vienna railway, was opened, thus providing a train connection to larger markets.[36] In 1867, the city was incorporated into the Piotrków Governorate, a local province.[37]
The infrastructure and edifices of Łódź were built at the expense of industrialists and business magnates, chiefly Karl Wilhelm Scheibler and Izrael Poznański, who sponsored schools, hospitals, orphanages, and places of worship.[38] From 1872 to 1892, Poznański established a major textile manufactory composed of twelve factories, power plants, worker tenements, a private fire station, and a large eclectic palace.[39] By the end of the century, Scheibler's Księży Młyn became one of Europe's largest industrial complexes, employing 5,000 workers within a single facility.[40] The years 1870–1890 saw the most intense industrialisation,[41] which was marked by social inequalities and dire working conditions.[42] Łódź soon became a notable centre of the socialist movement and the so-called Łódź rebellion(pl) in May 1892 was quelled by a military intervention.[42]
The turn of the 20th century coincided with cultural and technological progress; in 1899, the first stationary cinema in Poland (Gabinet Iluzji) was opened in Łódź.[43] In the same year, Józef Piłsudski, the future Marshal of Poland, settled in the city and began printing the Robotnik (The Worker; p. 1894–1939), an underground newspaper published by the Polish Socialist Party.[44] During the June Days (1905), approximately 100,000 unemployed labourers went on a mass strike, barricaded the streets and clashed with troops.[45] Officially, 151 demonstrators were killed and thousands were wounded.[46] In 1912, the Archcathedral of St. Stanislaus Kostka was completed and its tower at 104 metres (341 ft) is one of the tallest in Poland.[47][48]
Despite the impending crisis preceding World War I, Łódź grew exponentially and was one of the world's most densely populated industrial cities, with a population density of 13,200 inhabitants per square kilometre (34,000/sq mi) by 1914.[49] In the aftermath of the Battle of Łódź (1914), the city came under Imperial German occupation on 6 December.[50] With Polish independence restored in November 1918, the local population disarmed the German army.[51] Subsequently, the textile industry of Łódź stalled and its population briefly decreased as ethnic Germans left the city.[52]
Restored Poland (1918–1939)
[edit]Despite its large population and economic output, Łódź did not serve as the seat of its province until the 20th century.[53] Following the establishment of the Second Polish Republic, it became the capital of the Łódź Voivodeship in 1919.[54] The early interwar period was characterised by considerable economic hardship and industrial stagnation.[55] The Great Depression and the German–Polish customs war closed western markets to Polish textiles while the Bolshevik Revolution and the Civil War in Russia put an end to the most profitable trade with the East.[55][54]
Because of rapid and, consequently, chaotic development in the previous century, Łódź did not possess the adequate infrastructure and living standards for its inhabitants.[56] Pollution was acute, sanitary conditions were poor and the authorities did not invest in a sewage treatment system until the 1920s.[57][58] From 1918 to 1939, many cultural, educational and scientific institutions were created, including elementary schools, museums, art galleries and public libraries which prior to the First World War did not exist.[59] Łódź also began developing an entertainment scene, with 34 movie theatres opened by 1939.[59] On 13 September 1925, the city's first airport, Lublinek, commenced operations.[60] In 1930, the first radio transmission from a newly-founded broadcasting station took place.[61]
The ideological orientation of Łódź was strongly left-wing and the city was a notable centre of socialist, communist and bundist activity in Polish politics during the interbellum.[62]
Second World War (1939–1945)
[edit]During the invasion of Poland in September 1939, the Polish forces of General Juliusz Rómmel's Army Łódź defended the city against the German assault by forming a line of resistance between Sieradz and Piotrków Trybunalski.[63] The attack was conducted by the 8th Army of Johannes Blaskowitz, who encircled the city with the X Army Corps.[64] After fierce resistance, a Polish delegation surrendered to the Germans on 8 September, and the first Wehrmacht troops entered in the early hours of 9 September.[65] The German Einsatzgruppe III paramilitary death squad entered the city on 12 September.[66] Arthur Greiser incorporated Łódź into a new administrative subdivision of Nazi Germany called Reichsgau Wartheland on 9 November 1939,[67] and on 11 April 1940 the city was renamed to Litzmannstadt after German general and NSDAP member Karl Litzmann.[68]
The city became subjected to immediate Germanisation, with Polish and Jewish establishments closed, and Polish-language press banned.[69] Low-wage forced labour was imposed on the city's inhabitants aged 16 to 60; many were subsequently deported to Germany.[70] As part of the Intelligenzaktion, Polish intellectuals from the city and region were imprisoned at Radogoszcz and then either sent to concentration camps or murdered in the forests of Łagiewniki and the village of Lućmierz-Las.[71] Polish children were forcibly taken from their parents,[72] and from 1942 to 1945 the German Sicherheitspolizei operated a camp for kidnapped Polish children from various regions in Łódź.[73]
The German authorities established the Łódź Ghetto (Ghetto Litzmannstadt) in the city and populated it with more than 200,000 Jews from the region, who were systematically sent to German extermination camps.[74] It was the second-largest ghetto in occupied Europe,[75] and the last major ghetto to be liquidated, in August 1944.[76] The Polish resistance movement (Żegota) operated in the city and aided the Jewish people throughout its existence.[77] However, only 877 Jews were still alive by 1945.[78] Of the 223,000 Jews in Łódź before the invasion, 10,000 survived the Holocaust in other places.[79] The Germans also created camps for non-Jews, including the Romani people deported from abroad, who were ultimately murdered at Chełmno,[80] as well as a penal forced labour camp,[81] four transit camps for Poles expelled from the city and region, and a racial research camp.[82]
Post World War II (1945–1989)
[edit]Following liberation by Soviet forces on 19 January 1945, and the end of the World War II, Łódź informally and temporarily took over the functions of Poland's capital, and most of the government and country administration resided in the city prior to the reconstruction of Warsaw.[83]
Łódź also experienced an influx of refugees from Kresy. Many migrated into the suburbs and occupied the empty properties.[83] Under the Polish People's Republic, the city's industry and private companies were subject to nationalisation.[83] On 24 May 1945, the University of Łódź was inaugurated.[84] On 8 March 1948, the National Film School was opened, later becoming Poland's primary academy of drama and cinema.[85]
The spatial and urban planning after World War II was conducted in accordance with the Athens Charter, where the population from the old core was relocated into new residential areas.[86] However, as a result, the inner-city and historical areas fell in significance and degenerated into a slum.[86] A number of extensive panel block housing estates were constructed, including Retkinia, Teofilów, Widzew, Radogoszcz, and Chojny. These block housing estates were constructed between 1960 and 1990, covering an area of almost 30 square kilometres (12 sq mi) and accommodating a large part of the populace.[87]
In mid-1981 Łódź became famous for its massive hunger demonstration of local mothers and their children.[88][89]
Contemporary history (1990–present)
[edit]After 1989 the textile industry in Łódź collapsed and the city suffered from social and economic decline. The city's industrial heritage and examples of Polish Art Nouveau became an early tourist attraction. In the 2000s the city's main street, the Piotrkowska Street, was revitalized, providing space for shops and restaurants. By 2011 the city hosted around 60 festivals per year.[90]
The local government's efforts to transform the former industrial city into a thriving urban environment and tourist destination formed the basis for the city's failed bid to organise the 2022 International EXPO exhibition on the subject of urban renewal.[91]
Geography
[edit]Łódź covers an area of approximately 293 square kilometres (113 sq mi) and is located in the centre of Poland.[92] The city lies in the lowlands of the Central European Plain, not exceeding 300 metres in elevation.[92] Topographically, the Łódź region is generally characterised by a flat landscape, with only several highlands which do not exceed 50 metres above the terrain level.[93] The soil is predominantly sandy (62%) followed by clay (24%), silt (8%), and organogenic formations (6%) from regional wetlands.[94] The forest cover (equivalent to 4.2% of the whole country) is considerably low compared to other cities, regions, and provinces of Poland.[95]
Climate
[edit]Łódź has a humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). The lowest temperature was recorded in January 1987.
Climate data for Łódź, elevation: 68 m (223 ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 12.8 (55.0) |
17.5 (63.5) |
23.8 (74.8) |
29.9 (85.8) |
32.7 (90.9) |
36.3 (97.3) |
37.3 (99.1) |
37.6 (99.7) |
34.7 (94.5) |
25.9 (78.6) |
19.2 (66.6) |
14.9 (58.8) |
37.6 (99.7) |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 1.2 (34.2) |
2.9 (37.2) |
7.4 (45.3) |
14.4 (57.9) |
19.4 (66.9) |
22.7 (72.9) |
24.9 (76.8) |
24.6 (76.3) |
19.1 (66.4) |
13.0 (55.4) |
6.8 (44.2) |
2.4 (36.3) |
13.2 (55.8) |
Daily mean °C (°F) | −1.5 (29.3) |
−0.3 (31.5) |
3.1 (37.6) |
9.0 (48.2) |
13.8 (56.8) |
17.1 (62.8) |
19.2 (66.6) |
18.7 (65.7) |
13.7 (56.7) |
8.6 (47.5) |
3.9 (39.0) |
0.0 (32.0) |
8.8 (47.8) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | −4.0 (24.8) |
−3.3 (26.1) |
−0.7 (30.7) |
3.6 (38.5) |
8.2 (46.8) |
11.6 (52.9) |
13.6 (56.5) |
13.3 (55.9) |
9.0 (48.2) |
5.0 (41.0) |
1.3 (34.3) |
−2.4 (27.7) |
4.6 (40.3) |
Record low °C (°F) | −31.1 (−24.0) |
−27.4 (−17.3) |
−21.9 (−7.4) |
−8.0 (17.6) |
−3.6 (25.5) |
−0.3 (31.5) |
4.2 (39.6) |
3.3 (37.9) |
−1.9 (28.6) |
−9.9 (14.2) |
−16.8 (1.8) |
−24.6 (−12.3) |
−31.1 (−24.0) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 35.3 (1.39) |
34.1 (1.34) |
37.6 (1.48) |
35.2 (1.39) |
60.9 (2.40) |
62.3 (2.45) |
81.1 (3.19) |
54.1 (2.13) |
53.4 (2.10) |
44.0 (1.73) |
39.4 (1.55) |
40.7 (1.60) |
578.1 (22.76) |
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) | 6.8 (2.7) |
6.6 (2.6) |
4.7 (1.9) |
1.6 (0.6) |
0.0 (0.0) |
0.0 (0.0) |
0.0 (0.0) |
0.0 (0.0) |
0.0 (0.0) |
0.2 (0.1) |
2.2 (0.9) |
3.6 (1.4) |
6.8 (2.7) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) | 17.27 | 14.60 | 14.17 | 11.17 | 13.33 | 13.43 | 13.77 | 11.80 | 11.73 | 13.03 | 14.30 | 16.37 | 164.97 |
Average snowy days (≥ 0 cm) | 15.3 | 13.3 | 6.2 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.2 | 3.4 | 8.6 | 47.9 |
Average relative humidity (%) | 87.6 | 84.2 | 77.5 | 68.6 | 70.0 | 70.5 | 71.3 | 71.4 | 78.9 | 84.1 | 89.2 | 89.4 | 78.6 |
Mean monthly sunshine hours | 48.2 | 65.8 | 122.7 | 187.0 | 241.8 | 244.6 | 250.9 | 243.4 | 160.1 | 111.1 | 51.2 | 40.4 | 1,767.3 |
Average ultraviolet index | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
Source 1: Institute of Meteorology and Water Management[96][97][98][99][100][101][102][103] | |||||||||||||
Source 2: Meteomodel.pl (records, relative humidity 1991–2020),[104][105][106] WeatherAtlas (UV)[107] |
Administration
[edit]Government
[edit]The city's governance is executed by Urząd Miasta Łodzi, a local council or town hall, currently based at Juliusz Heinzl Palace.[108] The power is divided between the President of Łódź (Prezydent Łodzi), a title held by the mayor, and the Rada Miejska assembly comprising 37 elected deputies.[109] The term in office for deputies is 5 years.[109] Łódź also acts as a city with powiat rights, exercising the powers and duties of a local powiat county.[110]
Łódź is the capital of Łódź Voivodeship, one of Poland's 16 provinces, and hosts the voivodeship sejmik – a regional assembly.[111][page needed] The city is also the seat of the voivode, the province's governor who is the representative of the Polish Council of Ministers in the voivodeship, is the head of the combined government administration, acts as supervisory authority over local government units and as a higher-level authority within the meaning of the provisions on administrative proceedings.[111][page needed]
In medieval times, the town was governed by the burgomaster, who began his term as early as 1470. The first individual who held the title of "president" was Karol Tangermann, a close aide of Rajmund Rembieliński, when it was still a part of Congress Poland.[112] The first president of Łódź under the independent Second Polish Republic was Leopold Skulski (1917–1919), who subsequently became the prime minister of Poland.[111][page needed] The incumbent president since 2010 is Hanna Zdanowska from the Civic Coalition party.
Administrative division
[edit]Łódź was previously divided into 5 major boroughs (dzielnica) – Bałuty, Górna, Polesie, Śródmieście, and Widzew. In January 1993, the system of boroughs was abolished and the city became a single entity with no real subdivisions. In April 2000, a system of 36[b] neighbourhoods or dependent units (osiedle) was imposed by the City Council for administrative purposes only; these units have no local governing or regulatory authority.
Demographics
[edit]According to Statistics Poland (GUS), Łódź was inhabited by 672,185 people and had a population density of 2,292 persons per square kilometre (5,940/sq mi), as of December 2020.[update][113] Approximately 55.7 per cent of inhabitants are of working age (18–64 years), which is a considerable decrease from 64.1 per cent in 2010.[114] An estimated 29.1 per cent is of post-working age compared to 21.8 per cent ten years earlier.[115] In 2020, 54.39 per cent (365,500) of all residents were women.[115] Łódź has one of the highest feminisation rates among Poland's major cities, a legacy of the city's industrial past, when the textile factories attracted large numbers of female employees.[116]
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1950 | 620,183 | — |
1960 | 709,698 | +14.4% |
1970 | 762,454 | +7.4% |
1978 | 823,326 | +8.0% |
1988 | 854,261 | +3.8% |
2002 | 789,318 | −7.6% |
2011 | 728,892 | −7.7% |
2021 | 670,642 | −8.0% |
Source: [117][118][119][120][121] |
At its peak in 1988 the population was around 854,000;[122] however, this has since declined due to low fertility rates, outward migration and a lower life expectancy than in other parts of Poland.[123] Łódź was the country's second largest city until 2007, when it lost its position to Kraków.[116] A major contributing factor was the abrupt transition from socialist to market-based economy after 1989 and the resulting economic crisis,[124] but the economic growth which followed has not reversed the trend.[125] Depopulation and ageing are major impediments for the future development of the city, putting strain on social infrastructure and medical services.[116] As a result of the continuing demographic crisis and rapid population loss, Łódź was overtaken by Wrocław and dropped to become the country's fourth-largest city in 2022.[126]
Historically, Łódź was multi-ethnic and its diverse population comprised migrants from other regions of Europe. In 1839, approximately 78 per cent (6,648) of the total population was German. In 1913, Łódź had a population of 506,100 people, of whom 251,700 (49.7%) were Poles, 171,900 (34%) were Jews, 75,000 (14.8%) were Germans, and 6,300 (1.3%) were Russians.[127] According to the 1931 Polish census, the total population of 604,000 included 375,000 (59%) Poles, 192,000 (32%) Jews and 54,000 (9%) Germans. By 1939, the Jewish minority had grown to well over 200,000.[128]
Religion
[edit]The majority of believers in Łódź adhere to Roman Catholicism, the largest religious denomination in Poland.[129] The first Catholic bishopric was established in December 1920 and has been elevated to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Łódź in 1992 by Pope John Paul II.[130] The primary church for Catholic worship is the Basilica of St. Stanislaus Kostka, which is often reserved for special occasions or during religious holidays.[130] Constructed in 1912 in the Gothic Revival style, it is the tallest building in the city and one of Poland's tallest churches since the completion of the tower in 1927.[131] The Feast of Corpus Christi is widely celebrated and annual marches take place on Piotrkowska Street, in front of the Cathedral. Despite this, church attendance in Łódź is one of the lowest in Poland; mass attendance was estimated at 26% in 2013 and fell to 17% by 2023.[129] Statistics also show that the city and its environs have one of the highest concentration of atheists in Poland.[132]
Historically, Łódź had a strong and influential Protestant population (11% in 1921, 9.2% in 1931) that had its origins with the migration of German-speaking weavers and textile workers throughout the 19th century.[133] The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession representing Lutherans is the largest of the Protestant denominations. The city falls under the Lutheran Diocese of Warsaw, though the congregation is headquartered at the Church of St. Peter and St. Paul in Pabianice. The only active Lutheran church in Łódź is the historic St. Matthew's Church, which seasonally serves as a concert hall. There is also a parish of the Polish Reformed Church (Calvinist), dating back to 1888, as well as Methodist and Evangelical temples. Łódź is considered to be one of the centres of Jehovah's Witnesses' activity in Poland.
Judaism was once the city's second largest denomination (33.4% in 1931), with up to 250 synagogues and shtiebels in existence prior to 1939 and a strong cultural output.[133] The Stara Synagogue, commonly known as Alte Szil, and Ezras Israel Synagogue were the primary places of worship for Orthodox Jews. The Great Synagogue, the largest of its kind, served the Reformed Jewish community. All were destroyed during the Second World War, except for the defunct 19th-century Synagoga Reicherów. The Union of Jewish Religious Communities in Poland (ZGWŻ) manages the Łódź municipality; the local base is situated at a newer synagogue on Pomorska Street where the Community maintains kosher facilities and a mikveh.[134]
Łódź is the seat of a Mariavite Church diocese, initially created in 1910.[135] The Marivites are followers of Old Catholicism and a considerable minority; there are only three Mariavite dioceses across the country.[136]
Economy and infrastructure
[edit]Before 1990, the economy of Łódź was heavily reliant on the textile industry, which had developed in the city in the nineteenth century owing to the abundance of rivers used to power the industry's fulling mills, bleaching plants and other machinery.[137] Because of the growth in this industry, the city has sometimes been called the "Polish Manchester"[138] and the "lingerie capital of Poland".[139] As a result, Łódź grew from a population of 13,000 in 1840 to over 500,000 in 1913. By the time right before World War I Łódź had become one of the most densely populated industrial cities in the world, with 13,280 inhabitants per km2, and also one of the most polluted. The textile industry declined dramatically in 1990 and 1991, and no major textile company survives in Łódź. However, countless small companies still provide a significant output of textiles, mostly for export. Łódź is no longer a significant industrial centre, but it has become a major hub for the business services sector in Poland owing to the availability of highly skilled workers and active cooperation between local universities and the business sector.[140]
The city benefits from its central location in Poland. A number of firms have located their logistics centres in the vicinity. Two motorways, A1 spanning from the north to the south of Poland, and A2 going from the east to the west, intersect northeast of the city. As of 2012,[update] the A2 is complete to Warsaw and the northern section of A1 is largely completed. With these connections, the advantages of the city's central location should increase even further. Work has also begun on upgrading the railway connection with Warsaw, which reduced the 2-hour travel time to make the 137 km (85 mi) journey 1.5 hours in 2009. As of 2018,[update] travel time from Łódź to Warsaw is around 1.2 hours with the modern Pesa SA Dart trains.[141]
Recent years have seen many foreign companies opening and establishing their offices in Łódź. The Indian IT company Infosys has one of its centres in the city. In January 2009 Dell announced that it will shift production from its plant in Limerick, Ireland to its plant in Łódź, largely because the labour costs in Poland are a fraction of those in Ireland.[142] The city's investor friendly policies have attracted 980 foreign investors by January 2009.[142] Foreign investment was one of the factors which decreased the unemployment rate in Łódź to 6.5 per cent in December 2008, from 20 per cent four years earlier.[142]
Transport
[edit]Łódź is situated near the geographical centre of Poland, only a short distance away from the motorway junction in Stryków where the two main north–south (A1) and east–west (A2) Polish transport corridors meet, which positions the city on two of the ten major trans-European routes: from Gdańsk to Žilina and Brno and from Berlin to Moscow via Warsaw.[143] It is also part of the New Silk Road,[144] a regular cargo rail connection with the Chinese city of Chengdu operating since 2013.[145] Łódź is served by the national motorway network, an international airport, and long-distance and regional railways. It is at the centre of a regional and commuter rail network operating from the city's various train stations. Bus and tram services are operated by a municipal public transport company. There are 193 km (120 mi) of bicycle routes throughout the city (as in January 2019).[146]
Major roads include:
- A1: Gdańsk – Toruń – Łódź – Częstochowa – Cieszyn (national border)
- A2: Świecko (national border) – Poznań – Łódź – Warszawa
- S8: Wrocław – Sieradz – Łódź – Piotrków Trybunalski – Warszawa – Białystok
- S14: Pabianice – Konstantynów Łódzki – Aleksandrów Łódzki – Zgierz
- DK14: Łowicz – Stryków – Łódź – Zduńska Wola – Sieradz – Złoczew – Walichnowy
- DK72: Konin – Turek – Poddębice – Łódź – Brzeziny – Rawa Mazowiecka
- DK91: Gdańsk – Tczew – Toruń – Łódź – Piotrków Trybunalski – Radomsko – Częstochowa
Airport
[edit]The city has an international airport: Łódź Władysław Reymont Airport located 6 kilometres (4 miles) from the city centre. Flights connect the city with destinations in Europe including Turkey.[147] In 2014 the airport handled 253,772 passengers.[148] It is the 8th largest airport in Poland.[149][circular reference]
Public transport
[edit]The Municipal Transport Company – Łódź (Miejskie Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacyjne – Łódź), owned by the Łódź City Government, is responsible for operating 58 bus routes and 19 tram lines.[150][151] The tram network is one of the longest in the country and was the first electrified cable tramway in Congress Poland, beginning its operation on 23 December 1898. The regional tramway network also connects Łódź with the adjacent cities of Pabianice (since 2023) and Konstantynów Łódzki (since 2024), which are within the Łódź Agglomeration. The rolling stock largely comprises older but modernised wagons by Konstal and newer Polish-manufactured types such as Pesa Swing and Moderus Gamma. Among the popular models for buses are Mercedes Conecto LF and Solaris Urbino 18.
Rail
[edit]Łódź has a number of long distance and local railway stations. There are two main stations in the city, but with no direct rail connection between them—a legacy of 19th-century railway network planning. Originally constructed in 1866, the centrally-located Łódź Fabryczna was a terminus station for a branch line of the Warsaw-Vienna railway,[152] whereas Łódź Kaliska was built more than thirty years later on the central section of the Warsaw-Kalisz railway. For this reason most intercity train traffic goes to this day through Łódź Kaliska station, despite its relative distance from the city centre, and Łódź Fabryczna serves mainly as a terminal station for trains to Warsaw. The situation will be remedied in 2026 after the construction of a tunnel connecting the two,[153] which is likely to make Łódź Poland's main railway hub.[154] The tunnel will additionally serve Łódź Commuter Railway, providing a rapid transit system for the city, dubbed the Łódź Metro by the media and local authorities.[155] Three new stations are being constructed on the underground line, one serving the needs of the Manufaktura complex, another one serving Koziny neighbourhood and the third one located in the area of Piotrkowska Street.[155]
In December 2016, a few years after the demolition of the old building of Łódź Fabryczna station, a new underground station was opened.[154] It is considered to be the largest and most modern of all train stations in Poland and is designed to handle increased traffic after the construction of the tunnel.[156] It also serves as a multimodal transport hub, featuring an underground intercity bus station, and is integrated with a new transport interchange serving taxis and local trams and buses.[157] The construction of the new Łódź Fabryczna station was part of a broader project of urban renewal known as Nowe Centrum Łodzi (New Centre of Łódź).[158]
The third-largest train station in Łódź is Łódź Widzew. There are also many other stations and train stops in the city, many of which were upgraded as part of the Łódzka Kolej Aglomeracyjna commuter rail project. The rail service, founded as part of a major regional rail upgrade and owned by Łódź Voivodeship, operates on routes to Kutno, Sieradz, Skierniewice, Łowicz, and on selected days to Warsaw, with plans for further expansion after the construction of the tunnel.[159]
Education
[edit]Łódź is a thriving center of academic life. Łódź hosts three major state-owned universities, six higher education establishments operating for more than a half of the century, and a number of smaller schools of higher education. The tertiary institutions with the most students in Łódź include:
- University of Łódź (UŁ – Uniwersytet Łódzki)
- Lodz University of Technology (PŁ – Politechnika Łódzka)
- Medical University of Łódź (Uniwersytet Medyczny w Łodzi)
- National Film School in Łódź (Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Filmowa, Telewizyjna i Teatralna w Łodzi)
- Academy of Music in Łódź (Akademia Muzyczna im. Grażyny i Kiejstuta Bacewiczów w Łodzi)
- Academy of Fine Arts In Łódź (Akademia Sztuk Pięknych im. Wł. Strzemińskiego w Łodzi)
In the 2018 general ranking of state-owned tertiary education institutions in Poland, the University of Łódź came 20th (6th place among universities) and Lodz University of Technology 12th (6th place among technical universities). The Medical University of Łódź was ranked 5th among Polish medical universities. Leading courses taught in Łódź include administration (3rd place), law (4th) and biology (4th).
There is also a number of private-owned institutions of higher learning in Łódź. The largest of these are the University of Social Sciences (Społeczna Akademia Nauk) and the University of Humanities and Economics in Łódź (Akademia Humanistyczno-Ekonomiczna w Łodzi). In the 2018 ranking of private universities in Poland the former was ranked 9th, and the latter 23rd.
National Film School in Łódź
[edit]The Leon Schiller National Higher School of Film, Television and Theatre in Łódź (Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Filmowa, Telewizyjna i Teatralna im. Leona Schillera w Łodzi) is the most notable academy for future actors, directors, photographers, camera operators and TV staff in Poland. It was founded on 8 March 1948 and was initially planned to be moved to Warsaw as soon as the city was rebuilt following the Warsaw Uprising. However, in the end the school remained in Łódź and became one of the best-known institutions of higher education in the city.
At the end of the Second World War Łódź was the only large Polish city besides Kraków which war had not destroyed. The creation of the National Film School gave Łódź a role of greater importance from a cultural viewpoint, which before the war had belonged exclusively to Warsaw and Kraków. Early students of the School include the directors Andrzej Munk, Roman Polanski, Andrzej Wajda, Kazimierz Karabasz (one of the founders of the so-called Black Series of Polish Documentary) and Janusz Morgenstern, who at the end of the 1950s became famous as one of the founders of the Polish Film School of Cinematography.[160]
Culture
[edit]Landmarks and events
[edit]The most notable and recognizable landmark of the city is Piotrkowska Street, which remains the high-street and main tourist attraction in the city, runs north to south for a little over five kilometres (3.1 miles). This makes it one of the longest commercial streets in the world. Most of the building façades, many of which date back to the 19th century, have been renovated.[161] It is the site of most restaurants, bars and cafes in Łódź's city centre. Important monuments of architecture along Piotrkowska Street are the Old Town Hall, the Descent Of The Holy Spirit Church, the Łódź Catholic Cathedral and the St. Matthew's Lutheran Church. Other important churches in the city center include the Alexander Nevsky Orthodox Cathedral and the Karol Scheibler's Chapel, Lutheran part of Ogrodowa Street Cemetery.
Many neglected tenement houses and factories throughout the entire city centre have been renovated in recent years as part of the ongoing revitalization project run by the local authorities.[162] The best example of urban regeneration in Łódź is the Manufaktura complex, occupying a large area of a former cotton factory dating back to the nineteenth century.[163] The site, which was the heart of Izrael Poznański's industrial empire, hosts a shopping mall, numerous restaurants, 4-star hotel, multiplex cinema, factory museum, bowling and fitness facilities and a science exhibition centre.[164] Opened in 2006, it quickly became a centre of cultural entertainment and shopping,[164] as well as a recognizable city landmark attracting both domestic and foreign tourists.[163] Another example is the former factory of Karl Scheibler on Księży Młyn, which was turned into a mixed-use complex of offices and housing.
Łódź also provides plenty of green spaces for recreation. Woodland areas cover 9.61% of the city, with parks taking up an additional 2.37% of the area of Łódź (as of 2014).[update][165] Las Łagiewnicki ('Łagiewnicki Forest') is recognized as the largest forested area within the administrative borders of any city in Europe.[166] It has an area of 1,245 ha[165] and is cut across by a number of hiking trails that traverse the hilly landscape on the western edge of Łódź Hills Landscape Park.[167] A "natural complex which has remained nearly intact as oak-hornbeam and oak woodland,"[166] the forest is also rich in history, and its attractions include a Franciscan friary dating back to the early 18th century and two 17th-century wooden chapels.[168]
Out of a total of 44 parks in Łódź (as of 2014),[update] 11 have historical status, the oldest of them dating back to the middle of the 19th century.[169] The largest of these, Józef Piłsudski Park (188.21 hectares (0.7267 sq mi)),[165] is located near the Łódź Zoo and the city's botanical garden, and together with them it comprises an extensive green complex known as Zdrowie serving the recreational needs of the city. Another notable park located in Łódź is the Józef Poniatowski Park.
The Jewish Cemetery at Bracka Street, one of the largest of its kind in Europe, was established in 1892. After the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany in 1939, this cemetery became a part of Łódź's eastern territory known as the enclosed Łódź ghetto (Ghetto Field). Between 1940 and 1944, approximately 43,000 burials took place within the grounds of this rounded-up cemetery.[170] In 1956, a monument by Muszko in memory of the victims of the Łódź Ghetto was erected at the cemetery. It features a smooth obelisk, a menorah, and a broken oak tree with leaves stemming from the tree (symbolizing death, especially death at a young age). As of 2014,[update] the cemetery has an area of 39.6 hectares (98 acres). It contains approximately 180,000 graves, approximately 65,000 labelled tombstones, ohels and mausoleums. Many of these monuments have significant architectural value; 100 of these have been declared historical monuments and have been in various stages of restoration. The mausoleum of Izrael and Eleanora Poznański is perhaps the largest Jewish tombstone in the world and the only one decorated with mosaics.[171][172]
Museums in Łódź
[edit]- Archaeological and Ethnographic Museum
- Book Art Museum
- Central Museum of Textiles
- City of Lodz History Museum
- Film Museum
- Herbst Palace Museum
- Muzeum Sztuki (Museum of Art)
- Natural History Museum, University of Łódź
- Muzeum Tradycji Niepodległościowych (Independence Traditions Museum) with three parts:
- Radegast train station
- Mausoleum and museum in Radogoszcz – Radogoszcz prison
- exhibition Kuźnia Romów (Roma forge) in former Łódź Ghetto
- Se-ma-for museum of stop-motion film animation
- The Centre for Science and Technology EC1 in former Łódź power plant
Łódź has one of the best museums of modern art in Poland. Muzeum Sztuki has three branches, two of which (ms1 and ms2) display collections of 20th and 21st-century art. The newest addition to the museum, ms2 was opened in 2008 in the Manufaktura complex.[173] The unique collection of the Museum is presented in an unconventional way. Instead of a chronological lecture on the development of art, works of art representing various periods and movements are arranged into a story touching themes and motifs important for the contemporary public. The third branch of Muzeum Sztuki, located in one of the city's many industrial palaces, also has more traditional art on display, presenting works by European and Polish masters such as Stanisław Wyspiański and Henryk Rodakowski.[174]
Among the 14 registered museums to be found in Łódź,[175] there is the independent Book Art Museum, awarded the American Printing History Association's Institutional Award for 2015 for its outstanding contribution to the study, recording, preservation, and dissemination of printing history in Poland over the last 35 years.[176] Other notable museums include the Central Museum of Textiles with its open-air display of wooden architecture, the Cinematography Museum, located in Scheibler Palace, and the Museum of Independence Traditions, occupying the building of a historical Tsarist prison from the late 19th century.[173] A more unusual establishment, the Dętka museum offers tourists a chance to visit the municipal sewer designed in the early years of the 20th century by the British engineer William Heerlein Lindley.
Łódź in literature and cinema
[edit]Three major novels depict the development of industrial Łódź: Władysław Reymont's The Promised Land (1898), Joseph Roth's Hotel Savoy (1924) and Israel Joshua Singer's The Brothers Ashkenazi (1937). Roth's novel depicts the city on the eve of a workers' riot in 1919. Reymont's novel was made into a film by Andrzej Wajda in 1975.[177] In the 1990 film Europa Europa, Solomon Perel's family flees pre-World War II Berlin and settles in Łódź. Paweł Pawlikowski's film Ida was partially shot in Łódź.[177] Chava Rosenfarb's Yiddish trilogy "The Tree of Life" (1972; English translation 1985) portrays life within the Łódź Ghetto.
Theatre
[edit]- Grand Theatre (Teatr Wielki)
- Stefan Jaracz Theatre (Teatr Stefana Jaracza)
- Schiller's Studio Theatre (Teatr Studyjny Schillera)
Cuisine and food
[edit]Among the traditional dishes of Łódź and the Łódź Voivodeship are zalewajka – a sour cereal and potato soup, often served with mushrooms, kielbasa sausage and bread – and cabbage soup (kapuśniak) served with potato dumplings and pork cracklings.[178] These were once the staples of the working-class population employed in textile factories. Popular breads and baked goods include the angielka baguette roll and żulik bun with raisins.[178] Aspic in various forms (galareta, zimne nóżki or drygle) was once a well-established comfort and party food in the city. Łódź and the surrounding region is also known for having a strong preference for mushroom soup over barszcz (borscht) for the Polish Wigilia Christmas Eve supper.[179]
Major food venues are primarily located at Piotrkowska Street, for example the OFF Piotrkowska, a mixed-use development complex situated in a heritage-listed red brick factory. Food trucks are a common sight around the city centre and several neighbourhoods.
Sport
[edit]The city has experience as a host for international sporting events such as the 2009 EuroBasket,[180] the 2011 EuroBasket Women, the 2014 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship and the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup, with the opening and final of the latter taking place at Widzew Stadium. Łódź will also host the sixth edition of the European Universities Games in 2022.[181]
Under communism it was common for clubs to participate in many different sports for all ages and sexes. Many of these traditional clubs still survive. Originally they were owned directly by a public body, but have become independently operated by clubs or private companies. However, they get public support through the cheap rent of land and other subsidies from the city. Some of their sections have gone professional and separated from the clubs as private companies. For example, Budowlani S.A is a private company that owns the only professional rugby team in Łódź, while Klub Sportowy Budowlani remains a community amateur club.
- Budowlani Łódź – rugby (six times Polish champions), hockey, wrestling, volleyball
- ŁKS Łódź – association football (two times Polish champions), basketball (Polish champions 1953), volleyball (two times Polish champions), handball, boxing
- SMS Łódź[182] – association football, volleyball, basketball
- KS Społem Łódź – road and track cycling
- SKS Start Łódź[183] – football, swimming
- Widzew Łódź – association football (four time Polish champions, semi-finalists of the 1982–83 European Cup)
- Orzeł Łódź - motorcycle speedway team
- Sroki Łódź - Rugby league (three times Polish champions)
In Ekstraklasa of Polish beach soccer Łódź have three professional clubs: Grembach, KP and BSCC .
Horticultural Expo 2029
[edit]Łódź bid for the Specialized Expo 2022/2023 but lost out to Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Łódź was planned to host the Horticultural Expo in 2024. However, multiple Expo events were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a Horticultural Expo in Doha, Qatar from 2021/22 to 23/24 among them.[184] As a result, the Horticultural Expo in Łódź has been rescheduled to 2029 to maintain a required time interval between them.[185]
Notable residents
[edit]- Daniel Amit (1938–2007), Israeli physicist
- Yehuda Ashlag (1885–1954), Rabbi
- Grażyna Bacewicz (1909–1969), composer
- Aleksander Bardini (1913–1995), theatre director and actor
- Andrzej Bartkowiak (born 1950), cameraman and film director
- Jurek Becker (1937–1997), writer
- Sylwester Bednarek (born 1989), high jumper
- Marek Belka (born 1952), politician, former Prime Minister
- Karolina Bielawska (born 1999), model and Miss World 2021
- Kazimierz Brandys (1916–2000), writer
- Artur Brauner (1918–2019), film producer
- Edward G. Brisch (1901–1960), industrial coding and classification expert
- Jacob Bronowski (1908–1974), writer, mathematician and Britain's leading academic TV figure of the 1970s
- Sabina Citron (1928–2023), Holocaust survivor, activist and author
- Bat-Sheva Dagan (1925–2024), Holocaust survivor, teacher, psychologist and author
- Karl Dedecius (1921–2016), translator
- Elizabeth Diller (born 1954), American architect
- Karl Dominik (born 1980), China's first Chinese speaking Polish actor
- Marek Edelman (1919/1922–2009), politician, human rights activist and Holocaust survivor
- Jacob Eisner (born 1947), Israeli basketball player
- Max Factor Sr. (1877–1938), businessman, founder of the Max Factor cosmetics company
- Magdalena Fręch (born 1997), tennis player
- Dov Freiberg (1927–2008), Holocaust survivor and writer
- Joseph Friedenson (1922–2013), Holocaust survivor and writer
- Piotr Fronczewski (born 1946), Polish actor
- Maciej Golubiewski (born 1976), Polish political scientist and diplomat, Consul General at the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in New York City
- Marcin Gortat (born 1984), basketball player
- Mendel Grossman (1913–1945), Łódź ghetto photographer
- Józef Hecht (1891–1951), engraver and printmaker
- Jerzy Janowicz (born 1990), tennis player
- Josef Joffe (born 1944), journalist
- Michał Kalecki (1899–1970), Marxian economist
- Roman Kantor (1912–1943), épée fencer
- Jan Karski (1914–2000), diplomat and anti-nazi resistant
- Aharon Katzir (1914–1972), Israeli pioneer in study of electrochemistry of biopolymers; killed in Lod Airport Massacre
- Paul Kletzki (1900–1973), conductor
- Katarzyna Kobro (1898–1951), sculptor
- Lea Koenig (born 1929), Israeli actress
- Tomasz Konieczny (born 1972), opera singer
- Jerzy Kosinski (1933–1991), writer
- Jan Kowalewski (1892–1965), cryptologist
- Karolina Kowalkiewicz (born 1985), mixed martial artist
- Feliks W. Kres (1966-2022), fantasy writer
- Anna Lewandowska (born 1988), karateka and nutrition expert
- Nathan Lewin, Washington, D.C. attorney
- Daniel Libeskind (born 1946), architect
- Mikołaj Marczyk (born 1995), rally driver
- Tadeusz Miciński (1873–1918), poet
- Izabella Miko (born 1981), actress
- Stanisław Mikulski (1929–2014), actor
- Ruth Minsky Sender (1926–2024), author and survivor
- Zew Wawa Morejno (1916–2011), Chief Rabbi
- Henry Morgentaler (1923–2013), physician
- Konstantin Petrovich Nechaev (1883–1946), White movement leader and mercenary commander in China
- Zbigniew Nienacki (1929–1994), writer
- Marek Olędzki (born 1951), archaeologist
- Marian P. Opala (1921–2010), Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice
- O.S.T.R. (born 1980), rapper
- Adam Palma (born 1974), Polish-British guitarist and teacher
- Władysław Pasikowski (born 1959), film director
- Roman Polanski (born 1933), film director
- Piotr Pustelnik (born 1951), alpine and high-altitude climber, the 20th man to climb all 14 eight-thousanders
- Ze'ev Raban (1890–1970), Israeli painter and sculptor
- Adolph Moses Radin (1848–1909), rabbi
- Damian Radowicz (born 1989), footballer
- Władysław Reymont (1867–1925), writer, Nobel Prize winner
- Joseph Rotblat (1908–2005), physicist, Nobel Prize winner
- Stefan Rozental (1903–1994), nuclear physicist
- Arthur Rubinstein (1887–1982), pianist
- Arnold Rutkowski, opera singer
- Zbigniew Rybczyński (born 1949), animator
- Marek Saganowski (born 1978), footballer
- Andrzej Sapkowski (born 1948), fantasy writer
- Karl Wilhelm Scheibler (1820–1881), industrialist
- Ebi Smolarek (born 1981), footballer
- Piotr Sobociński (1958–2001), cinematographer
- Andrzej Sontag (born 1952), track-and-field athlete
- Natan Spigel (1900–1942), painter
- Władysław Strzemiński (1893–1952), painter
- Borys Szyc (born 1978), actor and musician
- Arthur Szyk (1894–1951), artist
- Adam Szymczyk (born 1970), art critic and curator
- Alexandre Tansman (1897–1986), composer and pianist
- Jack Tramiel (1928–2012), computer manufacturer, the founder of Commodore
- Julian Tuwim (1894–1953), poet
- Andrzej Udalski (born 1957), astronomer and astrophysicist
- Miś Uszatek, cartoon character
- Sławosz Uznański (born 1984), engineer and reserve astronaut of the European Space Agency
- Michał Wiśniewski (born 1972), singer
- Paweł Zatorski (born 1990), volleyball player
- Hanna Zdanowska (born 1959), politician, Mayor of Łódź
- Aleksandra Ziółkowska-Boehm (born 1949), writer
International relations
[edit]Łódź is home to fourteen foreign consulates, i.e. honorary consulates general of Hungary and Turkey, and honorary consulates of Albania, Armenia, Austria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova and Ukraine.[186]
Twin towns – sister cities
[edit]- Chemnitz, Germany (since 1972)
- Stuttgart, Germany (since 1988)
- Lyon, France (since 1991)
- Vilnius, Lithuania (since 1991)
- Odesa, Ukraine (since 1993)
- Tianjin, China (since 1993)
- Tel Aviv, Israel (since 1994)
- Rustavi, Georgia (since 1995)
- Barreiro, Portugal (since 1996)
- Tampere, Finland (since 1996)
- Puebla, Mexico (since 1996)
- Murcia, Spain (since 1999)
- Lviv, Ukraine (since 2003)
- Szeged, Hungary (since 2008)
- Guangzhou, China (since 2014)
- Chengdu, China (since 2015)
Łódź belongs also to the Eurocities network.
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Łódź terminated the partnership with Russian cities Ivanovo and Kaliningrad, and with Minsk, the capital of Belarus on 2 March 2022.[188]
See also
[edit]- History of Łódź
- Łódź Design Festival
- International Festival of Comics and Games in Łódź
- Bednarska Street, Łódź
Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^
- ^ List of the 36 units or neighbourhoods: Bałuty-Centrum, Bałuty-Doły, Bałuty Zachodnie, Julianów-Marysin-Rogi, Łagiewniki, Radogoszcz, Teofilów-Wielkopolska, Osiedle Wzniesień Łódzkich, Chojny, Chojny-Dąbrowa, Górniak, Nad Nerem, Piastów-Kurak, Rokicie, Ruda, Wiskitno, Osiedle im. Józefa Montwiłła-Mireckiego, Karolew-Retkinia Wschód, Koziny, Lublinek-Pienista, Retkinia Zachód-Smulsko, Stare Polesie, Zdrowie-Mania, Złotno, Śródmieście-Wschód, Osiedle Katedralna, Andrzejów, Dolina Łódki, Mileszki, Nowosolna, Olechów-Janów, Stary Widzew, Stoki, Widzew-Wschód, Zarzew, and Osiedle nr 33.
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External links
[edit]- Official website
- Public Transport Official Site
- City map of Łódź
- Historic images of Łódź
- Łódź Special Economic Zone
- Łódź-Lublinek Airport Archived 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 862. .
- The Łódź Post at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 September 2019) —English language newspaper
- The Łódź Ghetto Archived 20 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- Łódź, Poland at JewishGen