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It developed as a regional center of trade and crafts, located at the intersection of the Kalisz–Głogów and Toruń–Wrocław trade routes.[3] During the Thirty Years' War, in 1628, Protestant refugees from German states settled in the town.[2] It was plundered by the Swedes, during the Swedish invasion of Poland in 1656, but soon recovered and famous fairs were held there.[3]
It was annexed by Prussia in 1793 during the Second Partition of Poland. After the successful Greater Poland uprising of 1806, it was regained by Poles and included within the short-lived Duchy of Warsaw. In 1815 it was re-annexed by Prussia,[3] and in 1871 it subsequently became part of Germany. During the German rule in the 19th century, the town was located in the Prussian province of Posen.[4] The castle of Krotoszyn was the centre of a mediatised principality formed in 1819 out of the holdings of the Prussian crown and granted to the prince of Thurn und Taxis in compensation for his relinquishing control over the Prussian postal system[4] and it was subjected to Germanisation.[2] Famous Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin stopped in the town in 1829.[5] During the Polish Greater Poland uprising (1848)Germans and Jews attacked the local Polish committee, and the Poles had to move their activities to Koźmin Wielkopolski.[2] Later on, despite the Germanisation policies, Poles established a number of organizations, including an industrial society, a cooperative bank and a local branch of the "Sokół" Polish Gymnastic Society.[2]
Many inhabitants took part in the Greater Poland uprising (1918–19), during which the town was liberated by the insurgents on 1 January 1919,[3][6] nearly two months after Poland regained its independence.
World War II
The Germans attacked Krotoszyn on 1 September 1939, the first day of the invasion of Poland and World War II.[2] On 2 September they bombed a train with Polish civilians fleeing the Wehrmacht from Krotoszyn, killing 300 people[2][7] and on 3 September they captured the town.[2] The Germans established a transit camp for Polish prisoners of war and over 4,500 Polish soldiers passed through the camp.[2] In mid-September 1939, the Einsatzgruppe VI entered the town to commit various crimes against the Polish population.[8]
During the German occupation the Polish population was subjected to mass arrests,[9]Germanisation policies, discrimination, expulsions, executions[2] and deportations to forced labour in Germany.[10] Poles from Krotoszyn, including several local policemen and the town's deputy mayor, as well as several alumni of local schools, were also murdered by the Russians in the large Katyn massacre in April–May 1940.[11] The Germans destroyed the memorial dedicated to local Polish insurgents of 1918–1919, while another monument plaque was hidden by Poles and thus preserved.[6] Germany also established and operated a Nazi prison in the town.[12] Nevertheless, local Poles managed to organize the underground resistance movement, which included secret Polish teaching, scout troops, a local branch of the Home Army,[2] the Secret Military Organization and structures of the Polish Underground State.[13] Independent underground Polish press was issued in the town.[10]
The town was liberated by Soviet troops and local Poles in January 1945[2] and restored to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which then stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s. Some members of the Polish resistance movement were persecuted by the communists after the war.[10]
The officially protected traditional food originating from Krotoszyn is wędzonka krotoszyńska, a type of Polish smokedpork meat (as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland).[15] Local traditions of meat production date back hundreds of years, and the first butchers' guilds were established shortly after granting town rights in the early 15th century.[15]
Pietrowicz, Aleksandra; Wojcieszyk, Elżbieta (2011). "Dziewczyna z fotografii". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No.5–6 (126–127). IPN. p.174. ISSN1641-9561.
Pietrowicz, Aleksandra (2011). "Konspiracja wielkopolska 1939–1945". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No.5–6 (126–127). IPN. pp.32, 36. ISSN1641-9561.
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