Szczebrzeszyn
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Szczebrzeszyn [IPA:ʂtʂɛ'bʐɛʂɨn] (Yiddish name: שעבערשין Shebershin) is a city in southeastern Poland in Lublin Voivodeship, in Zamość County, about 20 km west of Zamość. From 1975-1999, it was in the administrative district of Zamość Voivodeship. It has 5,357 inhabitants (2004).
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[edit] Early History
Szczebrzeszyn's history can be traced back to 1352 when Casimir III was king. However, there had been a settlement there for several centuries already. This settlement or zamczysko was fortified, as excavations of the walls and defenses bear witness. Neighboring villages are named in Nestor's 11th century chronicle of Rus. This suggests that Szczebrzeszyn already existed, lying beside a major commercial route running from south to north.
In 1492, in the reign of Jan Olbracht, trade had developed so much that the king passed an Act specifying which roads the merchants of Szczebrzeszyn should use when traveling through Greater Poland with their wares. As merchants traveled through Szczebrzeszyn from south to north, they paid set taxes which brought the city a large income. For example, the tax for a wagon with merchandise was 2 groschen; for an ox, 1 groschen; for a wagon with salt from Drohobycz, a measure of salt.
After the death of [Jan Amor] of Tarnów in the year 1500, Szczebrzeszyn stayed in Tarnowski hands for the next 20 years. Later, it passed over as a dowry to the Kmita family. At that time, long-running feuds among family members re-ignited over the Szczebrzeszyn inheritance, while other magnates also staked their claims. King Zygmunt August issued a binding decree regarding this dispute in the year 1555, and allocated rights over the city to the Gorka family of Greater Poland.
The names of the Gorka brothers, Andrzej and Stanisław, are preserved in legends which the oldest of the Szczebrzeszyn residents tell to this day. The Gorkas confirmed the many privileges given to the city years before. They renewed the keep (defensive tower) of which traces remained on the zamczysko. Their main residence was in Greater Poland, but when they were in Szczebrzeszyn, the keep was lively and merry. The city flourished under the Gorkas, as they were community-minded people.
The Gorkas took a strong interest in religious matters, and granted freedom to all religious groups. They built a Greek Orthodox church, transformed the Roman Catholic parish church into a Calvinist one, and opened a synagogue nearby. The well-known supporters of the Reformation, Stankar and Felix Kreutziger, originally from Szczebrzeszyn, sought the protection of these feudal lords. During this time, Szczebrzeszyn reached the highest levels of development.
[edit] Rise and Fall
There were many reasons for the cessation of development and later the steep decline. A great loss to the city was brought about by the terrifying fire that broke out in the castle keep at the beginning of September 1583. The keep was incinerated, and all of the documents relating to the privileges from the king were lost. The fire broke out so suddenly that the residents of the keep barely got out with their lives.
In that same year, the king, Stefan Batory, as a result of the efforts of Andrzej Gorka, renewed all the privileges. For the benefit of Szczebrzeszyn, the Gorkas confirmed and even expanded the Magdeburg Laws, and instituted specific changes for the benefit of the citizens. These were in force for a long time in Szczebrzeszyn.
The Gorkas did not rule for long. The last of the Gorkas, Stanislaw, died in 1592, after which the Szczebrzeszyn estates were taken over by the Czarnkowski family. In the year 1593, Jan Zamoyski bought Szczebrzeszyn from them, along with 35 surrounding villages, and integrated them into his Ordinat, which was created in 1589. At the same time, Zamoyski founded a new capital city on the territory of his Zamosc estates, and he was most concerned with the development of that city. From that time on, Szczebrzeszyn lost its significance, its specific character, and its decline began.
Szczebrzeszyn began to assume a place like all the other towns of the Ordinat, which Zamoyski cared about to a lesser extent than his beloved Zamosc. Despite this, he funded the Monastery of the Holy Franciscans and next to it the Cloister of the Holy Trinity, the modern day Cloister of Saint Katarzyna near the hospital. Apart from this, he liquidated the Catholic Temple and returned the one-time parish Cloister to the Catholics.
In the 17th century, the people were greatly occupied with religious wars. The attitude towards the Arians was one of great animosity, and it led to excesses: for example, the case during funerals of the Arians. This compelled Tomasz Zamoyski to issue a decree in 1637 that the Arians must leave Szczebrzeszyn, 'where Arians have arrived, as well as adherents of new Christian sects.'
The city suffered greatly from the wars, as well as assaults by the Tatars, Turks, and Cossacks. The city suffered especially greatly in 1672 when Tatars torched and plundered it. Masses of people were killed by a variety of epidemics. The victims of the Plague were taken to a separate cemetery outside of the city.
Occasionally, Szczebrzeszyn was the site of historical occurrences. In the year 1672, the so-called Szczebrzeszyn Confederation was organized with the objective of blunting the power of the Hetmen. The conferences took place in the Cloister of Saint Katarzyna and Jan Zamoyski took part in them when he was 'Hetman Wielki Koronny.'
Despite everything, many new guilds arose in the 17th century, which achieved the highest level of development: bakers, coopers, shoemakers, hat makers, felt workers, linen workers, smiths, shtelmakher, locksmiths, sword makers, harness makers, metal workers, goldsmiths, comb makers, rope turners, weavers, and butchers. Just the names and the number of the guilds bear witness to how vigorous the manual trades and industry developed here.
The 18th century was not a distinguished period. The shtetl declined a bit at a time. At the time of the partition of Poland, Szczebrzeszyn fell into the hands of Austria. To this day, Austrian coins are unearthed from that period.
[edit] New Development
Szczebrzeszyn began to develop anew, beginning at the onset of the 19th century. We can ascribe this to the fact that Zamo had ceased to be the seat of the Zamoyskis, and they turned their attention to Szczebrzeszyn, which was closest to their residence. In the year 1811, they transferred the provincial school here from Zamosc, which was closed there in 1809. In 1812, the Holy Mercy Hospital was transferred here from Zamosc, which was set up in the building of the former monastery.
The town came alive. New people appeared: teachers, students, guests. New school buildings and smaller private houses were constructed,.
The public health office of the Ordinat decided that it would locate its Chief Physician here. An Ordinat Hospital was created for peasants with venereal diseases, which the general hospitals did not want to take in because of the monks. The Lady, Teofilia Reder opened a higher private school of three classes for well-to-do girls. A Sunday trade school was organized. Commerce revived. Even more people would come to visit here. However, the principal role was played by the district school, which drew many enlightened teachers and [like] tempered young people to it.
The district school found itself under the oversight of the protector, Stanislaw Zamoyski, who was rich in his influence, a Senator and Voievode, to whom the school is thankful for its existence, along with the Holy Mercy Hospital. The extremely wealthy family of the Zamoyskis—who lived for the most part in Klemensow, apart from the Ordinat itself, which resided in Warsaw—had a good impact on the entire area. It is sufficient to recall the meeting of the distant, but familiar landholders, organized by Andrzej Zamoyski. For this January event, the most important landholders would travel to come together here, from almost the entirety of Poland, which certainly had a significance and an influence on the nearby shtetl.
The influence of Stanislaw Zamoyski was so great, that Szczebrzeszyn, together with its district school, suffered less from the politics of Russification than other settlements after the November Uprising [sic:1830]. Despite this, the school was liquidated, in 1852, as a position that it was an obstacle to carrying out the policies of the Russian authorities. This was a hard blow for Szczebrzeszyn and an incalculable loss.
The significant decline of the city was immediately noticeable. The city was unable to rebound from this plight, even after the liberation, when a Teacher's Seminary existed here, and later a Gymnasium. Szczebrzeszyn never again reclaimed its former significance.
[edit] During the Time of the Uprising
The peaceful way of life was disrupted by the November Uprising in 1831. A short writeup of the events in Szczebrzeszyn at that time is found in the memoirs of the well-known pedagogue Wincenty Dawid, excerpts reproduced here from his recollections written in the year 1887:
"In the end, our tranquility and working lives were disrupted and the model order of the Szczebrzeszyn schools was wrecked. The news, that an uprising had broken out in Warsaw, and that the Russians had abandoned the capitol city, and also the borders of the kingdom, elicited an unheard of exhilaration among everyone. The quiet shtetl, which knew of no other politics other than making appeals to the nobility, immediately felt demands to step out into the political arena together with the entire land.
"In the course of one hour, the black eagles on top of the Magistrate Building were torn down and smashed, as well as from other institutions. The old swords were unearthed, and pistols, they were cleaned off, and made ready. In the smithies, the blacksmiths worked even on holidays. Agricultural implements were beaten into pikes. Scythes were mounted on long poles.
"The intelligentsia, the professors and the Rector himself, call the youth to arm themselves. A rededication of the flag was celebrated, praying in the courtyard of the school. The Rector, Zenkowski gave a speech to the lined up rows of citizens and students, armed with all sorts of ammunition, that each individual was able to make for himself. At the end of the ceremonies, 'Jeszcze Polska nie zginela' was sung. This took place in the middle of December, and immediately, Prof. Kowalski, and many older students, went off with Zenkowski to the Polish military. Only a small number of students remained in the school, only children.
"After Christmas, a movement of the Russian military began. The first to enter Szczebrzeszyn were the Dragoons, whose wild, beard-covered physiognomies made a frightful impression on us. We looked with fear upon these huge men, who camped out on the same place where the battle-ready youth had stood.
"Immediately, news reached us about the decisive battles between the Polish military and its heroic leaders in the field, from Grochow, behind Wawer. Every bit of news was transmitted with great fervor from hand-to-hand, comments were made, and plans were made for the future, as is usual in a small shtetl. The joy became even greater in the spring, when our military [forces] entered Lithuania with Dembinski and Gieldung at their head, when [Wojciech] Chrzanowski and [Jozef] Dwernicki entered the Lublin region, marching on Wolhyn, on the second side of the Bug River, stopping along the way to conduct general battles outside of Czaczki, and Old-Zamosc.
"On the same Schulhof, on that great Thursday, Dwernicki's Uhlans and the Krakusi billeted themselves, placing several cannons around the place, which it seems to me had been plundered from Czaczki. We spiritedly approached our riders, and played with their weaponry. For several days, food and drink was carried to them from the city. They were accepted as brothers.
"When the spring and summer heat set in, a cholera epidemic spread through the city here for the first time. Horse manure was burned in the marketplace and in the streets as a remedy against the cholera, but it didn't help. Many families left the city for the surrounding forests. Prayers were offered in the cloisters to end the epidemic, or prayers of thanksgiving for those victories from the arresting of the disease. The young priest Nowakowski, a fiery orator, would tell the worshipers after prayers about the heroic deeds of our leaders. He punished and accused those young people, who withheld themselves from the military, calling each of them by their name...
"Zamosc, the nearby fortress, and other points, were threatened with encirclement. Many clashes took place in Szczebrzeszyn. The Cossacks would fall upon the city, plundered, beat the Jews, and the townsfolk. A minute later, the Uhlans or the Krakusi would arrive from the direction of Zamo . Once, the Cossacks, as a response to such an attack, decided to take revenge on the city, while the youth of the city took part in these clashed between the Polish military and the Cossacks. At night, the Cossacks drew near in order to torch the city and carry out a slaughter among its residents. A tumult arose in the city, and half the city's residents fled to the nearby forests. One could already hear the shooting from the direction of Janow.
"However confusion elicits wonder. The aggressive people armed themselves. The municipal policeman, an older military man, together with the sexton of the cloister, raised an alarm. Banging on the cloister drum, they gave orders in a loud voice, and in doing so, gave the impression that there was a large military detachment present. The Cossacks and Dragoons, which were already positioned outside the city, decided to pull back. Later orders restrained them from acts of vengeance."
When a national liberation movement developed a couple of years before the January Uprising in 1863, the greatest reaction in the entire Zamo Powiat (which today encompasses 4 Powiats) was in Szczebrzeszyn. Here, Szczebrzeszyn played a special role.
We have very limited details about the uprising itself. Many people joined the party. A civil organization existed here. As late as 1865, the owner of the local pharmacy, Antoni Topolski, was arrested under suspicion that he stood at the head of the people in the city who rose up.
The first clash during the planned assault on the Cossack barracks on January 30, 1863, which was organized by the party by Leszczynski, from the Ordinat, Henryk Granowski, ended in failure. Many wounded revolutionists lay in the local hospital for treatment. Part of them were buried in the Szczebrzeszyn parish [cemetery].
[edit] Russification Methods
After the failure of the Uprising, the Russian authorities began to implement a severe policy of Russification, making the effort to artfully implant everything that was Russian.
Elderly people have been asked to write down their recollections of that time, but they were, for the most part, illiterate. Some of them related what happened to their children, and those benefitting from directions wrote down precise facts with dates and names. Hopfully in this manner, it would be possible to gather important material, but the war interrupted that work.
That difficult time, is being forgotten, a little at a time, when the weak would eventually succumb, and the strong would resist the priests, gendarmes, government officials, among others. In this respect, the women were stronger than the men.
The persecutions of the Uniates took on dramatic forms. Never to be forgotten were the conversations with an elderly peasant from Zurawnica, who told of a frightful scene, when one of his neighbors, a Uniate, agreed to accept the Russian Orthodox faith. The protests of his wife had no effect. When all of the formalities were already ready, and the peasant was required to approach the communion ceremony, his wife went mad from mental confusion, and attacked the priest. This had a fearful effect on her husband, who the refused to carry out the forthcoming ceremony. Being much taken by these tales, effort was made to assemble details about the Uniates in Szczebrzeszyn. A notice from the year 1843 announces that the parish of the Uniates was very poor, because it had 'a small number of adherents to the Szczebrzeszyn church (tzerkva).' In December 1877, the priest, Aleksander G?rski—who, it appears, did not belong to the unyielding fighters—signed his letter as the 'Rector of the Szczebrzeszyn Orthodox Parish.' It was at that time that the Uniates and the Greek-Catholic church were liquidated, and was transformed into a Russian Orthodox church.
Later on, the priest Timofei Tracz came as Rector, and a sorrowful era was initiated for the Polish Catholics and especially for the Uniates. The Rector himself was once a Uniate priest, and voluntarily converted to the Russian Orthodox system of belief and became an ideological Russifier and disseminator of his new faith. He led an ascetic existence, and his activities had an ideological-fanatical character. With time, he worked himself into becoming visible to the highest institutional authorities, and became extremely influential.
Everyone in the Zamoscregion feared him. No one here stood up to him. It is necessary to say that he had considerable success in spreading the Russian Orthodox faith. He carried out this mission without being selective with regard to methods: with promises, chicanery, threats, and violence.
Proceedings from the archive at Zwierzyniec confirm that there never were any Russian Orthodox faithful in Szczebrzeszyn, with the exception of officials, who would sometime spend time here. Apart from the Russian Orthodox church, which had been transformed, as previously mentioned, from a Greek-Catholic church, the Catholic Church near the hospital was remade asa Russian Orthodox church in 1883. The number of adherents to the Russian Orthodox parish grew quickly in proportion, and in that time totaled 486 individuals.
In the year 1905, in the first two months after the publication of the Tolerance Manifesto, 4,195 people in the Szczebrzeszyn parish went over from Russian Orthodoxy to the Roman Catholic faith—that is to say, from Szczebrzeszyn itself—and 402 people from the outskirts of Zamość . Because of this, the Tolerance Declaration was a severe blow to the priest Tracz. All at once, his entire work was for naught. He could not stand this, and with his entire might attempted to resist the desertion, but without result. All these events had a strong impact on his health, and sped his death. He died in 1909.
In the time of World War I, when the Muscovites left Szczebrzeszyn, both Orthodox churches were locked down. The entire Russian Orthodox parish vanished immediately. In order to erase any traces of their prior belief, part of the populace changed the spelling on the grave stones of their kin, from Russian to Polish. No trace remained even of the Tracz memorial on his grave stone. In accordance with an order from the bailiff, someone during the night broke down the monument. The coffin with the body of Tracz was transferred from the area near the church to the public cemetery.
The Rector of the Roman Catholic parish was at that time the priest, Grabarski. He was very popular, and known for his philanthropic activities—even for the benefit of Jews. He was very much beloved by the Jews. For many years, prayers were offered in synagogues on his behalf.
Life in Szczebrzeszyn during the time of the Russian rule was gray and sorrowful. The pressure of rule was felt heavily from the side of the Russian authorities. Community activity was minimal: there was no manner of spiritual movement. Despite this, a certain amount—a conspiratorial activity—was carried on, such as illegal study. Certain organizations did exist: Mlodziez Szkolna, N.D., P.P.S.
The external character of Szczebrzeszyn was set down by the military, a Cossack battalion, which was stationed here. The World War broke out, and masses of military marched through the shtetl: Russian, Austrian, afterwards, more Russian and later a long time of Austrian occupation. Many forms of orientation manifested themselves: pro-Moscow, pro-Austrian, initiatives for independence. Part of the young people went off to military legions.
[edit] Trivia
Szczebrzeszyn is widely known for having a hard to pronounce name for any but possibly Slavic native speakers and is famous for being used by Jan Brzechwa in his Chrząszcz poem:
W Szczebrzeszynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie
Which can be translated in: In [the town of] Szczebrzeszyn a beetle buzzes in the reed.
In the town a statue of a beetle playing the violin refers to this poem.
[edit] People
- Józef Brandt, painter, born here
- Leon Bibel, painter, born here
- Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz, philosopher, sociologist, born here
- Zygmunt Klukowski, physician, bibliophile and historian, lived here
[edit] References
- History of Szczebrzeszyn by Zygmunt Klukowski (from Shebreshin Yizkor Book), Translation: Jackob Salomon Berger
[edit] External links
- Szczebrzeszyn-Shebreshin Website
- Szczebrzeszyn.pl Website
- Szczebrzeszyn.info Website
- Szczebrzeszyn Online Website
- Jewish History of Szczebrzeszyn
- History and description of Szczebrzeszyn from 1890