Giecz
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Giecz is now a small village in west-central Poland, in Greater Poland Voivodeship, near Dominowo and Środa. It was once one of the main centres of Polish statehood in the early Middle Ages, alongside Poznań and Gniezno.
In the early 9th century a small keep was built on a mound on a peninsula on the Giecz lake; fortified with a stockade and earthworks, it was one of the key strongholds of the early Piast dynasty. In 1038 during a war with Bohemia, the place was seized by Bretislaus I, who sacked the nearby settlement and sold its inhabitants into slavery. The place quickly recovered and by the 13th century was a centre of administration, trade and commerce in the Greater Poland region. At about that time the settlement received a town charter and became the seat of a castellany. However, in 1331 it was burnt to the ground, never to recover.
After 1945 archaeologists discovered the remnants of a mediaeval pallatium, a pre-Romanesque rotunda, stone walls, a 13th-century palace and several sites of primitive iron-ore working.