Nesvizh

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Niasviž
Нясвіж (Belarusian)
Несвиж (Russian)

Nesviž

Flag

Coat of arms
Location of Nesvizh, shown within the Minsk Voblast
Coordinates: 53°13′N 26°40′E / 53.217°N 26.667°E / 53.217; 26.667
Country
Voblast
Raion
 Belarus
Minsk Voblast
  Nesvizh Raion
First mentioned 1223
Population (2009)
  Total 14,300
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Area code(s) +375 1770
Website

Nesvizh (Niasviž, Belarusian: Нясві́ж [nʲaˈsʲvʲiʐ]; Russian: Не́свиж; Polish: Nieśwież; Lithuanian: Nesvyžius; Yiddish: ניעסוויז; Latin: Nesvisium) is a city in Belarus. It is the administrative center of the Nesvizh District (rajon) of Minsk Province and location of the Nesvizh Castle World Heritage Site. Its 2009 population is 14,300.[1]

History

Nesvizh was first documented in 1223,[2] later becoming a part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In the 15th century, while still a minor town, it passed to the Radziwiłł princely family, and remained the family's home until 1813. The first Belarusian language book printed in the Latin alphabet, a catechism by Symon Budny, was published in Nesvizh in 1562.[3] Nesvizh Castle was founded in 1583, and between 1584 and 1598 two monasteries and a collegium, all belonging to different religious orders, were built.[4] On the initiative of Mikołaj "the Orphan" Radziwiłł the city was granted Magdeburg rights in 1586. Two epidemics that occurred in the city in the 17th century led to an establishment of a pharmacy in 1627.

During the Great Northern War of 1700-1721, the city was significantly damaged by the Swedish troops. It was rebuilt in the 1720s by Michał "Rybeńko" Radziwiłł. In the aftermath of the war, in 1740s and 1750s he founded a silk belt factory (which was later moved to Sluck), a cadet corps military school, several textile manufacturers and restored the Corpus Christi Church and a printing factory. Michał's wife, Franciszka Urszula Radziwiłłowa, founded the Nesvizh Radziviłł Theater, which included a choir and a ballet school.

In 1764 and 1768 the city was occupied by Russian troops, and in 1772 the library, which included approximately 10,000 volumes, along with paintings and other objects of art, was transferred to St. Petersburg. Books from the library were granted to the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Niasviž Castle

Hegemony

Nesvizh was part of:

Town Hall

The city was a county (powiat) centre in Nowogródek Province during Polish rule between 1919-1939.

The Jews of Nesvizh

The Jewish population in 1900 stood at 4,687,[5] and approx. 4,500 on the eve of the German invasion of Operation Barbarossa. With the occupation beginning on June 27, 1941, they established a Judenrat. On October 30, 4,000 of the town's Jews were murdered and the rest confined to a ghetto. On July 20, 1942, the ghetto was surrounded by Belorussian police and the German commander announced that the ghetto's population would be liquidated with the exception of 30 essential skilled workers. The ghetto's underground organization, based on a Soviet-era Zionist group, called for self-defense, having one machine gun but mostly knives and similar arms. Most of the Jews were killed; a few succeeded in escaping to nearby forests to join partisan units, including the Zhukov Jewish partisan unit.[6]

Main sights

Facade of the Corpus Christi Church
Slutsk Gate
  • Slutsk Gate, a city gate constructed around 1700. Its name refers to the city of Slutsk.

Twin towns

References

  1. "Region information on the official website of the Nesvizh Regional Executive Committee (in Russian)". Retrieved 2009-10-02. 
  2. "Region information on the official website of the Nesvizh Regional Executive Committee (in English)". Retrieved 2009-10-02. 
  3. "Minsk celebrates 440th anniversary of first Belarusian book printed in Cyrillic alphabet". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus. Retrieved 2009-06-16. 
  4. Г. П. Пашкоў, ed. (2006). "Нясвіж". Энцыклапедыя "Вялікае княства Літоўскае" (том 2). Мінск: Беларуская Энцыклапедыя. pp. 368–369. 
  5. Jewish Gen Town Locator
  6. Shalom Cholawski, Nesvizh in the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, vol. 3, pp.1043-1044

External links

Coordinates: 53°13′N 26°40′E / 53.217°N 26.667°E / 53.217; 26.667

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