Kraà Ânik is a town in southeastern Poland with 30 842 inhabitants (2024), situated in the Lublin Voivodeship, historic Lesser Poland. It is the seat of Kraà Ânik County. The town of Kraà Ânik as it is known today was created in 1975, after the merger of its two districts - Kraà Ânik Lubelski, and Kraà Ânik Fabryczny.
Kraà Ânik is located in Lesser Poland, among the hills of Lublin Upland, 49 kilometers south-west of Lublin. The town is divided into two major parts, which are a few kilometers apart: Kraà Ânik Fabryczny and Kraà Ânik Lubelski (or Kraà Ânik Stary, Old Kraà Ânik). The town has an area of 25.28 square kilometers, of which arable land makes up 45%, and forests 17%.
Kraà Ânik Lubelski is the original part of the town where all historic buildings are located. It is made of several districts, such as Old Town, Bojanówka, Koszary, Góry, Zarzecze, Kwiatkowice, and Osiedle Kolejowe. Kraà Ânik Lubelski has old churches and the oldest cemetery of the town, as well as a rail station, a bus station and main administrative offices of the county. It is also a major road junction, where future Expressway S19 (current National Road No. 19) meets National Road No. 74. Until 2010, the Road 74 went through the center of Kraà Ânik, but now there is a by-pass.
Kraà Ânik Fabryczny was founded in the late 1930s, as a settlement for State Ammunition Factory No. 2 (Panstwowe Fabryka Amunicji nr. 2), one of the enterprises built as part of the Central Industrial Region. Previously, in the location of Kraà Ânik Fabryczny there was the village of Dàbrowa Bór, placed a few kilometers northwest of Kraà Ânik, in a forest between Kraà Ânik and UrzÃÂdów. The government of the Second Polish Republic planned a new settlement, built from scratch, for 6,000 people around the new Ammunition Factory No. 2, FLT-Kraà Ânik. After the war, the settlement of Dàbrowa Bór was expanded, and in 1954 its name was changed to Kraà Ânik Fabryczny. In the 1960s, a number of single-family houses was built, later on, several blocks of flats were constructed. On October 1, 1975, Kraà Ânik Fabryczny merged with Kraà Ânik Lubelski, and the villages of Budzyà  and Piaski, creating the town of Kraà Ânik. Currently, Kraà Ânik Fabryczny has some 20,000 inhabitants.
The area of Kraà Ânik was first settled in the 13th century, and the town received its city charter in 1377, by King Louis I of Hungary. At that time it belonged to Sandomierz Voivodeship, one of two voivodeships of Lesser Poland (Lublin Voivodeship was created in 1474, out of parts of Sandomierz Voivodeship). Located on a busy merchant road from Silesia to Kyiv, Kraà Ânik in the 14th century belonged to the Gorajski family. In 1403, it had a parish church of Saint Paul, and in 1410, as a dowry of Anna of Goraj, it passed into the hands of the TÃÂczyà Âski family. Later on, it belonged to other families, such as the Radziwià Âà Âs, and in 1604, the town was purchased by hetman Jan Zamoyski. Until 1866, Kraà Ânik belonged to the Zamoyski family. The town frequently suffered from fires, it was also destroyed by the Swedes in 1657, during the Deluge.
Since the 14th century, Kraà Ânik was surrounded by a rampart, and ca. 1465, stone-brick walls were built on initiative of Jan TÃÂczyà Âski, with two gates - Lublin Gate and Sandomierz Gate. The walls were demolished in the second half of the 19th century. Kraà Ânik also had a defensive church, surrounded with a high wall, and a castle, built in the 14th century on a hill surrounded by swamps. By 1646, the castle was already neglected. In 1657, it was completely destroyed by the Swedes.
Until the Third Partition of Poland (1795), Kraà Ânik belonged to Lublin Voivodeship, then passed into Austrian hands. In 1807 it was included in the short-lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw, and from 1815 until 1915 the town was in the Russian Empire (Congress Poland). In August 1914, the town and surrounding area were a focal point of Battle of Kraà Ânik, an opening battle of the World War I struggle between Russia and Central Powers over control of Galicia. During the war, the town gained its first railway connection, as a line was built through it by the Russians in 1914 in order to deliver supplies to the front. Later on, the line was expanded, and now it joins Lublin with Stalowa Wola.
In 1938 Kraà Ânik was selected as the location for an ammunition factory (see Central Industrial Region). The factory was not finished by the time World War II broke out in 1939, and during the German occupation it was used to manufacture parts for Heinkel planes and other purposes. After the war, in 1948, the factory was started up again, this time to produce ball bearings (the first factory to do that in Poland).
As with much of the Lublin district, Kraà Ânik was a major center of Judaism, with 5,000 Jews (almost 50% of the population) prior to World War II. Historical accounts place Jews in the area in 1531, but the official right to settle there was granted to Jews in 1584. In 1654, Jewish residence was officially limited to the area near the synagogue, but in practice this was not rigidly enforced.
Following the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in World War II, Kraà Ânik was taken over by the Soviets in 1939 and later by the Nazis during Operation Barbarossa. It was the site of the Budzyà  concentration camp, where the prisoners worked for the Heinkel Flugzeugwerke, an initially Polish aircraft production factory which had been taken over by the Germans. This camp, with around 3,000 Jews, became a subcamp of Majdanek.
There was another labor camp in Kraà Ânik called the WIFO Labor Camp, Kraà Ânik Labor Camp, or Arbeitslager Skret, lit. 'Skret Labor Camp', located in the ghetto at Szkolna and BÃ³à ¼nicza streets. It held a similar number of inmates (around 3,000), most of whom were murdered.
From a population of more than 5,000 Kraà Ânik Jews, only an estimated 350 survived the Holocaust; most or all of these survivors left Poland.
Kraà Ânik has a sports club Stal, which was founded in 1948.
Kraà Ânik is twinned with:
Former twin towns:
In 2019, Kraà Ânik's city council has adopted an LGBT-free zone resolution, which led to the city's budget losing 10 million euros from EEA and Norway Grants, getting expelled from a European Union twin town cooperation program and losing twin town status with Nogent-sur-Oise. In 2021, an appeal to repeal the vote by the mayor was rejected by the town council. The resolution was finally overturned on April 29, 2021.
On 24 September 2020, Kraà Ânik councilors voted to consider the ban on 5G mobile telephony in the city. Support was given to the petition of the "Poland Free from 5G Coalition Association" (pl: Stowarzyszenie Koalicja Polska Wolna od 5G), which also provides for an order to dismantle Wi-Fi networks in schools.