à Âuków is a city in eastern Poland with 30,727 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2005). Since 1999, it has been situated in the Lublin Voivodeship, previously it had belonged to the Siedlce Voivodeship (between 1975 and 1998). It is the capital of à Âuków County.
The town has an area of , of which forests make up 13%. à Âuków is located on the Southern Krzna river, at approximately 160 meters above sea level. For 500 years à Âuków, together with neighboring towns Siedlce and Radzyà  Podlaski, was part of Lesser Poland, and was located in the extreme northeastern corner of the province. Some time in the 19th century, it became associated with another historical region of Poland, Podlasie.
The name of the town first appeared in documents in 1233 (Castelani nostri de Lucow). à Âuków comes from Old Slavic word à Âuk, which means "a place located in a wetland".
à Âuków was established as a grod, around the year 1233. It guarded eastern border of the Sandomierz Land, against warring tribes from the East including the Yotvingians and the Lithuanians. In the first half of the 13th century, à Âuków was the seat of Lesser Poland's castellany, positioned in a strategic corner of the province. After prince of Kraków and Sandomierz Bolesà Âaw V the Chaste brought here the Knights Templar (1250âÂÂ1257), a Roman Catholic Diocese of à Âuków was established here. It existed for a very short time (1254âÂÂ1257), and was closed after protests of the Teutonic Knights. In the late Middle Ages, à Âuków was frequently invaded and destroyed by the Old Prussians, Yotvingians, Lithuanians, and Tatars. The city life improved only after 1385 (see Union of Krewo), when Poland and Lithuania became allies. In 1403, à Âuków was officially granted a charter, codifying its legal status. The town originally belonged to the Sandomierz Voivodeship, but in 1474, it became part of the Lublin Voivodeship (1474âÂÂ1795).
à Âuków frequently burned (1517, 1528, 1530). Its period of prosperity in the first half of the 17th century came to an end after the Swedish Deluge (1655âÂÂ1660), when it was ransacked and burned by the Swedes. In the second half of the 18th century, à Âuków had some 3,000 residents. The town began a slow recovery, but in 1782, in a great fire, it almost completely burned, and as a result, its population decreased by 50%. At that time, à Âuków was a prominent center of education in the region. In 1701, Piarist monks opened a college in à Âuków, which later became one of the first in Poland to carry out the reforms of the Commission of National Education.
During the Partitions of Poland, à Âuków was annexed by the Austrian Empire (1795), but since 1815, it was part of the Russian-controlled Congress Poland. Its inhabitants took active role in Polish uprisings of the 19th century (November Uprising, January Uprising). Following the November Uprising in 1839, the Patriotic Union, organized by youth from à Âuków and Warsaw, operated here. It was led by Karol Levittoux, a graduate of the à Âuków high school. The discovery of the "conspiracy" by the Russians was the direct cause of the closure of the high school in à Âuków and its relocation to Siedlce in 1844. After Poland regained its independence as the Second Polish Republic in 1918, à Âuków was again assigned to the Lublin Voivodeship. It was home to a military garrison with several mounted units stationed there. Jews made up about 50% of the population. Almost all of them were murdered in the Holocaust.
In May 1941 a large Jewish ghetto was formed by German administration. It was fenced-out in mid-September 1942, and liquidated before the end of the same year. The number of inmates was nearly 12,000. Deportations took place on the 5th and 8 October, and the 7th and 8 November. Around 9,000 Jews were put onto Holocaust trains and sent to Treblinka extermination camp where they were murdered. Approximately 2,200 inmates were shot locally into execution pits. On 28 October, more Jews were brought in from Adamów, Wojcieszków, Kock, Tuchowicz, and Trzebieszów, about 4,500 in total. Many were executed locally, while others were sent to Treblinka along with the locals. After the wave of deportations and transfers, the ghetto was rearranged as a slave labor camp for Jewish workers employed in the Gestapo warehouses. In December 1942, approximately 500 of them were shot dead. Five months later, on May 2, 1943, the remaining 3,000âÂÂ4,000 Jews were transported to Treblinka extermination camp. Only about 150 Jews of à Âuków survived the Holocaust, mostly in the USSR. They migrated to Israel, Western Europe, and the United States of America.
Also, à Âuków was an important center of anti-German resistance (see Home Army). On 4 September 1939, the German Luftwaffe bombed à Âuków's train station causing many civilian deaths as a result.
After the war, two large factories were built in town: the "Lukbut" shoe factory and a meat plant owned by Henryk Stokà Âosa.
Among the popular points of interest are:
à Âuków railway station is an important railroad junction, located on the strategic eastâÂÂwest line from Brest-Litovsk to Warsaw and Berlin. Other lines stemming from à Âuków are the connections to DÃÂblin and to Skierniewice.