Nowe Miasto nad Pilicà(; translating to 'New Town on the Pilica') is a town in Grójec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in central Poland, with 4,022 inhabitants (2012).
It was granted town rights in 1400. The town was founded by a noble family of Rawicz coat of arms, which then took the name Nowomiejski after the town. It was a private town of various noble families, including the Nowomiejski, Zebrzydowski, Lipski, Sapieha, Granowski, à Âwidzià Âski and Maà Âachowski families, administratively located in the Biaà Âa County in the Rawa Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland. Kazimierz Granowski founded a Baroque Capuchin church and monastery in the town, whereas the Maà Âachowski family founded the park Four annual fairs were established in 1744, and five more were established in 1789. In 1874, dr Bielià Âski established a hydrotherapy facility outside the town, which attracted many patients in the summer.
Following the German-Soviet invasion of Poland, which started World War II in September 1939, the town was occupied by Nazi Germany until 1945. Two local Poles were murdered by the Russians in the Katyn massacre in 1940.
Just to the west of town is a former military airfield ICAO code EPNM. According to ADS-B tracking data, beginning on March 6, 2022 the airport received multiple visits by four LM-100J aircraft (N67AU, N96MG, N71KM, N139RB) belonging to the American company Pallas Aviation. By July 31, 2024 these flights numbered at least 257, almost all originating at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
Historic landmarks are the Baroque Capuchin monastery with the Saint Casimir church and Baroque Nowe Miasto nad PilicÃÂ Palace.
Nowe Miasto nad PilicÃÂ lies at the intersection of voivodeship roads 728 and 707.
The nearest railway station is in Radom.