à Âroda à Âlàska (, ; ) is a town in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It is the seat of à Âroda County, and of the smaller administrative district (gmina) called Gmina à Âroda à Âlàska. The town lies approximately west of the regional capital Wrocà Âaw, on the à Âredzka Woda creek. As of 2019, the town has a population of 9,516. It is part of the Wrocà Âaw metropolitan area.
The town emerged from a medieval Polish trade settlement in the 13th century, and its town rights, granted by Henry the Bearded, became a model for municipal rights of more than 100 towns in Poland. The town has been an important craft and trade center since and has a number of heritage structures, including in Romanesque, Gothic and Baroque styles, and is the site of the discovery of the medieval à Âroda Treasure.
Transforming à Âroda à Âlàska from a small commercial settlement into a center of urban character was carried out by Polish Duke Henry the Bearded (1202âÂÂ1238) whose idea was to enhance the economic and political significance of the Silesia region as a means to re-unify the Polish Kingdom. He vested it with town rights before 1233. At around 1235, he granted it a special law, based on the Magdeburg law, but adapted to the local conditions (à Âroda law). It was a model on which many other Polish towns were later founded (including Opole, Kalisz, Wieliczka, Radom). à Âroda à Âlàska is situated in the central part of the Lower Silesia region at the main transport routes joining the east and west of Europe. The name à Âroda means "Wednesday", as that was the day on which the weekly market took place. The town was fortified with ramparts and a moat. The St. Andrew's Church was most likely built before à Âroda was granted town rights, although the oldest known mention dates back to 1233, whereas the castle was first mentioned in 1266, however, it also may have been built much earlier. It was a residence of the local dukes from the Piast dynasty and the seat of the à Âroda castellany. Between 1220 and 1234 a hospital was established either by Duke Henry the Bearded or Bishop of Wrocà Âaw Wawrzyniec, and by the late 13th century, there was also a parish school (at St. Andrew's Church). Possibly in 1253, the Franciscans arrived and established the town's first monastery, although the oldest known mention comes from 1318. A second hospital was founded in the late 14th century.
In the 13th century the town was a regional center of salt trade. A Merchants' House was established in 1283, a slaughterhouse operated in the town by 1307, and after 1348 merchant shops were built. Crafts and trade, including weaving, developed in the town. Since the 15th century, vines were grown, as a result of which winemaking as well as brewing developed.
In 1428âÂÂ31 the town was devastated by the Hussites (especially devastating was the attack in 1428 when Hussites robbed the town and burnt down the monastery and church of Franciscan order). In 1526, the town was incorporated by the Habsburg monarchy. In the 16th century it was one of the regional centers of Anabaptism. The town was damaged in the Thirty Years' War. One of two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the town in the 18th century and Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland often traveled that route. In 1740, the Prussian soldiers seized the town and incorporated it into the Prussian Kingdom. In 1806 it was sacked by French troops, and in 1813 by German soldiers. Together with the rest of Prussia, the town became a part of unified Germany in 1871.
During World War II the Germans established there two forced labour subcamps of the Stalag VIII-A prisoner-of-war camp. In January 1945, a death march of prisoners of a subcamp of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp from Brzeg Dolny reached the town, and 93 sick prisoners, including 56 Poles, were massacred by the Volkssturm. Ernst Dickmann who ordered the massacre was sentenced to death after the war in December 1945 and executed. On 9 February 1945, the German troops withdrew from the town.
The town then became again part of Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the 1980s. A time of complete insecurity began for the townspeople. On June 26, 1945, Polish militia forced all people out of their homes for deportation to the west. However, the expulsion march ended in nearby Chojnów and the people returned to their homes. Each morning at 7, men and women had to show up for work and war white armbands. Eventually, all locals were evicted in mid-1946, in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement. In 1946, the adjective à Âlàska was added to the name after the region of Silesia within which the town is located, to distinguish it from the town of à Âroda Wielkopolska.
During renovation works in the 1980s, a hoard of medieval silver and gold coins and jewellery, named the à Âroda Treasure, was found. It is now displayed in the Regional Museum in à Âroda à Âlàska and the National Museum in Wrocà Âaw.
A Silesian folk story tells how the empress of Tartary travelled through Europe until she reached à Âroda à Âlàska in 1240. The citizens decided that it was appalling for a non-Christian to display so much wealth, and killed her and all of her entourage, except two of her ladies who managed to hide and flee back to Tartary. Once there, they told the Emperor what had happened to his wife, who swore revenge and gathered an army of five hundred thousand troops. According to German antiquary Johann Gustav Gottlieb Büsching, no tradition survives telling what the outcome was, though the timespan of the story roughly corresponds with the first Mongol invasion of Poland (1240âÂÂ1241). Büsching states the story was first published in a 1504 life of Saint Hedwig of Silesia, and was later turned into a folk song.
Among the heritage architecture of à Âroda à Âlàska are:
National road 94 bypasses à Âroda à Âlàska to the south.
Vovoideship road 346 connects à Âroda à Âlàska to Oà Âawa.
à Âroda à Âlàska has a station on the Legnica-Wrocà Âaw railway line.
The local football club is Polonia à Âroda à Âlàska with men's and women's sections. Both compete in the lower divisions.
See twin towns of Gmina à Âroda à Âlàska.