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POLAND : Gdynia - History
The
first mention of Gdynia was of a Pomeranian (Kashubian) fishing
village, in 1253. Oksywie, now part of Gdynia, was mentioned even
earlier in 1209. In the years 13821772 Gdynia belonged to the
Cistercian abbey in Oliwa.
Gdynia, as part of Eastern Pomerania, was part of the
loose confederation of Slavic tribes that would later be called
Poland from circa 9901308. After the Massacre of Gdansk (1308) it
became a state of the Teutonic Order (13081454/66), but afterwards
fell to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (14661772). At the
Partitions of Poland of 1772 it was annexed into the Kingdom of
Prussia (17721919), and as part of Prussia became part of the
German Empire (18701919). Its name during its centuries under
German rule was Gdingen.
After World War I it was assigned as part of the Polish
Pomerania to Poland (19191945), and was reannexed by Germany at the
start of World War II in 1939. The seaport was largely destroyed by
the withdrawing German troops in 1945 (90% of the buildings and
equipment were destroyed) and the harbour entrance was blocked by
the German battlecruiser Gneisenau.
It
was then reannexed by Poland in 1945.
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