Pruzhany

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Pruzhany
Пружаны
Pruzhany Palace
Pruzhany Palace
Official seal of Pruzhany
Seal
Pruzhany is located in Belarus
Pruzhany
Pruzhany
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Country  Belarus
Region Brest Region
District Pruzhany District
Mentioned 1487
Population (2006)
 • Total 19,300
Time zone FET[1] (UTC+3)
Postal code 225133
Area code(s) +375 1632
License plate 1

Pruzhany (Belarusian: Пружаны, [pruˈʐanɨ]; Russian: Пружаны, Polish: Prużany, Yiddish: פרוזשענע‎, Pruzhani) is a town in Brest Voblast, Belarus. Pruzhany is the center of a district in Brest Region, Belarus. Its population is about 20.000 people. The town is located at the confluence of the Mukha River and the Vets Canal, which give the start to Mukhavets River.

History

File:Pru mem 1.jpg
The war memorial to commemorate the villages of the Pruzhany District burnt to ashes by Nazis in the last war

Pruzhany has been known as Dabuchyn since 1487. In the 16th century it belonged to queen Bona Sforza of Poland. She brought Renaissance influence and development of trades in this part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In 1589, her daughter Anna granted a town charter and the coat of arms of Pruzhany (a blue snake swallowing a baby on a silver shield). The coat of arms was borrowed from that of the Sforza family of Milan. Pruzhany was a center of pottery trade at those times. In the mid-19th century a wealthy Polish landlord Walenty Szwykowski laid out a park and built a pretentious palace that houses a museum today after a restoration. The museum has a rich collection on the history and arts of the region. Another tourist attraction is the landmark at the confluence of the Mukha River and the Vets Canal. It presents a statue of a passionate pair rising over waves.

File:Pruzhany river.jpg
One of the tourist attractions in today's Pruzhany is the landmark at the confluence of the Mukha River and the Vets Canal

The Jewish population in 1900 was 5,080.[2] During World War II, Pruzhany was occupied by the Germans from June 26, 1941 to July 17, 1944. In 1941, the Nazis herded the Jews of Białystok and the vicinity here to create a ghetto.[3] In Aktion roundups on January 28–31, 1943, the Nazis deported 10,000 Jews of the Pruzhany ghetto to Auschwitz, via Birkenau, where the men, women and children were murdered.[4][5][6][7]

In 2003, the central part of the town was reconstructed to prepare the town for the national harvest festival “Dozhinki” in autumn 2003.

Pruzhany is the birthplace of Joseph B. Soloveitchik, the Torah scholar and Jewish leader.

See also

References

External links


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