Stopnica


Stopnica is a town in Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina called Gmina Stopnica. It lies in Lesser Poland, approximately east of Busko-Zdrój and south-east of the regional capital Kielce. In 2007 the village had an approximate population of 1,500. In 1362 Stopnica was granted the civic rights by King Casimir III the Great. Stopnica lost the rights in 1870 and regained in 2015. During World War II the village was almost completely destroyed. Before the war Stopnica had a large Jewish community, which perished in the Holocaust.

Location and name

In the Middle Ages, Stopnica used to be one of the major urban centers of Lesser Poland’s Sandomierz Voivodeship. The town is located 15 kilometers east of Busko-Zdrój, on the Stopniczanka river, along National Road nr. 73. Stopnica is a road hub, where the road nr. 73 crosses local roads 756 and 757. The name of the town most probably comes from the early Slavic word stob, which was associated with settlements located near marshes, lakes and rivers. Unlike the contemporary town, early Stopnica was not located on a hill, but in the valley of the Stopniczanka, among marshes and ponds.

History

The first mention of Stopnica comes from the 12th century, but a gord, or Slavic settlement, had existed here earlier. According to Jan Długosz’s chronicle Annales seu cronici incliti regni Poloniae, in 1103 the parish priest of Stopnica, Reverend Baldwin, became the Bishop of Kraków. In 1362 Stopnica was granted civic rights by King Casimir III the Great. On the king’s order, a castle, a hospital and a Gothic church were built here. In 1498, King John I Albert confirmed the status of Stopnica. At that time, it was the seat of a starosta, and the town enjoyed several privileges granted to it by the kings of the Jagiellon dynasty. In 1470 the Jagiellonian University professor Jan of Stobnica was born here.
Together with several other locations in Lesser Poland, Stopnica in the 16th century was one of the centers of the Protestant Reformation. A Calvinist church was founded here in 1551 by Marcin Zborowski, an influential nobleman, voivode of Kalisz. In 1649 King John II Casimir confirmed the town status of Stopnica, and banned Jews from settling in the market square and around the parish church. Stopnica maintained its position of an important urban center of Sandomierz Voivodeship, but the town declined in the 1650s, during the Swedish invasion of Poland. Firstly, it was looted and burned by the Swedes, then more destruction was brought by the Transilvanian troops of George II Rakoczi. To make matters worse, in 1662 a plague decimated the population. After its complete destruction, Stopnica never recovered. In 1787, the town was visited by King Stanisław II Augustus, and on April 10, 1795, Stopnica almost completely burned. After the Partitions of Poland, Stopnica was annexed by the Austrian Empire, but in 1809 it became the seat of a county of the Duchy of Warsaw. Residents of Stopnica County actively supported the January Uprising of 1863, forming a regiment of infantry. As a punishment, the Russians reduced Stopnica to the status of a village, which nevertheless remained the seat of the county until 1915, when the Austrians replaced the county seat with Busko-Zdrój.

World War II period edit code

In 1939, Stopnica had 6,142 inhabitants, of whom two thirds were Jewish.
On September 9, 1939, the German VIII Army Corps reached the vicinity of Stopnica and were met by troops of the "Śląsk" Operational Group. The German 5th Armored Division moved through the city itself, where they battled by the 1st Battalion of 203 Reserve Infantry Regiment.
In 1941–1942, in the vicinity of the old cemetery in Stopnica, the Nazis established a ghetto where they kept about 5,000 Jews. In October 1942, the Germans started transporting the Jewish people from Stopnica County to Treblinka. In Stopnica, the extermination started on November 5, 1942. Having surrounded the village, the Germans pulled out the Jews from all the houses and herded them in the Square from where they chased them to a railway station in Szczucin. The elderly, the poor and mothers with small children were shot to death during stopovers.
In 1944, fierce fighting was fought for the Baranow-Sandomierz bridgehead near Stopnica. The Germans, trying to destroy the bridgehead, bombed Stopnica, and then sent six armored divisions against the troops of the 5th Army of General Guard, General Alexei Nizh. On August 13, 1944, the Germans attacked in the direction of Stopnica. The Panzerkampfwagen VI B Königstiger was used here for the first time. The use of a new type of weapon was not successful - the attackers lost 12 tanks, including 3 were captured by Soviet soldiers. On November 7, 1944, the Nazis blew up the mined monastery. reformers  . Another offensive that the east did the rest of the destruction. Not a single house survived in Stopnica .
During World War II, Stopnica was completely destroyed, first partially in September 1939 and later completely in the summer and autumn of 1944 when the Wehrmacht tried to halt the advancing Red Army. After the war, not a single house remained in the village. In the post-war years Stopnica was rebuilt.

Points of interest