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Long existing as a trading place, it was first recorded in the 10th century as Vratislavia (the origin of its various later names) after Vratislav I, duke of Bohemia (915-921). The town was conquered by Boleslaus I of Poland in the 990s. Already a place of some importance, it became the capital of the imperial duchy of Silesia in 1138 and of Lower Silesia in 1163, where Silesians had founded a settlement south of the river. This settlement was sacked by Mongol invaders in 1241.
The town was then rebuilt and migrants from other parts of the empire replenished the decimated population. Documents of the time refer to the town by many variants of the name, including Bresslau, Presslau, Breslau and Latin Wratislaw. The restored Breslau town was given Magdeburg city rights in 1262. The first illustration of the city was published in the Schedelsche Weltchronik in 1493.
Under direct overlordship of the Holy Roman Empire the emperors granted government positions to members of various ducal and royal dynasties. The city was a member of the Hanseatic League of northern European trading cities. In 1335 it was along with the entire province of Silesia incorporated into the Kingdom of Bohemia and was part of it until 1740s, from 1526 under Habsburg dynasty. The overwhelming majority of the inhabitants became Protestants during the Reformation, but were forcibly suppressed during the Catholic Reformation[?] by the Jesuits, working with the support of the Habsburg rulers.
In 1569 Silesia had made a contract with Brandenburg, that in the case that the last Silesian Piast rulers died out, the land would be united with Brandenburg. This was the case in the 17th century, but the Habsburgs kept Silesia. The Protestant churches were closed and Silesia, including Breslau, was forced to become nearly all Catholic again. Because Brandenburg-Prussia was more sympathetic to their choice of religion, many people from Silesia and Bohemia sought refuge in Brandenburg-Prussia, and particularly Berlin. The Prussian king Frederick the Great even built a church dedicated to Saint Hedwig, the patroness of Silesia, in Brandenburg and Berlin. The diocese of Berlin was attached to the archdioce of Breslau.
Annexed by the kingdom of Prussia in the 1740s, Prussia and the city became part of the German Empire in 1871. The kings of Prussia saw to it that Breslau became a major industrial centre, notably of linen and cotton manufacture, more than tripling in population in 1860-1910 to over half a million. Its municipal boundaries were greatly extended in 1928.
Many of the city's 10,000 Jews were murdered during the Nazi genocide of World War II. During the Communist takeover, many of the city's ethnic Germans were incarcerated, expelled, or murdered. ]] Damaged severely during the siege by the Soviet army in 1945, the city was given to Poland, and the Polish name for the city, Wroclaw, came into more common use. The flight or deportation of the overwhelming majority of its German inhabitants reduced the overall population count by more than half. In the years following the Second World War, a process of enforced resettlement of millions of Polish people from eastern Poland was carried out by the communist authorities and their Soviet allies. Thousands of the displaced persons were brought to Wroclaw area and settled there.
In July 1997 the city was hit by a severe flooding of the Odra.
Today's Wroclaw has nine universities, including Wroclaw University[?] (Uniwersytet Wroclawski) and Wroclaw Polytechnic[?] (Politechnika Wroclawska). Its major industries are the manufacture of railroad cars and electronics. The city has both an airport and a river port.
City home page: http://www.wroclaw.pl/
Wroclaw University: http://www.uni.wroc.pl/STRONAENG.HTM
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