SOPOT

:''This page is about the city Sopot in Poland. For other cities with the same name see Sopot (disambiguation)''
'Sopot' (pronounce: ; ; Kashubian: ''Sopòt'') is a seaside town in Eastern Pomerania on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea in northern Poland, with a population of approximately 40,000.
Sopot is a powiat capital in the Pomeranian Voivodeship. Until 1999 it formed a part of the Gdańsk Voivodeship. Along with Gdańsk and Gdynia, Sopot is part of the ''trojmiasto'' (Tricity) metropolitan agglomeration.
Sopot is a large health-spa and tourist resort destination, well known for the longest wooden pier in Europe, the ''Molo'' (at 515.5 meters), from which one can see the Gulf of Gdańsk. The city is also famous for its Sopot International Song Festival, the largest such event in Europe after the Eurovision Song Contest.

Contents
City name
History
Famous people
Mayors
Economy
Major corporations
Higher education
Transportation
Sports
Twin cities
See also
External links

City name


The name ''Sopot'' stems from an old Slavic word meaning "spring" or "source". It was mentioned as ''Sopoth'' in 1283 and ''Sopot'' in 1291. The German name ''Zoppot'' is a Germanization of the original Slavic name. Between the two world wars the plural names ''Sopoty'' or ''Copoty'' were in common use.

History



'Historical population
of Sopot'
1819350
1842937
18742,800
190011,800
191417,400
191918,400
193330,800
194726,900
1950?
196044,000
197047,700
197551,700
198051,300
199046,700
199543,700
199843,000
200041,432
200738,600


Sopot was founded as a Slavonic (Pomeranian) stronghold in the 7th century. Initially it was a commercial trade outpost for commerce extending both up the Vistula river and to cities north across the Baltic Sea. With time the significance of the stronghold diminished and by the 10th century it was reduced to a fishing village, with the village itself eventually abandoned. However, a century later the area was settled again and two villages were founded within the confines of today's' city: Stawowie and Gręzowo. They were first mentioned in 1186 as being granted to the Cistercian abbey in Oliwa. Another of the villages that constitute today's Sopot, Świemirowo, was first mentioned in 1212 in a document by Mściwój I, Duke of Gdańsk, who granted it to the Premonstratensian (Norbertine) monastery in nearby Żukowo.
The Sopot village, which later became the namesake for the whole city, was first mentioned in 1283 when it was located as a fishing village and granted to the Cistercians. By 1316 the abbey bought all villages in the area and became the owners of all the area of the city. After the Toruń Peace Treaty of 1466 the area was incorporated into the Kingdom of Poland.
The spa for the citizens of Gdańsk has been active since the 16th century. Until the end of that century most noble and magnate families from Gdańsk built their manor housees in Sopot. During the negotiations of the Treaty of Oliva King John II Casimir lived in one of them, while Swedish negotiator Magnus de la Gardie resided in another — it has been known as the ''Swedish Manor'' ever since.
During the 1733 War of the Polish Succession Imperial Russian troops besieged the nearby city of Gdańsk and a year later looted and burned the village of Sopot to the ground. Much of Sopot would remain abandoned during and after the conflict..
Monument to the Armia Krajowa

In 1757 and 1758 most of the ruined manors were bought by the Pomeranian magnate family of Przebendowski. General Józef Przebendowski bought nine of these palaces and in 1786 his widow, Bernardyna Przebendowska (nee Kleist), bought the remaining two.
Sopot was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in 1772 in the First Partition of Poland. Following the new laws imposed by King Frederick the Great, church property was confiscated by the state. The village was reconstructed and in 1806 the area was sold to the Gdansk merchant Carl Christoph Wegner.
In 1819 Wenger opened the first public bath in Sopot and tried to promote the newly-established spa among the inhabitants of Danzig, but the undertaking was a financial failure. However, in 1823 Dr. Jean Georg Haffner, a former medic of the French army, financed a new bath complex that gained significant popularity. In the following years Haffner erected more facilities. By 1824 a sanatorium was opened to the public, as well as a 63-metre pier, cloakrooms, and a park. Haffner died in 1830, but his enterprise was continued by his stepson, Ernst Adolf Böttcher. The latter continued to develop the area and in 1842 opened a new theatre and sanatorium. By then the number of tourists coming to Sopot every year had risev to almost 1,200.
In 1870 Sopot saw the opening of its first rail line: the new Danzig-Kolberg rail road that was later extended to Berlin. Good rail connections added to the popularity of the area and by 1900 the number of tourists had reached almost 12,500 a year.
In 1873 the village of Sopot became an administrative centre of the Gemeinde. Soon other villages were incorporated into it and in 1874 the number of inhabitants of the village rose to over 2,800.
The new "Crooked House"

At the beginning of the 20th century it was a favourite spa of Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany. The city again became a holiday resort for the inhabitants of nearby Danzig, as well as wealthy aristocrats from Berlin, Warsaw, and Königsberg. Soon after World War I a casino was opened in the Grand Hotel as the primary source of money for the treasury of the Free City of Danzig.
In 1877 the self-government of the Gemeinde bought the village from the descendants of Dr. Haffner and started its further development. A second sanatorium was constructed in 1881 and the pier was extended to 85 metres. In 1885 the gas works were built. Two years later tennis courts were built and the following year a horse-racing track was opened to the public. There were also several facilities built for the permanent inhabitants of Sopot, not only for the tourists. Among those were two new churches: Protestant (September 17, 1901) and Catholic (December 21, 1901).
On October 8, 1901, Wilhelm II granted Sopot city rights, spurring further rapid growth. In 1904 a new balneological sanatorium was opened. In 1907 new baths south of the old ones were built in Viking style. In 1909 a new theatre was opened in the nearby forest within the city limits, in the place where today the Sopot Festival is held every year. By 1912 a third complex of baths, sanatoria, hotels, and restaurants was opened, attracting even more tourists. Shortly before World War I the city had 17,400 permanent inhabitants and over 20,000 tourists every year.
Pier in Sopot. One of the longest wooden piers in Europe, 450 meters from bank, 650 total

Following the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 Sopot became a part of the Free City of Danzig. Thanks to the proximity of the Polish and German borders the economy of the town soon recovered. The new casino became one of the main sources of income of the tiny free-city state. In 1927 the city authorities built the Kasino-Hotel, one of the most notable landmarks of Sopot today. After World War II it was renamed to Grand Hotel and continues to be one of the most luxurious hotels in Poland.
The first Richard Wagner festival was held in the Forest Opera in 1922. The festival's success had Sopot sometimes referred to during the period as the "Bayreuth of the North". In 1928 the pier was extended to its present length of 512 metres. Since then it has been the longest wooden pier in Europe and one of the longest in the world. In the early 1930s the city reached the peak of its popularity among foreign tourists — more than 30,000 annually (this number does not include tourists from Danzig/Gdansk itself). However, by the 1930s, tensions on the nearby Polish-German border and the rising popularity of Nazism in Germany saw a decline in foreign tourism; in 1938 local Germans Nazis burned down Sopot's synagogue.
World War II broke out on September 1, 1939. The following day the Free City of Danzig was annexed by Nazi Germany and most of the local Poles, Kashubians, and Jews were arrested and imprisoned or expelled. As the war raged on, the city's tourist industry collapsed. The last Wagner Festival was held in 1942.
St. George's Church

The Soviet Union's Red Army entered Sopot on March 23, 1945. Sopot in 1945 lost approximately 10% of its buildings -- some during the fighting, but a good number burned to the ground by drunken Soviet conscripts after the fighting had ceased on May 8, 1945. The Red Army soldiers burned and looted most of the buildings close to the pier, including the health-spa sanatoria complex.
As per the Potsdam Conference, Sopot was incorporated into the post-war Polish state. The authorities of Gdańsk Voivodeship were located in Sopot until the end of 1946. Most of the German inhabitants who had remained in the city after the evacuation before the advancing Red Army were soon to be expelled, and soon eastern settlers from Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union would arrive.
Sopot recovered rapidly after the war. A tramway line to Gdańsk was opened, as well as the Higher School of Music, the Higher School of Maritime Trade, a library, and an art gallery. During the city presidency of Jan Kapusta) the town opened an annual Arts Festival in 1948. In 1952 the tramways were replaced by a heavy-rail commuter line connecting Gdańsk, Sopot and Gdynia. Although in 1954 the Higher School of Arts was moved to Gdańsk, Sopot remained an important centre of culture, and in 1956 the first Polish jazz festival was held there (until then jazz had been banned by the Communist authorities). This was the forerunner of the continuing yearly Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw. In 1961 the first International Song Contest, founded by Wladyslaw Szpilman, was held in the "Forest Opera". Two years later the main street of Sopot (''Bohaterów Monte Cassino'') was turned into a pedestrian-only promenade.
New complexes of baths, sanatoria, and hotels were opened in 1972 and 1975. By 1977 Sopot had approximately 54,500 inhabitants, the highest ever in its history. In 1979 the historical downtown was declared a national heritage center by the government of Poland.
The martial law declared by Wojciech Jaruzelski in 1981 and the following period of economical decline ended with the fall of the communist regime in 1989. In 1995 the southern bath and sanatoria complex were extended significantly and the Saint Adalbert spring opened two years later. Thanks to that in 1999 Sopot regained its official spa town status.
In 2001 Sopot celebrated the 100th anniversary of its city charter.
City centre

Fountain on the main square (before the city centre redevelopment)

Famous people


The following is a list of notable personalities born or living in the city.

Jerzy Afanasjew, poet, director

Kiejstut Bereźnicki, painter

Janusz Christa, comic book author

Oscar G. Dahlberg, graphic artist

Maciej Dejczer, film director

Jerzy Doerffer, ship constructor and engineer

Andrzej Dudziński, cartoonist

Stanisława Fleszarowa-Muskat, novelist

Winfried Glatzeder, East German actor

Lech Kaczyński, president of Poland

Klaus Kinski, actor

Seweryn Krajewski, composer, pop-singer

Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski, statesman, economist

Janusz Lewandowski, politician, economist, member of the European Parliament

Marian Mokwa, painter

Leszek Możdżer, jazz musician and composer

Carl Maria Splett, bishop of Gdańsk

Donald Tusk, politician

Fritz Houtermans, physicist

★ Barbara Kaczmarowska Hamilton, portrait painter
Guests and visitors of the spa resorts and the Grand Hotel have included:

Charles Aznavour, French singer

Josephine Baker, American singer

Fidel Castro, president of Cuba

Marlena Dietrich, German-born actress and singer

Charles de Gaulle, general and president of France

Hermann Goering, German politician, commander of the Luftwaffe

Adolf Hitler, chancellor of Germany

Ignacy Mościcki, president of Poland

Reza Shah Pahlavi, shah of Iran

Omar Sharif, Egyptian-born actor

Mayors



★ 1902-1905 Volkmar von Wurmb

★ 1905-1908 Johannes Kollath

★ 1908 Baron von Gagern

★ 1908-1919 Max Woldmann

★ 1919-1930 Erich Laue

★ 1930-1934 Hermann Lewerenz

★ 1934-1936 Fliessbach

★ 1936-1941 Erich Temp

★ 1942 Gerchard Koß

★ 1942 Schröder

★ 1942-1945 ?

★ 1945 Henryk Michniewicz

★ 1945 Tadeusz SoboÅ„

★ 1946 Antoni Turek

★ 1946-1948 Leonard Wierzbicki

★ 1948 Srebrnik

★ 1948 BolesÅ‚aw ÅšliwiÅ„ski

★ 1948-1949 Jan Kapusta

★ 1949-1950 Piotr Nowak

★ 1950-1952 Alfred Müller

★ 1952-1954 Hieronim KozieÅ‚

★ 1954-1958 Roman Kosznik

★ 1958-1965 StanisÅ‚aw Podraszko

★ 1965-1969 Zenon Bancer

★ 1969-1978 BolesÅ‚aw Robakowski

★ 1978-1981 Lech ÅšwiÄ…tkowski

★ 1981-1984 Cezary DÄ…browski

★ 1984-1990 Andrzej Plona

★ 1990-1992 Henryk Ledóchowski

★ 1992-1998 Jan KozÅ‚owski

★ 1998-present Jacek Karnowski

Economy


Major corporations


STU Ergo Hestia SA

Higher education



Gdańsk University, Department of Economy, Department of Management

High School of Finances and Administration

High School of Finances and Accountancy

High School of Physical Education and Tourism

Transportation


Interestingly, Sopot does not have its own municipal mass transit. The city is covered by both the Gdynia and Gdańsk municipal bus lines, the commuter rail line (with three stops: Sopot, Sopot Wyścigi and Sopot Kamienny Potok), and the Polish national railway, PKP.

Sports


::''See also: Sports in Tricity''
There are many popular professional sports teams in Sopot and the tri-city area. The most popular in Sopot today is probably basketball thanks to the award-winning Prokom Trefl Sopot. Amateur sports are played by thousands of Sopot citizens, as well as in schools of all levels (elementary, secondary, and university).

Prokom Trefl Sopot - men's basketball team, Polish Champion 2004= 1st place in Era Basket Liga, will play in basketball Euroleague

★ Idea Prokom Open - ATP and WTA tennis tournament held in August. Rafael Nadal and Flavia Pennetta won in 2004.

★ Ogniwo Sopot - [MKS Ogniwo Sopot] is a rugby club, founded in 1965. Since the 80's, Ogniwo is one of the best Polish rugby teams. They were undefeated since 1989 to 1993, with Edward Hodura as a coach.

Twin cities



Frankenthal, Germany

Ratzeburg, Germany

Peterhof, Russia

Karlshamn, Sweden

Southend on Sea, United Kingdom

Næstved, Denmark

Ashkelon, Israel

Zakopane, Poland

See also



Tricity

Gdańsk

Gdynia

Sports in Tricity

Sopot (station)

Grand Hotel (Sopot)

External links



Municipal website

Gdańsk website

Gdynia website

Danzig-Online

Sopot

Sopot Guide Sopot's attractions, beaches, nightlife and more courtesy of Gdansk-life.com

Images from Sopot

A Few Views of Sopot in Old Postcards

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