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Bydgoszcz
(redirected from Bydogoszcz)

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Bydgoszcz (bĭd`gôshch), Ger. Bromberg, city (1994 est. pop. 384,000), capital (with Toruń) of Kujawsko-Pomorskie prov., N central Poland, on the Brda River, a tributary of the Vistula. One of Poland's major inland ports, it stands on the Bydgoszcz Canal (built 1773–74), which links the Brda and Noteć rivers and is part of the Vistula-Oder waterway. The city is also an important railway junction. Its chief industries produce wood products, textiles, metal goods, and chemicals. Chartered in 1346, the city developed during the Middle Ages around the site of a prehistoric fort. In the 15th and 16th cent. it became an important commercial center. It passed to Prussia in 1772 and was returned to Poland in 1919. Occupied by German forces from 1939 to 1945, the city suffered heavy damage in World War II. The most notable surviving building is a 15th-century Gothic church.

Bydgoszcz

City (pop., 2000 est.: 384,500), northern Poland. Originally a commercial city of the Teutonic Order, it received town rights in 1346. It prospered as a grain and timber centre until it was devastated in the 17th-century Swedish wars. In the 18th century the Bydgoszcz Canal, which linked the basins of the Vistula and Oder rivers, made the city a major inland port. It fell under Prussian rule in 1772–1919. The Germans held it throughout World War II, but it was noted for its staunch resistance to the Nazi invasion of 1939. It remains important as a water transport route, connecting Upper Silesia with the Baltic ports.


Bydgoszcz
an industrial city and port in N Poland: under Prussian rule from 1772 to 1919. Pop.: 579 000 (2005 est.)

Bydgoszcz 

a city and port in northern Poland. Administrative center of Bydgoszcz Województwo (province). Population, 278, 000 (1968). It is located at the beginning of the navigable Bydgoszcz Canal and the Brda River and at the junction of major railroads ahd highways. Bydgoszcz is an important industrial center, with more than 50, 000 workers employed in industry. The old established industries include food processing, metalworking, woodworking, leather, and ceramics; the more recently developed industries are machine building (electrotechnical and machine-tool industries; precision mechanics; and the production of equipment for the chemical and cement industries); chemicals, including the organic synthesis industry; and the production of refrigerators and bicycles. The city was founded in 1346.

IU. V. ILINICH



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It followed Gollob's 1998 triumph in Bydogoszcz, where he left Ryan Sullivan, Nilsen and Hans Nielsen trailing in his wake in the grand finale.
Nilsen was second at Wroclaw last season and third at Bydogoszcz two years ago.
 
 
 
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