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Łódź
a city in Poland, lying on the Vistula-Oder watershed. The administrative center of Łódź Urban Województwo. Population, 774,000 (1972). Next to Warsaw, it is Poland’s largest and most industrially developed city. Together with such surrounding textile towns as Pabianice, Zgierz, and Ozorków, Łódź forms the Łódź conurbation. It is also an important transportation center. In people’s Poland the city’s industry has been diversified, and beside the older industries there have arisen new branches of the machine building, electrical engineering, and chemical industries. The city has remained Poland’s chief textile center. Of the 220,000 persons employed in industry in 1972, about half work in the textile industry. Łódź accounts for more than one-fourth of the country’s production of wool fabrics, about two-fifths of its cotton fabrics and yarn, more than two-fifths of its silk, and about one-fourth of its tricot. Łódź also produces transformers, equipment for electric traction, motion picture apparatus, textile machinery, artificial and synthetic fibers, rubber goods, and leather footwear. Printing and the food and condiment industry are also well developed. Łódź is the site of a university; polytechnic, medical, and other institutes; the Central Film Studio of the Polish People’s Republic; and opera and other theaters. Łódź acquired the legal status of a town in the 15th century. Since the 1820’s it has been a textile center, around which a large textile region developed in the second half of the 19th century. In the 1870’s, Łódź became a focus of the proletarian movement. A local organization of the party Proletariat I was founded here in 1882, and a general strike took place in 1892. The Łódź rebellion of 1905 was an important landmark in the history of the struggle of the Polish proletariat. A soviet of workers’ deputies functioned here in 1918–19, and one of the largest strikes in Poland occurred in 1928. In 1939 the city was occupied by the German fascist troops and renamed Litzmannstadt. Soviet troops liberated Łódź on Jan. 19, 1945. The center of Łódź has a regular layout dating from the early 19th century. After the second half of the 19th century the city grew without systematic planning. Since World War II (1939–45) the city has been modernized. New residential districts have been built, as well as numerous public buildings, such as the university library, a sports complex, and a theater. A monument-mausoleum to the soldiers of the Soviet Army was erected in Łódź in 1961. REFERENCEŁódź : rozwój miasta w Polsce Ludowej. Warsaw, 1970.IU. V. ILINICH Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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No references found | Further, the partners anticipate that Emis will begin to manufacture the CTC designed rewinders and splicers at its factory in Lodz, Poland, in the near future. Arena: Lodz Arena Referees: Zoran Sutulovic (Montenegro), Borys Ryzhyk (Ukraine), Robert Lottermoser (Germany) Turkey: Engin, Sinan 3, Hidayet 12, Ersan 16, Omer Asik 10, Kerem 2, Semih 7, Omer Onan 7, Oguz, Bekir, Ender 10 Slovenia: Lakovic 12, Udrih 12, Nachbar 16, Erazem Lorbek 6, Brezec 7, Golemac 2, Slokar 3, Jugadnik 11, Klobucar 1st Period: 15-24 Half-time: 32-39 (Slovenia) 3rd Period: 52-57 (THROUGH ASIA PULSE) Poland marked the 65th anniversary of Nazi Germany's liquidation of the World War II Lodz Ghetto Thursday with ceremonies honouring its 220,000 Jewish victims, Holocaust survivors and Poles who saved them. |
Lodz |
Lodovico Antonio Muratori Lodovico Ariosto Lodovico Ferrari Lodovico Muratori lodoxamide lodoxamide tromethamine LODP LODR lodranite LODRR LODRS LODRSC LODS Lods, Marcel LODSB LODTM LODUS LODV LODVG LODYC Lodygin, Aleksandr Lodygin, Aleksandr Nikolaevich Lodz LódzLódz Lodz Operation of 1914 Lódz Operation of 1914 Lodz Rebellion of 1905 Lódz Rebellion of 1905 Lodz Wojewodztwo Lódz Województwo Lódzka Agencja Rozwoju Regionalnego SA Loe LOEA LOEAHA LOEAT Loeb Loeb Baruch Loeb Classical Library Loeb's deciduoma Loeb, Jacques Loeb, Jacques Loeb, James Loeb, Leonard B. Loeb, Solomon Loebner competition Loebner contest Loebner prize LOEC | |||||||
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