Kalisz

Kalisz (Polish: [ˈkaliʂ] ; German: Kalisch) is a city in central Poland, and the second-largest city in the Greater Poland Voivodeship, with 97,905 residents (December 2021).[1] It is the capital city of the Kalisz Region. Situated on the Prosna river in the southeastern part of Greater Poland, the city forms a conurbation with the nearby towns of Ostrów Wielkopolski and Nowe Skalmierzyce.

Kalisz
Top: Town Hall, Former "Calisia" Piano Factory
Middle: Courthouse, "Gołębnik" tenement
Bottom: Aerial view of the Kalisz Old Town
Flag of Kalisz
Coat of arms of Kalisz
Motto: 
Latin: Poloniae urbs vetustissima (The oldest city of Poland)
Kalisz is located in Poland
Kalisz
Kalisz
Coordinates: 51°45′27″N 18°4′48″E
Country Poland
Voivodeship Greater Poland
Countycity-county
Established9th century
Town rightsafter 1268
Government
  MayorKrystian Kinastowski
Area
  Total70 km2 (30 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2021)
  Total97,905 Decrease (38th)[1]
  Density1,472/km2 (3,810/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
62-800 to 62-810
Area code(+48) 62
Car platesPK, PA
ClimateDfb
Websitewww.kalisz.pl

Kalisz is one of the oldest cities in Poland and one of the two traditional capitals of Greater Poland (alongside Poznań). It has served as an important regional center in Poland since the Middle Ages as a provincial capital and notable royal city. It is one of the historical burial sites of medieval Polish monarchs and dukes of the Piast dynasty and the site of a number of significant events in Polish history as well as several battles. Since the 19th century it has been the center of an industrial district. It is the cultural, scientific, educational and administrative center of the eastern and southern Greater Poland region, and the seat of Roman Catholic Diocese of Kalisz.

History

There are many artefacts from Roman times in the area of Kalisz, indicating that the settlement had once been a stop of the Roman caravans heading for the Baltic Sea along the trade route of the Amber Trail.[2] Calisia had been mentioned by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD, although the connection is doubted by some historians who claim that the location mentioned by Ptolemy was situated in the territory of the Diduni in Magna Germania.

Middle Ages

Mediaeval seal of the city of Kalisz

Archaeological excavations have uncovered early medieval settlement from the Piast dynasty period, c. 9th–12th centuries.[3] Modern Kalisz was most likely founded in the 9th century as a provincial capital castellany and a minor fort. As part of the region of Greater Poland, i.e. the cradle of the Polish state, the town formed part of Poland since the country's establishment in the 10th century.

In 1106, Bolesław III Wrymouth captured the town, and made it a part of his feudal domain. Between 1253 and 1260 the town was incorporated according to the German town law called the Środa Śląska Law (after Środa Śląska in Silesia), a local variation of the Magdeburg Law, and soon started to grow. One of the richest towns of Greater Poland, during the feudal fragmentation of Poland it formed a separate duchy ruled by a local branch of the Piast dynasty.

In 1264, the Statute of Kalisz was issued in the city by Bolesław the Pious. It was a unique protective privilege for Jews during their persecution in Western Europe, which in the following centuries made Poland the destination of Jewish migration from other countries. After Poland was reunited, the town became a centre of weaving and wood products, as well as one of the cultural centres of Greater Poland.

In 1282 the city laws were confirmed by Przemysł II of Poland, and in 1314 it was made the capital of the Kalisz Voivodeship by King Ladislaus the Short. Located roughly in the centre of Poland (as its borders stood in that era), Kalisz was a centre of trade. In 1331, the city was successfully defended by the Poles during a siege by the Teutonic Knights. Because of its strategic location, King Casimir III the Great signed a peace treaty with the Teutonic Order there in 1343. As a royal city, Kalisz managed to defend many of its initial privileges, and in 1426 a new town hall was built. The Polish Duke Mieszko III the Old was buried in Kalisz.[2] In the 14th century, Jews of the town were attacked during epidemics by mobs which accused them of poisoning the wells of the town.[4]

1500–1914

Polish King Sigismund II Augustus confirms the old privileges of Kalisz, 1552

In 1574 the Jesuits came to Kalisz and in 1584 opened a Jesuit College, which became a centre of education in Poland; around this time, however, the importance of Kalisz began to decline somewhat, its place being taken by nearby Poznań.

The economic development of the area was aided by a large number of Protestant Czech Brothers, who settled in and around Kalisz after being expelled from Bohemia in 1620.

In the 18th century, one of two main routes connecting Warsaw and Dresden ran through the city, and Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland often traveled that route.[5] In 1789, 881 Jews lived in Kalisz, 29% of the city’s population.[6] In 1792, a fire destroyed much of the city centre.

In 1793, in the Second Partition of Poland, the Kingdom of Prussia absorbed the city, called Kalisch in German. That year Jews were 40% of the population.[7] In 1801, Wojciech Bogusławski set up one of the first permanent theatre troupes in Kalisz.

In 1807, Kalisz became a provincial capital within the Duchy of Warsaw. During Napoleon's invasion of Russia, following Yorck's Convention of Tauroggen of 1812, von Stein's Treaty of Kalisz was signed between Russia and Prussia in 1813, confirming that Prussia now was on the side of the Allies.

Kalisz Tribunal and Courthouse

After the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte, Kalisz became a provincial capital of Congress Poland and then the capital of a province of the Russian Empire. In the 1820s a special Jewish quarter was created where the third of the town that was Jewish was required to live; it existed until 1862.[7][6] Prussia and Russia held joint military exercises near the town in 1835. The proximity to the Prussian border accelerated economic development of the city and Kalisz ("Калиш" in Russian Cyrillic) started to attract many settlers, not only from other regions of Poland and other provinces of the Russian Empire, but also from German states. In 1860, 4,423 Jews lived in the town, 34.5% of its residents.[6] During the January Uprising, on April 15, 1863, Polish insurgents fought two victorious clashes against the Russians near the city.[8] In 1881, Russian authorities expelled Jewish residents who lacked Russian citizenship.[7] In 1897, the Jewish population of the town was 7,580, about one-third of the total population.[7]

In 1902, a new railway linked Kalisz to Warsaw and Łódź. Since the 19th century, Kalisz was one of the leading Polish centers of piano manufacturing. In the early 20th century, it became the leading center, surpassing Warsaw.[9]

World War I and interwar period

Główny Rynek (Main Market Square)

With the outbreak of World War I, the proximity of the border proved disastrous for Kalisz; it was one of the first cities destroyed in 1914. Between 2 and 22 August, Kalisz was shelled and then burned to the ground by German forces under Major Hermann Preusker, even though Russian troops had retreated from the city without defending it and German troops – many of them ethnic Poles – had initially been welcomed peaceably. Eight hundred men were arrested and then several of them slaughtered, while the city was set on fire and the remaining inhabitants were expelled. Out of roughly 68,000 citizens in 1914, only 5,000 remained in Kalisz a year later. By the end of the Great War, however, much of the city centre had been more or less rebuilt and many of the former inhabitants had been allowed to return.[10]

After the war Kalisz became part of the newly independent Poland.[11] On December 13, 1918, the First Border Battalion, composed of volunteers from Kalisz and Ostrów Wielkopolski, was sworn in Kalisz, before joining the ongoing Greater Poland uprising (1918–19) against Germany.[11] The reconstruction continued and in 1925 a new city hall was opened. In the 1931 Polish census, Kalisz had a population of 15,300 Jews, nearly 30% of the city's total population.[12] In 1939 the population of Kalisz was approximately 81,000. The Jewish population of Kalisz at the time was 27,000.[13]

World War II

Execution of a Polish priest by the Germans in 1939
Deportation of the Jews of Kalisz

After the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, the proximity of the border once again proved disastrous. Kalisz was captured by the Wehrmacht after Polish resistance,[14] and the city was annexed by Germany. In revenge for resistance, the Wehrmacht carried out massacres of Polish defenders, who were executed both in the city and in the nearby settlement of Winiary (today, a district of Kalisz).[14] Over 1,000 people were arrested as hostages.[14] Numerous Poles were arrested and murdered during the Intelligenzaktion aimed at annihilation of the Polish intelligentsia. Around 750 Poles from Kalisz, Ostrów Wielkopolski, and other nearby settlements were imprisoned in the Kalisz prison from September 1939 to March 1940, and most were murdered in large massacres in the Winiary forest.[15] In November 1939, the Einsatzgruppe VI Nazi paramilitary killing squad murdered 41 Poles at the local Jewish cemetery; among the victims was pre-war Polish mayor of Kalisz, Ignacy Bujnicki.[16] In April and May 1940, many Poles arrested in the region, especially teachers, were imprisoned in the local prison, and afterwards deported to the Mauthausen and Dachau concentration camps, where they were murdered.[17]

Memorial at the site of a massacre of 150 Poles in Winiary

In Kalisz, the Germans established a Germanisation camp for Polish children taken away from their parents (Gaukinderheim).[18] The children were given new German names and surnames, and were punished for any use of the Polish language, even with death (e.g., a 14-year-old boy Zygmunt Światłowski was murdered).[18] After their stay in the camp, the children were deported to Germany; only some returned to Poland after the war, while the fate of many remains unknown to this day.[18]

By the end of World War II approximately 30,000 local Jews had been murdered, and 20,000 local Catholics were either murdered or expelled to the more eastern part of German-occupied Poland (General Government) or to Germany as slave workers. In 1945 the population of the city was 43,000 – approximately half the pre-war figure. In 1945, Kalisz was restored to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which stayed in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s.

Following the war, Jewish Holocaust survivors returned to the city, by 1946 numbering some 500. By the late 1940s only some 100 remained, and those few who stayed blended into Polish society.[19]

1950-present

In 1975, after Edward Gierek's reform of the administrative division of Poland, Kalisz again became the capital of a province – Kalisz Voivodeship; the province was abolished in 1998, however, and since then Kalisz has been the county seat of a separate powiat within the Greater Poland Voivodeship. In 1976, the city limits were greatly expanded by the incorporation of the surrounding settlements of Majków, Nosków, Piwonice and Szczypiorno as new districts.[20] The Polish anti-communist resistance Movement for Defence of Human and Civic Rights issued independent underground press in the city.[21] In August 1980, employees of local factories joined the nationwide anti-communist strikes,[22] which led to the foundation of the Solidarity organization, which played a central role in the end of communist rule in Poland.

In 1991 the city festival was inaugurated on 11 June to commemorate the confirmation of the incorporation of the city in 1282. In 1992, Kalisz became the seat of a separate diocese of the Catholic Church.[2] In 1997 Kalisz was visited by Pope John Paul II.[2]

The city was the site of the former 'Calisia' piano factory, until it went out of business in 2007. The factory building was transformed into the Calisia One Hotel, which opened in 2019.

In November 2021, Polish far-right nationalists held an anti-semitic rally in Kalisz attended by hundreds of people. They burned a red-covered book meant to symbolize the 1264 Statute of Kalisz, historic pact protecting Poland's Jewish rights.[23]

Climate

Kalisz has an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb) using the −3 °C (27 °F) isotherm or a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfb) using the 0 °C (32 °F) isotherm.[24][25]

Climate data for Kalisz (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1951–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 13.8
(56.8)
18.1
(64.6)
22.7
(72.9)
29.8
(85.6)
31.4
(88.5)
36.6
(97.9)
36.9
(98.4)
38.0
(100.4)
35.1
(95.2)
27.2
(81.0)
19.3
(66.7)
15.8
(60.4)
38.0
(100.4)
Average high °C (°F) 1.7
(35.1)
3.4
(38.1)
7.8
(46.0)
14.6
(58.3)
19.4
(66.9)
22.8
(73.0)
25.2
(77.4)
25.0
(77.0)
19.4
(66.9)
13.3
(55.9)
7.2
(45.0)
2.9
(37.2)
13.6
(56.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) −0.8
(30.6)
0.3
(32.5)
3.7
(38.7)
9.4
(48.9)
14.1
(57.4)
17.3
(63.1)
19.5
(67.1)
19.3
(66.7)
14.4
(57.9)
9.2
(48.6)
4.4
(39.9)
0.6
(33.1)
9.3
(48.7)
Average low °C (°F) −3.0
(26.6)
−2.3
(27.9)
0.3
(32.5)
4.6
(40.3)
9.0
(48.2)
12.3
(54.1)
14.2
(57.6)
14.2
(57.6)
10.1
(50.2)
5.9
(42.6)
2.1
(35.8)
−1.6
(29.1)
5.5
(41.9)
Record low °C (°F) −28.5
(−19.3)
−28.3
(−18.9)
−21.1
(−6.0)
−7.2
(19.0)
−3.8
(25.2)
2.4
(36.3)
4.0
(39.2)
4.8
(40.6)
−1.7
(28.9)
−7.4
(18.7)
−16.6
(2.1)
−25.1
(−13.2)
−28.5
(−19.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 26.4
(1.04)
24.3
(0.96)
33.2
(1.31)
26.9
(1.06)
53.0
(2.09)
54.8
(2.16)
77.3
(3.04)
54.3
(2.14)
46.0
(1.81)
36.8
(1.45)
31.0
(1.22)
29.7
(1.17)
493.8
(19.44)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 5.0
(2.0)
4.2
(1.7)
2.4
(0.9)
0.8
(0.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.2
(0.1)
1.5
(0.6)
3.6
(1.4)
5.0
(2.0)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 15.17 13.33 13.00 10.47 12.50 13.00 13.40 11.70 10.87 12.43 13.13 15.13 154.13
Average snowy days (≥ 0 cm) 12.5 10.2 4.8 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 1.9 7.1 37.3
Average relative humidity (%) 87.9 84.7 79.3 71.1 72.5 72.9 71.9 71.2 78.2 84.3 89.4 89.4 79.4
Mean monthly sunshine hours 49.3 69.6 120.8 195.2 248.1 253.4 253.3 242.9 160.5 110.7 52.0 41.0 1,796.7
Source 1: Institute of Meteorology and Water Management[26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33]
Source 2: Meteomodel.pl (records, relative humidity 1991–2020)[34][35][36]

City neighborhoods

Market Square at dusk
Wojciech Bogusławski Theatre in Kalisz
Old Town with the Collegiate Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary on the left
Neighborhoods of Kalisz
Name Population Area (km2) Area (mi2)
Asnyka56970.440.1698849
Chmielnik36123.281.266415
Czaszki71300.670.2586884
Dobro5971.960.7567602
Dobrzec8678.623.328201
Dobrzec P85991.510.5830143
Dobrzec W55030.380.146719
Kaliniec46850.360.1389968
Korczak44590.730.281855
Majków33112.961.142862
Ogrody20732.060.7953704
Piskorzewie19151.990.7683433
Piwonice26608.723.366811
Rajsków18843.431.32433
Rogatka27200.270.1042476
Rypinek37084.481.729738
Sulisławice8354.681.806958
Sulisławice Kolonia1641.190.4594616
Szczypiorno15295.872.26642
Śródmieście172581.760.6795398
Tyniec41893.021.166029
Widok65160.440.1698849
Winiary24915.402.08495
XXV-lecia50941.020.3938242
Zagorzynek27733.891.501937

Religion

Saint Nicholas Cathedral in the Old Town

There are 19 Catholic churches, five Protestant churches, and one Eastern Orthodox church in Kalisz. Synagogues were built in Kalisz beginning in 1698, and a New Synagogue was built in 1879.[37] Before World War II there were 25,000 Jews in Kalisz, but most of them were murdered by Germans in the Holocaust in Poland and by the summer of 1942 the Jewish community in Kalisz was entirely destroyed.

Education

Kalisz is a centre of education in the region. It is home to 29 primary schools, 15 junior high schools, and five high schools. Seven colleges and a dozen or so vocational schools are also located there. The city is also home to branches of Poznań University, Poznań University of Economics, and Poznań University of Technology, as well as other institutions of higher education. It is a home to the Henryk Melcer Music School.

Economy

Although there is little heavy industry within the city limits, Kalisz is home to several large enterprises. It has the Winiary (part of the Nestlé group) and Colian food processing plants and the Big Star jeans factory. Two plane engine production factories, WSK-Kalisz and Pratt & Whitney Kalisz (a branch of Pratt & Whitney Canada), are located in Kalisz.

Cuisine

The Andruty kaliskie wafers originated in Kalisz, and are the most well-known traditional food from the city in Poland.

Another officially protected traditional specialty of the area (as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland) are homemade cold pressed juices from fresh fruits of the Kalisz Region, produced according to traditional recipes without any additional ingredients.[38] These include juices from apples, pears, cherries, blackcurrant, redcurrant, strawberries and raspberries.[38] The tradition dates back several centuries.[38]

Sports

Arena Kalisz, the city's main indoor hall, home venue of the MKS Kalisz men's handball team and Calisia Kalisz women's volleyball team

The district of Szczypiorno, as the place of pioneering games of handball in Poland, is the namesake for szczypiorniak, the Polish name of the sport. Other popular sports in Kalisz include football and volleyball. Notable sports teams include:

Kalisz is also the location of Kaliskie Towarzystwo Wioślarskie, one of the oldest Polish rowing clubs, founded in 1894.

Transport

Kalisz railway station was built in 1902 as the destination of the Warsaw–Kalisz Railway. It is currently served by Przewozy Regionalne and PKP Intercity.

Etymology

The name Kalisz is thought to stem from the archaic kal, meaning swamp or marsh.

Notable people

Avraham Gombiner, rabbi and scholar
Stanisław Wojciechowski, president of Poland (1922–1926)

International relations

Twin towns — Sister cities

Kalisz is twinned with:[39]

See also

References

  1. "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved 9 August 2022. Data for territorial unit 3061000.
  2. Anna Woźniak (2013), "Historia miasta Kalisz" (History of Kalisz) from the city's Official website. Internet Archive.
  3. Tadeusz Chrzanowski, "Kalisz", Sport i Turystyka, Warsaw 1978 (Polish, German, English, French, Russian).
  4. The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Funk & Wagnalls. 1907.
  5. "Informacja historyczna". Dresden-Warszawa (in Polish). Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  6. "YIVO | Kalisz". yivoencyclopedia.org.
  7. "History of the Jewish Community in Kalisz: 12th Century to World War I". encyclopedia.ushmm.org.
  8. Zieliński, Stanisław (1913). Bitwy i potyczki 1863-1864. Na podstawie materyałów drukowanych i rękopiśmiennych Muzeum Narodowego w Rapperswilu (in Polish). Rapperswil: Fundusz Wydawniczy Muzeum Narodowego w Rapperswilu. p. 196.
  9. Vogel, Beniamin (2016). Kolekcja Zabytkowych Fortepianów im. Andrzeja Szwalbego w Ostromecku (in Polish and English). Bydgoszcz: Miejskie Centrum Kultury w Bydgoszczy. pp. 19, 25. ISBN 978-83-64942-08-2.
  10. Maciej Drewicz: Kto zniszczył Kalisz (Who destroyed Kalisz). Dziennik Wielkopolski; Internet Archive Wayback Machine.
  11. Krystyna Dobak-Splitt; Jerzy Aleksander Splitt. "Odzyskanie niepodległości / powstanie wielkopolskie". Kalisz poprzez wieki. Dawny Kalisz. Retrieved October 3, 2012. Kalisz poprzez wieki, Wydawca: Towarzystwo Miłośników Kalisza, 1988
  12. "Jewish Community of Kalisz in the Interwar Years". encyclopedia.ushmm.org.
  13. "History | Virtual Shtetl".
  14. Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN. p. 92.
  15. Wardzyńska, p. 205-206
  16. Wardzyńska, p. 206-207
  17. Wardzyńska, p. 212-213
  18. Krystyna Dobak-Splitt; Jerzy Aleksander Splitt. ""Dom wychowawczy" dla polskich dzieci w Kaliszu". Kalisz.info (in Polish). Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  19. Krzyzanowski, Lukasz (January 1, 2018). "An Ordinary Polish Town: The Homecoming of Holocaust Survivors to Kalisz in the Immediate Aftermath of the War". European History Quarterly. 48 (1): 92–112. doi:10.1177/0265691417742017. S2CID 149350666 via SAGE Journals.
  20. Rozporządzenie Ministra Administracji, Gospodarki Terenowej i Ochrony Środowiska z dnia 24 czerwca 1976 r. w sprawie zmiany granic niektórych miast w województwach: bielskim, jeleniogórskim, kaliskim, płockim i toruńskim., Dz. U. z 1976 r. Nr 24, poz. 144
  21. Zwiernik, Przemysław (2011). "Opór społeczny i opozycja w epoce Gierka". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 5–6 (126–127). IPN. p. 130. ISSN 1641-9561.
  22. Zwiernik, p. 131
  23. "Poland: Chanting 'death To Jews,' Far-right Nationalists Burn Book On Jewish Rights". I24news.
  24. Kottek, Markus; Grieser, Jürgen; Beck, Christoph; Rudolf, Bruno; Rubel, Franz (2006). "World Map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification updated" (PDF). Meteorologische Zeitschrift. 15 (3): 259–263. Bibcode:2006MetZe..15..259K. doi:10.1127/0941-2948/2006/0130.
  25. Peel, M. C.; Finlayson B. L. & McMahon, T. A. (2007). "Updated world map of the Köppen–Geiger climate classification" (PDF). Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. 11 (5): 1633–1644. doi:10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007. ISSN 1027-5606.
  26. "Średnia dobowa temperatura powietrza". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 3 December 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  27. "Średnia minimalna temperatura powietrza". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  28. "Średnia maksymalna temperatura powietrza". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  29. "Miesięczna suma opadu". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 9 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  30. "Liczba dni z opadem >= 0,1 mm". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  31. "Średnia grubość pokrywy śnieżnej". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  32. "Liczba dni z pokrywą śnieżna > 0 cm". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  33. "Średnia suma usłonecznienia (h)". Normy klimatyczne 1991-2020 (in Polish). Institute of Meteorology and Water Management. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  34. "Kalisz Absolutna temperatura maksymalna" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  35. "Kalisz Absolutna temperatura minimalna" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  36. "Kalisz Średnia wilgotność" (in Polish). Meteomodel.pl. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  37. The Universal Jewish Encyclopedia ...: An Authoritative and Popular Presentation of Jews and Judaism Since the Earliest Times. Universal Jewish Encyclopedia, Incorporated. 1942.
  38. "Domowe soki tłoczone na zimno ze świeżych owoców ziemi kaliskiej". Ministerstwo Rolnictwa i Rozwoju Wsi - Portal Gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 April 2022.
  39. "Kontakty zagraniczne Miasta". bip.kalisz.pl. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  • Kalisz travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • www.kalisz.pl
  • Jewish Encyclopedia: "Kalisz” by Herman Rosenthal, Judah Eisenstein, and J. G. Lipman (1906).
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