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Coordinates: 53°7′59″N 23°9′14″E / 53.13306°N 23.15389°E / 53.13306; 23.15389
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{{short description|Street in Białystok, Poland}}
{{Infobox street
{{Infobox street
|name=Lipowa Street
|name=Lipowa Street
|native_name={{native name|pl|Ulica Lipowa}}
|former_names=Choroska, Nowolipie, Sowiecka, Lindenstrasse, Józefa Stalina
|image=6512 Ulica Lipowa w Białymstoku September 2019.jpg
|image=6512 Ulica Lipowa w Białymstoku September 2019.jpg
|image_alt=
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|inauguration_label=
|inauguration_label=
|inauguration_date=
|inauguration_date=
|type=[[Street]]
|location=[[Osiedle Centrum, Białystok|Centrum District]], [[Białystok]], Poland
}}
}}
'''Lipowa Street''' is a representative street at the center of Białystok, running from the Kościuszki Square (corner of Spółdzielcza Street) to Romana Dmowskiego Niepodległości Square (corner of Krakowska street).<ref>[http://www.gisbialystok.pl/gis-bialystok/app/menupage.jsp Miejski System Informacji Przestrzennej (GIS)].</ref>. The street is made up of low buildings mostly of 2-3 floors with various shops, offices and restaurants located at the ground floor
'''Lipowa Street''' is a representative street at the center of [[Białystok]], [[Poland]], running from the [[Kościuszko Square in Białystok|Kościuszko Square]] (corner of Spółdzielcza Street) to Romana Dmowskiego Niepodległości Square (corner of Krakowska street).<ref>[http://www.gisbialystok.pl/gis-bialystok/app/menupage.jsp Miejski System Informacji Przestrzennej (GIS)].</ref> The street is made up of low buildings mostly of 2-3 floors with various shops, offices and restaurants located at the ground floor.


==Name==
==Name==
{{See also|Street names in Białystok}}
The name of the street comes from a row of lime which grew here in the 18th-20th centuries. Over the centuries, the name of this exclusive and representative Białystok street in the city center took various names: Choroska, Nowolipie, Lipowa, Józefa Piłsudskiego, Sovietskaya, Lindenstrasse, Józefa Stalina to finally return to its original name after World War II, Lipowa.
The name of the street comes from a row of [[Tilia|lime]] which grew here in the 18th-20th centuries. Over the centuries, the name of this exclusive and representative Białystok street in the city center took various names: Choroska, Tykocka, Nowolipie, Lipowa, Józefa Piłsudskiego, Sovetskaya, Lindenstrasse, Józefa Stalina to finally return to its original name after [[World War II]]: Lipowa.


==History==
==History==
[[image:Biełastok, Lipavaja. Беласток, Ліпавая (1940).jpg|thumb|right|200px|View of the street in 1940, when Białystok [[Soviet annexation of Western Belorussia|became part]] of the [[Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic|Byelorussian SSR]]]]
Behind the corner tenement (in its place was once the inn "Pod Łabędziem", belonging to Andruszka - the lover of Jan Klemens Branicki), ending from the north with the western frontage of Kościuszko Square, Lipowa Street begins. Its name comes from a row of lime trees that grew along it in the second half of the 18th century, but at that time it was still called Choroska Street and later Nowolip. At the beginning of the 20th century it was already called Lipowa.
This street was built in two stages. Its first section led from the market square to today's intersection with Malmeda Street. Since the 16th century, this was the beginning of the route leading to [[Choroszcz]] and [[Tykocin]]. This road turned further south. Its course more or less coincided with today's streets of Św. Mikolaja, Kalinowskiego, Grunwaldzka. It was not until 1730 that [[Jan Klemens Branicki]], creating the Baroque composition of the city, marked out the current line of this street. With the marking of the new direction of Choroska Street, the importance of the much older and shorter axis, Suraska Street - Wasilkowska - parish church, decreased. The line of Choroska Street, which now passed through Przedmieście Choroskie at a changed angle, became the main axis of the expansion of Białystok due to its good connection with the palace and the New Town. Work on marking out the new course of Choroska Street began in the 1730s.{{sfn|Dobroński|2001|p=41}} A trace of its former direction was a winding street called in the 1771/72 inventory "ulica Poprzeczna Zatylna ku cerkwi". An additional element of the new development of the street in the spirit of the French Baroque was the planting of four rows of linden trees in 1758, two on each side.


[[image:8359 May 2022 in Białystok.jpg|thumb|right|200px|View of the linden avenue in the street, May 2022]]
In the interwar period, it was called the street of Marshal Józef Piłsudski, then generalissimo Józef Stalin, then fűhrer Adolf Hitler, again generalissimo Stalin and finally Lipowa again. The street in 1944 was almost completely destroyed by the Nazis<ref>W. Monkiewicz, Białystok i okolice, KAW, Białystok 1986, s. 49.</ref>.
Its perspective was closed by St. Roch Hill. However, the name of the street retained a clear division into two parts. The section leaving the market square was inhabited by a dozen or so families, in small wooden houses, whose facades were bricked up and whose roofs were covered with tiles and was closed by a gate placed at the height of the current [[Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas, Białystok|Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas]]. Behind the gate, up to St. Roch Hill, Branicki ordered in 1758 to plant linden trees in four rows, reaching almost to St. Roch Hill. This part of the street was called Nowolipie. Construction work in Nowolipie street was still being carried out there in the 1750s. At that time, a promenade mill was built according to the design of Ricound de Tiweqaille, modelled on a similar mill operating in Warsaw.


In the mid-18th century, Choroska Street was built up on both sides. At its end stood the spacious Włokowicz drive-in inn (in this place there is now the Cristal Hotel). Nowolipie had the character of a suburb, inhabited mainly by farmers. There were two breweries and a mill, the so-called promenade. In 1799, almost the entire southern side of Nowolipie was built up, and in the northern side the buildings reached half of its length. In 1810, houses stood along the entire street. It had a regularly shaped frontages, separated by rows of lime trees, made a great impression. In the mid-19th century, the city limits absorbed Nowolipie.<ref>{{cite book|title=Białystok: zarys historyczny z 22 ilustracjami|last1=Mościcki|first1=Henryk|lang=pl|year=1933|p=53}}</ref> The name Lipowa began to be used at that time. In the second half of the 19th century, the name Tykocka began to be used in reference to Choroska Street.
Moving westwards is the Cristal Hotel, the first real post-war hotel in Bialystok in Poland, and located the intersection with Liniarskiego and Malmeda streets<ref>[http://www.bialystok.pl/site.php?s=MDAzNDQz Szlakami zabytków – Ulicą Lipową].</ref>..


[[image:7845 November 2021 in Białystok.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The initial section of Lipowa Street adjoining [[Kościuszko Market Square]].]]
On the other side of Liniarskiego Street stands the Orthodox Church. St. Nicholas the Wonder, built in 1843-1846. It is a classicist building, built on the plan of a Greek cross. From 1951, the church of St. Nicholas serves as a diocesan cathedral, is also the seat of the parish of St. Nicholas. The administration of the Orthodox diocese of Białystok-Gdańsk, the Center of Orthodox Culture and the Department of Orthodox Theology at the University of Bialystok are located at the church.
In 1852, the District Hospital (No. 43) was opened on Lipowa Street. On the other side of the street stood the House of the Gentry ({{lang-pl|Dom Ziemiaństwa}}), where numerous county offices and social organizations had their seats. In the last decades of the 19th century, Lipowa became the largest shopping arcade in the city. The wealthiest townspeople, mainly Jews, built representative tenement houses along them. One of them belonged to Boruch Gwin, currently the Cristal Hotel stands in this place. In the years 1912-1915 it housed the editorial office of the Gazeta Białostocka, whose editor and publisher was Konstanty Kosinski. One of the most impressive buildings was the Trylling tenement house, standing on the corner of Lipowa and Nowy Świat. The owner of the corner tenement house on Lipowa and Kupiecka (modern Malmeda) was Józef Puchalski, the first temporary president of Białystok in 1919. Chaim Ber Zakhejm had his house between these tenement houses. It housed the Białystok Commercial Bank, established in 1897.{{sfn|Lechowski|2016|p=52}}


In August 1897, when Tsar Nicholas II and his wife visited Białystok, the triumphal arch on Lipowa Street near St. Roch Hill was removed. This rather cheap structure, made of wood and plywood, was dismantled only in 1904. One of the reasons for its removal was a dramatic event in July of that year, when a terrorist act took place under the arch. As a result of a bomb explosion, 46-year-old Emma Hampel died.{{sfn|Lechowski|2016|p=61}} The arch was seriously damaged, and the force of the explosion caused 50 windows in the surrounding buildings to be broken. More terrorist and criminal actions took place in the street at the onset of the new century. In 1903, Białystok police chief Matlenka was shot at the street. In 1905, bandits shot through the windows of the bank office in Trylling's house, severely wounding the cashier Josel Goldszmidt. In the same year, a bandit attack took place in Puchalski's tenement house when unknown perpetrators, under the pretext of looking for work, severely beat the merchant M. Cejtkin. In 1906, a bomb was thrown into the hairdressing salon in Ginzburg's house, and a dozen or so days later, the owner of the office, Jankiel Zilberblat, was killed. Less than a month later, at high noon on Tykocka Street, Leonid Genke, a correspondent of the "Moscow News", was shot, wounding him with two bullets in the back.{{sfn|Lechowski|2016|p=62}}
In front of the church is the intersection of Lipowa Malmeda Street leading to a small square. There is a statue of Ludwik Zamenhof, the creator of the international language Esperanto, who was born in Bialystok in 1859. In that intersection during the Holocaust stood one of the gates leading to the [[Białystok Ghetto|Jewish ghetto in the city]].


Following the regaining of [[National Independence Day (Poland)|independence]] of Poland and the creation of the [[Second Polish Republic]], the street kept its important status and its character didn't change. During the existence of the Second Polish Republic its name was changed to Piłsudskiego.
Lipowa Street runs further west towards the church of St. Rocha. Following it in Lipowa 14, is the building where the first self-service store in Poland was built, the "Pokój" cinema, and on the opposite side of the street the Art Nouveau palace of Chaim Nowik, which now houses the Military Command of Supplements, a building slightly removed from the street of the former Jewish Craft School (currently Complex of Vocational Schools) which is an example of a famous work in the interwar years the Białystok masonry school and - on the other side - a very nice, neoclassical tenement house with caryatids supporting the balcony.


During the Soviet occupation of the city, its name, together with the [[Kościuszko Market Square]] changed to Sovetskaya. During the German occupation, the streets adjoining the northern side of the street became part of the [[Białystok Ghetto]], with one of the gates to it located at the intersection of Lipowa and Malmeda streets.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bialystok.wyborcza.pl/bialystok/7,35241,30014812,tu-byla-brama-getta-pamiec-o-tragedii-bialostockich-zydow.html|title=Tu była brama getta. Pamięć o tragedii białostockich Żydów zapisana pod stopami|lang=pl|date=2023-07-27|accessdate=2024-08-25|publisher=Wyborcza|first1=Monika|last1=Żmijewska}}</ref> In July 1944, just before the [[Wehrmacht]] retreated from the city, it burned and destroyed most of the street, with few surviving buildings.<ref>W. Monkiewicz, Białystok i okolice, KAW, Białystok 1986, s. 49.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://poranny.pl/bialystok-jak-zmieniala-sie-reprezentacyjna-ulica-miasta-lipowa-na-unikalnych-zdjeciach/ar/c1-17350213|title=Białystok. Jak zmieniała się reprezentacyjna ulica miasta? Lipowa na unikalnych zdjęciach|lang=pl|publisher=Kurier Poranny|date=2024-08-16|accessdate=2024-08-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rodm-bialystok.pl/index.php/nasze-dzialania/publikacje/462-publikacja-wyzwolenie-bialegostoku|title=“Wyzwolenie” Białegostoku lipiec-sierpień 1944 r.|last1=Boćkowski|first1=Daniel|accessdate=2024-08-24}}</ref>
==External links==
{{commonscat-inline|Lipowa Street in Białystok}}
After the war, the street, together with the entire center of the city was re-built. In 2012 the street was reconstructed<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.radio.bialystok.pl/wiadomosci/index/id/92287|title=Białystok: Ulica Lipowa doceniona|lang=pl|date=2012-12-06|accessdate=2024-08-24}}</ref> and parking lots at some of its sections were cancelled, a move criticized by some of the business owners in the area.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://plus.poranny.pl/u-szymborskich-fotografowali-sie-wszyscy-bialostoczanie/ar/11795716|title=U Szymborskich fotografowali się wszyscy białostoczanie|lang=pl|publisher=Kurier Poranny|first1=Alicja|last1=Zielińska|date=2017-02-23|accessdate=2024-08-24}}</ref>

==Buildings==
Moving westwards is the Cristal Hotel, the first real post-war hotel in Bialystok in Poland, and located the intersection with Liniarskiego and Malmeda streets<ref>[http://www.bialystok.pl/site.php?s=MDAzNDQz Szlakami zabytków – Ulicą Lipową].</ref>..

On the other side of Liniarskiego Street stands the [[Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas in Białystok|Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas]], built in 1843–1846. It is a classicist building, built on the plan of a Greek cross.

At Lipowa 14, is the building where the first self-service store in Poland was built, the "Pokój" cinema, and on the opposite side of the street the Art Nouveau palace of Chaim Nowik, which now houses the Military Command of Supplements (next to which were the barracks of the 8th horse artillery battery in the quarter between today's Lipowa, Dabrowskiego, Poleska, and Przejazd streets).{{sfn|Borkiewicz|1987|p=19}}


==References==
==References==
===Citations===
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
===Bibliography===
*{{cite book|last1=Borkiewicz|first1=Adam|title=Walki 1 pułku Legionów o Białystok|year=1987|lang=pl|publisher=Białystocka Oficyna Wydawnicza}}
*{{cite book|last1=Dobroński|first1=Adam|year=2001|title=Białystok historia miasta|lang=pl|publisher=Białystok City Hall}}
*{{cite book|last1=Lechowski|first1=Andrzej|title=Sekrety Białegostoku|year=2016|publisher=Księży Młyn|lang=pl}}


==External links==
[[Category:Streets in Poland]]
{{commons category-inline|Lipowa Street in Białystok}}
[[Category:Białystok]]
{{Białystok}}
[[Category:Streets in Białystok]]
[[Category:Transport in Białystok]]
[[Category:Transport in Białystok]]
[[pl:Ulica Lipowa w Białymstoku]]

Revision as of 17:57, 2 September 2024

Lipowa Street
Lipowa Street in September 2019
Native nameUlica Lipowa (Polish)
Former name(s)Choroska, Nowolipie, Sowiecka, Lindenstrasse, Józefa Stalina
TypeStreet
Length790 m (2,590 ft)
LocationCentrum District, Białystok, Poland
Coordinates53°7′59″N 23°9′14″E / 53.13306°N 23.15389°E / 53.13306; 23.15389

Lipowa Street is a representative street at the center of Białystok, Poland, running from the Kościuszko Square (corner of Spółdzielcza Street) to Romana Dmowskiego Niepodległości Square (corner of Krakowska street).[1] The street is made up of low buildings mostly of 2-3 floors with various shops, offices and restaurants located at the ground floor.

Name

The name of the street comes from a row of lime which grew here in the 18th-20th centuries. Over the centuries, the name of this exclusive and representative Białystok street in the city center took various names: Choroska, Tykocka, Nowolipie, Lipowa, Józefa Piłsudskiego, Sovetskaya, Lindenstrasse, Józefa Stalina to finally return to its original name after World War II: Lipowa.

History

View of the street in 1940, when Białystok became part of the Byelorussian SSR

This street was built in two stages. Its first section led from the market square to today's intersection with Malmeda Street. Since the 16th century, this was the beginning of the route leading to Choroszcz and Tykocin. This road turned further south. Its course more or less coincided with today's streets of Św. Mikolaja, Kalinowskiego, Grunwaldzka. It was not until 1730 that Jan Klemens Branicki, creating the Baroque composition of the city, marked out the current line of this street. With the marking of the new direction of Choroska Street, the importance of the much older and shorter axis, Suraska Street - Wasilkowska - parish church, decreased. The line of Choroska Street, which now passed through Przedmieście Choroskie at a changed angle, became the main axis of the expansion of Białystok due to its good connection with the palace and the New Town. Work on marking out the new course of Choroska Street began in the 1730s.[2] A trace of its former direction was a winding street called in the 1771/72 inventory "ulica Poprzeczna Zatylna ku cerkwi". An additional element of the new development of the street in the spirit of the French Baroque was the planting of four rows of linden trees in 1758, two on each side.

View of the linden avenue in the street, May 2022

Its perspective was closed by St. Roch Hill. However, the name of the street retained a clear division into two parts. The section leaving the market square was inhabited by a dozen or so families, in small wooden houses, whose facades were bricked up and whose roofs were covered with tiles and was closed by a gate placed at the height of the current Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas. Behind the gate, up to St. Roch Hill, Branicki ordered in 1758 to plant linden trees in four rows, reaching almost to St. Roch Hill. This part of the street was called Nowolipie. Construction work in Nowolipie street was still being carried out there in the 1750s. At that time, a promenade mill was built according to the design of Ricound de Tiweqaille, modelled on a similar mill operating in Warsaw.

In the mid-18th century, Choroska Street was built up on both sides. At its end stood the spacious Włokowicz drive-in inn (in this place there is now the Cristal Hotel). Nowolipie had the character of a suburb, inhabited mainly by farmers. There were two breweries and a mill, the so-called promenade. In 1799, almost the entire southern side of Nowolipie was built up, and in the northern side the buildings reached half of its length. In 1810, houses stood along the entire street. It had a regularly shaped frontages, separated by rows of lime trees, made a great impression. In the mid-19th century, the city limits absorbed Nowolipie.[3] The name Lipowa began to be used at that time. In the second half of the 19th century, the name Tykocka began to be used in reference to Choroska Street.

The initial section of Lipowa Street adjoining Kościuszko Market Square.

In 1852, the District Hospital (No. 43) was opened on Lipowa Street. On the other side of the street stood the House of the Gentry (Template:Lang-pl), where numerous county offices and social organizations had their seats. In the last decades of the 19th century, Lipowa became the largest shopping arcade in the city. The wealthiest townspeople, mainly Jews, built representative tenement houses along them. One of them belonged to Boruch Gwin, currently the Cristal Hotel stands in this place. In the years 1912-1915 it housed the editorial office of the Gazeta Białostocka, whose editor and publisher was Konstanty Kosinski. One of the most impressive buildings was the Trylling tenement house, standing on the corner of Lipowa and Nowy Świat. The owner of the corner tenement house on Lipowa and Kupiecka (modern Malmeda) was Józef Puchalski, the first temporary president of Białystok in 1919. Chaim Ber Zakhejm had his house between these tenement houses. It housed the Białystok Commercial Bank, established in 1897.[4]

In August 1897, when Tsar Nicholas II and his wife visited Białystok, the triumphal arch on Lipowa Street near St. Roch Hill was removed. This rather cheap structure, made of wood and plywood, was dismantled only in 1904. One of the reasons for its removal was a dramatic event in July of that year, when a terrorist act took place under the arch. As a result of a bomb explosion, 46-year-old Emma Hampel died.[5] The arch was seriously damaged, and the force of the explosion caused 50 windows in the surrounding buildings to be broken. More terrorist and criminal actions took place in the street at the onset of the new century. In 1903, Białystok police chief Matlenka was shot at the street. In 1905, bandits shot through the windows of the bank office in Trylling's house, severely wounding the cashier Josel Goldszmidt. In the same year, a bandit attack took place in Puchalski's tenement house when unknown perpetrators, under the pretext of looking for work, severely beat the merchant M. Cejtkin. In 1906, a bomb was thrown into the hairdressing salon in Ginzburg's house, and a dozen or so days later, the owner of the office, Jankiel Zilberblat, was killed. Less than a month later, at high noon on Tykocka Street, Leonid Genke, a correspondent of the "Moscow News", was shot, wounding him with two bullets in the back.[6]

Following the regaining of independence of Poland and the creation of the Second Polish Republic, the street kept its important status and its character didn't change. During the existence of the Second Polish Republic its name was changed to Piłsudskiego.

During the Soviet occupation of the city, its name, together with the Kościuszko Market Square changed to Sovetskaya. During the German occupation, the streets adjoining the northern side of the street became part of the Białystok Ghetto, with one of the gates to it located at the intersection of Lipowa and Malmeda streets.[7] In July 1944, just before the Wehrmacht retreated from the city, it burned and destroyed most of the street, with few surviving buildings.[8][9][10]

After the war, the street, together with the entire center of the city was re-built. In 2012 the street was reconstructed[11] and parking lots at some of its sections were cancelled, a move criticized by some of the business owners in the area.[12]

Buildings

Moving westwards is the Cristal Hotel, the first real post-war hotel in Bialystok in Poland, and located the intersection with Liniarskiego and Malmeda streets[13]..

On the other side of Liniarskiego Street stands the Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas, built in 1843–1846. It is a classicist building, built on the plan of a Greek cross.

At Lipowa 14, is the building where the first self-service store in Poland was built, the "Pokój" cinema, and on the opposite side of the street the Art Nouveau palace of Chaim Nowik, which now houses the Military Command of Supplements (next to which were the barracks of the 8th horse artillery battery in the quarter between today's Lipowa, Dabrowskiego, Poleska, and Przejazd streets).[14]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Miejski System Informacji Przestrzennej (GIS).
  2. ^ Dobroński 2001, p. 41.
  3. ^ Mościcki, Henryk (1933). Białystok: zarys historyczny z 22 ilustracjami (in Polish). p. 53.
  4. ^ Lechowski 2016, p. 52.
  5. ^ Lechowski 2016, p. 61.
  6. ^ Lechowski 2016, p. 62.
  7. ^ Żmijewska, Monika (2023-07-27). "Tu była brama getta. Pamięć o tragedii białostockich Żydów zapisana pod stopami" (in Polish). Wyborcza. Retrieved 2024-08-25.
  8. ^ W. Monkiewicz, Białystok i okolice, KAW, Białystok 1986, s. 49.
  9. ^ "Białystok. Jak zmieniała się reprezentacyjna ulica miasta? Lipowa na unikalnych zdjęciach" (in Polish). Kurier Poranny. 2024-08-16. Retrieved 2024-08-25.
  10. ^ Boćkowski, Daniel. ""Wyzwolenie" Białegostoku lipiec-sierpień 1944 r." Retrieved 2024-08-24.
  11. ^ "Białystok: Ulica Lipowa doceniona" (in Polish). 2012-12-06. Retrieved 2024-08-24.
  12. ^ Zielińska, Alicja (2017-02-23). "U Szymborskich fotografowali się wszyscy białostoczanie" (in Polish). Kurier Poranny. Retrieved 2024-08-24.
  13. ^ Szlakami zabytków – Ulicą Lipową.
  14. ^ Borkiewicz 1987, p. 19.

Bibliography

  • Borkiewicz, Adam (1987). Walki 1 pułku Legionów o Białystok (in Polish). Białystocka Oficyna Wydawnicza.
  • Dobroński, Adam (2001). Białystok historia miasta (in Polish). Białystok City Hall.
  • Lechowski, Andrzej (2016). Sekrety Białegostoku (in Polish). Księży Młyn.

Media related to Lipowa Street in Białystok at Wikimedia Commons