Kociewie
Kociewie is an ethnocultural region in the eastern part of Tuchola Forest, in northern Poland, Pomerania, that is inhabited by the Kociewians. Its cultural capital is Starogard Gdański, the biggest town is Tczew, while other major towns include Świecie, and Pelplin. The region has about 250,000 inhabitants. It has well-developed industry and agriculture. Administratively, it is divided between the Pomeranian and Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeships.
Kociewie is bordered by the Chełmno Land in the south, Powiśle in the east, Kashubia and Żuławy Wiślane in the north, and other parts of historic Pomerania in the west.
History
Prehistory
The earliest inhabitants of what is now Kociewie are believed to have been from the Upper Paleolithic period. Evidence of the Linear Pottery culture has been unearthed in the region, and a Neolithic settlement discovered at Barłożno. Archeological evidence from Tczew County indicates that the Kociewian lands were inhabited by people from the prehistoric Funnelbeaker culture. Later Iron Age settlements and cemeteries have also been uncovered in the same area.Early history
19th century
The first known mention of the region in the historical record dates to 10 February 1807 when the name Gociewie was used in correspondence between Jan Henryk Dąbrowski and one of his Lieutenant colonels’ during the Greater Poland Uprising. Although, it is likely that the name Kociewie had been in use since the late Middle Ages.One of the main escape routes for insurgents of the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising from partitioned Poland to the Great Emigration led through Tczew and Starogard.
In the mid-19 century the ethnographer Florian Ceynowa described the inhabitants of Kociewie; he named the people around Gniew and Pelplin as the Fetrów and Kociewiem respectively, distinguished by their melodic accents, who farmed pigs and horses. To their north were the Pola of the fields around Starogard Gdański.
Many inhabitants of the region of the region militantly agitated against Prussian rule in Kociewie. The most notorious attempt at an uprising in Kociewie was led by Ceynowa in 1846. In February of that year he organised a force of about 100 Kosynierzy to storm the barracks in, what was then named, Preußisch Stargard. However, the Prussian authorities had been forewarned about the imminent attack, which was subsequently abandoned. The Kociewian uprising was planned to coincide with the Greater Poland Uprising. In 1906–1907, Polish children in Kociewie joined the children's school strikes against Germanisation that spread throughout the Prussian Partition of Poland. Following World War I, Poland regained independence and control of Kociewie.
World War II
Following the Nazi German invasion of Poland, which started World War II in September 1939, Kociewie was declared part of the Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia on 8 October 1939, with its judicial institutions being incorporated into the German system of regional, national, and Higher National courts the following year. Under German occupation, the Polish population was subjected to various crimes, such as mass arrests, imprisonment, slave labor, expulsions, kidnapping of children, deportations to concentration camps and genocide, including the Intelligenzaktion. Major sites of massacres of Poles in the region included Szpęgawsk, Mniszek, Skarszewy and Grupa. The occupiers also murdered the patients of the psychiatric hospitals in Kocborowo and Świecie.Geography
Cities and towns
Genetics
In a 2013 study, Y-DNA haplogroups among the Polish population indigenous to Kociewie were reported as follows:56.3% R1a, 17.7% R1b, 8.2% I1, 7.6% I2, 3.8% E1b1b, 1.9% N1, 1.9% J and 2% of other haplogroups.
Culture
The region is rich in historic architecture of various styles, including Gothic, Baroque and Art Nouveau. Most notable Gothic landmarks are the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption in Pelplin and Gniew Castle. John III Sobieski often resided in Gniew as a local starost before he became King of Poland.Main museums of the region include:
- Vistula River Museum in Tczew, located in a pre-war agricultural machine factory where during World War II, a transit camp for Poles expelled from the region was established and operated by Nazi Germany.
- The Shipwreck Conservation Centre, a branch of the National Maritime Museum in Gdańsk, is located in Tczew.
- Diocesan Museum in Pelplin, which contains one of the finest collections of medieval art in Poland, and the country's sole copy of the Gutenberg Bible.
- Museum of Kociewie Land in Starogard Gdański with archaeological, ethnographic and historical collections, located in two medieval defensive towers.
- Museum of the History of the Polish Peasant Movement in Piaseczno, one of three such museums in Poland.
- Museum of Firefighting in Świecie.
People from Kociewie
- Teresa Budzisz-Krzyżanowska, Actress
- Grzegorz Ciechowski, Rock Musician
- Kazimierz Deyna, Footballer
- Grzegorz Gajdus, Long-distance runner
- Andrzej Grubba, Table Tennis Player
- Krzysztof Kosedowski, boxer
- Henryk Jankowski, Catholic priest and member of Solidarity
- Grzegorz Kołodko, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister
- Bronisław Malinowski, track and field athlete
- Oktawia Nowacka, modern pentathlete
- Paweł Papke, politician and volleyball player
- Kazimierz Piechowski, Auschwitz political prisoner and soldier
- Teresa Piotrowska, politician
- Sławomir Pstrong, film and television director
- Danuta Rosani, olympic athlete
- Tomasz Schuchardt, actor
- Anna Szarmach, jazz and pop singer
- Bogdan Wenta, politician and handball coach
- Kazimierz Zimny, olympic athlete