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Mielnik
Village
120-year-old pine tree at the entrance to Mielnik
120-year-old pine tree at the entrance to Mielnik
Coat of arms of Mielnik
Mielnik is located in Poland
Mielnik
Mielnik
Coordinates: 52°20′N 23°3′E / 52.333°N 23.050°E / 52.333; 23.050
Country Poland
VoivodeshipPodlaskie
CountySiemiatycze
GminaMielnik
Population
980

Mielnik [ˈmʲɛlɲik] is a village in Siemiatycze County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.[1] It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Mielnik. It lies approximately 17 kilometres (11 mi) south-east of Siemiatycze and 88 km (55 mi) south of the regional capital Białystok.

Mielnik has a long and rich history. The area of the town was in c. 1018 captured by warriors of Bolesław Chrobry, and remained in Polish hands until c. 1050, when Kazimierz Odnowiciel handed it to Grand Prince of Kiev, Yaroslav the Wise, for his help in getting rid of Mieclaw. Since Mielnik was located near the settlement of the Yotvingians, its area was subject to frequent raids.

In 1323–1324, Mielnik and nearby Drohiczyn were captured by Lithuanian Duke Gediminas, and remained part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until 1569, except for the period 1391 - 1408, when it was governed by Mazoviad Duke Janusz I of Warsaw, and 1430 - 1444, when it was ruled by Duke Bolesław IV of Warsaw. In 1420, Duke Vytautas founded here a Roman Catholic church, which was located in the complex of the Mielnik Castle. On September 22, 1440, Mielnik received Chelmno town charter from Duke Bolesław IV. Four years later, the town was purchased by King Casimir IV Jagiellon.

On 1 October 1501, Alexander I Jagiellon named first vogt of Mielnik, a nobleman named Mikolaj Rychlik, who resided in a manor house at Oslowo. On October 23 of the same year, the Union of Mielnik was signed by Alexander I and Lithuanian nobles. Four days later, Alexander changed Mielnik's town charter into Magdeburg rights. King Sigismund I the Old visited Mielnik twice, in 1506 (while awaiting Polish crown), and 1513, when he stayed here for a month, ordering construction of a second Catholic church.

In the 16th century, Mielnik established its position as one of the most important towns of the province of Podlasie. In 1520 it became seat of a powiat, and in 1545, three Russian boyars, Fiedor Owczyna, Jendriej Palecki and Michalko Obolenski were imprisoned in the Mielnik Castle. The castle itself was expanded and remodeled in the 1540s and early 1550s by starosta Nikodem Janowicz Swiejko of Ciechanowiec. Since 1551, it was a Renaissance complex, used for royal visits. In 1554, a bridge over the Bug river was destroyed, and a new one was built in Turna. As a result, merchants with their goods bypassed Mielnik, which contributed to the town's slow decline. In 1566, the Land of Mielnik was established.

Following the Union of Lublin (1569), Mielnik was annexed by the Kingdom of Poland. Its population was c. 1,500, and the town remained an important urban center of Podlasie.

Swedish invasion of Poland was a disaster for Mielnik, and the town has never recovered from the destruction. In late May 1657, it was burned to the ground by Swedes of Gustav Otto Steinbock and Transilvanians of George II Rakoczi, who also destroyed the royal castle and the parish church. As a result, Mielnik lost 70% of population.

Following the Partitions of Poland, Mielnik was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia (1795), and in 1807, it was transferred to the Russian Empire, where it remained until World War I. In 1829, Russians destroyed local Catholic church, and in 1863, to commemorate suppression of the January Uprising, chapel of Alexander Nevsky was built. Mielnik returned to Poland in 1919, losing its town charter in 1934.

Demographics[edit]

1897 census[edit]

The most spoken languages in Mielnik according to the Russian Imperial Census of 1897:[2]

Language Population Proportion
Jewish 441 29.7%
Ukrainian 422 28.42%
Russian 324 21.81%
Polish 293 19.73%
Unknown 5 .34 %
Total 1,485 100.00%

People associated with Mielnik[edit]

References[edit]