Katowice

Katowice
/kah'taw vee"tse/, n.
a city in S Poland. 344,000. German, Kattowitz /kah"toh vits/.

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City (pop., 2000 est.: 340,539), south-central Poland.

Located in the midst of the coalfields of Upper Silesia, it was settled by 1598. It became a city in 1865, when coal mining began in the region. It became part of Poland in 1922 and has since incorporated surrounding villages. It is a centre of mining and heavy industry and an important rail junction.

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Poland
German  Kattowitz 

      city and capital, Śląskie województwo (province), south-central Poland. It lies in the heart of the Upper Silesia coalfields.

      The settlement was first recorded in 1598, and it remained a small village until 1865, when it was granted municipal rights as Kattowitz. It grew rapidly as coal mining began in the area during the 1860s. The city became part of Poland in 1922 and has since incorporated surrounding villages. Its economy is dependent on coal mining and heavy industry, and it is an important rail junction and has an airport. The local Jan coal mine was the first fully automated mine in the world. The Huta Katowice metal complex, located in neighbouring Dąbrowa Górnica, was one of Poland's major development projects in the 1970s. Katowice is also a cultural centre and is home to the University of Silesia, the Academy of Economics, and other institutions of higher education. Two music festivals held in the city are the “Metalmania” Rock Festival and the Rawa Blues Festival. Pop. (2002) 327,222.

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Universalium. 2010.

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