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Ursus, Warsaw

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A peaceful residential area in Warsaw called Osiedle Gołąbki, featuring apartment buildings and streets.

Ursus is a part of the city of Warsaw. It is one of the 18 main areas that make up Warsaw. Before 1977, Ursus was its own city, but it was later joined with Warsaw. Before 1954, the area was called Czechowice.

History

In the area now called Ursus, there were three villages in the 1300s: Czechowice, Skorosze, and Szamoty (which was later called Gołąbki).

When factories grew in the 1900s, these villages grew too. In the early 1920s, a big factory called Zakłady Mechaniczne "Ursus" was built, making machines for farms. Czechowice became a place where people lived because it was close to the factories. By 1939, before World War II, Czechowice had 7,000 people living there. Skorosze had a school, a police station, and a train station.

In 1952, Czechowice, Skorosze, and Szamoty joined together to form a new city named Czechowice. But in 1954, the city changed its name to Ursus because there was already another place called Czechowice in southern Poland.

In June 1976, people in Ursus started protests because the government raised food prices. Many people were hurt and arrested during these protests. These protests helped start a group called Komitet Obrony Robotników (KOR). On August 1, 1977, Ursus became part of Warsaw, specifically within the Ochota district, as a result of the protests. Since January 1, 1993, Ursus has been its own district in Warsaw.

The present

Ursus is a small district in Warsaw. It has the lowest crime rate of all the districts.

Neighbourhoods within the district

Some of the neighbourhoods in Ursus, Warsaw, include Gołąbki, Szamoty, Niedźwiadek, Czechowice, and Skorosze.

Twin towns

Ursus has a twin town agreement with Shevchenkivskyi District in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Ursus, Warsaw, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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