Kraków
Kraków (Polish: Kraków; (pronounced: ['krakuf]); variant English spelling Cracow; in full Royal Capital City of Krakow, Polish: Królewskie Stołeczne Miasto Kraków) is one of the oldest and largest cities in Poland. In 2014 in Kraków lived 759,800 people. It is on the Vistula river. Krakow is the capital of Lesser Poland Voivodeship (województwo małopolskie); before that it was the capital of Kraków Voivodship (since 14th century).
During the mid-early 19th century, Krakow became an independent city-state, under the name of "The Free, Independent and Strictly Neutral City of Krakow". However, it was annexed by Austria-Hungary in 1846.
Pope John Paul II was raised in Krakow and was its archbishop from 1964 until he was elected as Pope in 1978. When it was later announced that the city will host World Youth Day in 2016, it will be a tribute to the late Pope who became a saint in 2014.
The current mayor of Krakow is Jacek Majchrowski.
During World War II, there was once a ghetto in the city which held mostly the Jews of Kraków. The ghetto was liquidated for the final time in March 1943, with most of it's inhabitants sent to the Treblinka extermination camp.
Sister cities
Kraków is twinned, or maintains close relations with:
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Kraków Media
The Romanesque St. Leonard's Crypt, which date back to the 11th century, when Casimir I the Restorer made Kraków his royal residence and the capital of the Kingdom of Poland
Woodcut of Kraków from the Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493
Tadeusz Kościuszko takes the oath of loyalty to the Polish nation in Kraków's market square (Rynek), 1794.
Act of granting the constitution to the Free City of Krakow. After the Partitions of Poland, Kraków became a city-state and remained the only piece of sovereign Polish territory between 1815 and 1846.
Convent of Norbertine Sisters in Kraków-Zwierzyniec and the Vistula River during the summer season