Kępno[ˈkɛmpnɔ] is a town in south-central Poland. Kępno is located in the historical Wieluń Land. It lies on the outskirts of the Greater Poland Voivodeship, bordering the historical region of Silesia and the Łódź Voivodeship. As of December 31, 2009 Kępno had a population of 14,760. One popular attraction in Kępno is the Rynek (market square).
Kępno was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the 1793 Second Partition of Poland. Administered within South Prussia from 1793 to 1807, it was part of the NapoleonicDuchy of Warsaw from 1807 to 1815. As Kempen, it was restored to Prussia in the 1815 Congress of Vienna and administered within the Grand Duchy of Posen (until 1848) and the Province of Posen, within which it was the seat of the district Kempen in Posen. The town was a 19th-century shtetl. The majority of the Jews left the city during the second half of the 19th century because of the epidemics (cholera, etc.) and the poor living conditions. They left mainly for Wrocław and surroundings, Berlin, and the Americas. Kempen (Kepno) immigrants were the first Jews to settle in Guatemala, and formed the basis of the German-Jewish community there. In the meantime, the Polish population was subject to Germanisation policies.[2] Since the mid-19th century, to resist Germanisation, Poles founded various organizations, including industrial and cultural societies, printing houses and a local branch of the "Sokół" Polish Gymnastic Society.[4] In the early 20th century local Poles protested against Germanisation policies.[5]
In 1918 Poland regained independence after World War I and the Greater Poland Uprising broke out, the aim of which was to reunite the region with Poland. In response the Germans placed over 1,000 Grenzschutz troops in the town and persecuted the local Polish population.[9] In January 1919, the Germans interned six leading local Polish activists in Świętoszów.[9] Despite their plans, the Polish insurgents did not try to recapture the town, however, it was still restored to Poland on 17 January 1920.[9]
Following the invasion of Poland and the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Kępno was occupied by the Wehrmacht and on September 6–7, 1939 the Einsatzgruppe III entered the town to commit atrocities against Poles.[10] Some Poles from Kępno were murdered by German troops already on September 7, 1939, in the nearby village of Wylazłów.[11] The town was annexed by Nazi Germany, renamed Kempen and administered as part of the county or district (kreis) of the same name within Reichsgau Wartheland. Its population was subject to segregation, Germanisation, confiscation of property, arrests, expulsions, deportations to forced labour, imprisonment in concentration camps and executions.[12] The Germans established and operated a Nazi prison in the town.[13] Polish monuments were destroyed.[14] The Polish resistance movement was organized in Kępno in November 1939.[15]Red Army troops took the town on January 21, 1945, and with the end of the war, the town returned to Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which remained in power until the Fall of Communism in the 1980s. The Polish resistance movement remained active in the town, and in September 1945 it captured the local communist police station and liberated the prisoners.[16]
Kowalski, Stanisław (2018). Dzieje Kępna. Od początku istnienia do 2015 r. (in Polish). Kępno.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Footnotes
^"Kępno Population". www.polskawliczbach.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 30 January 2017.
^ abcde"Historia". kepno.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
^Łuczak, Agnieszka (2011). "Podziemie niepodległościowe w Wielkopolsce w latach 1945–1956". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 5-6 (126-127). IPN. p. 77. ISSN1641-9561.
^"Ser liliput wielkopolski". Ministerstwo Rolnictwa i Rozwoju Wsi - Portal Gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 30 May 2021.