Puneet Varma (Editor)

Kudowa Zdrój

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Country
  
Poland

Founded
  
1354

Lowest elevation
  
370 m (1,210 ft)

Population
  
10,204 (2006)

County
  
Kłodzko

Highest elevation
  
420 m (1,380 ft)

Area
  
33.9 km²

Local time
  
Saturday 7:33 PM

Kudowa-Zdrój wwwhotelroomsearchnetimcitykudowazdrjpolan

Gmina
  
Kudowa-Zdrój (urban gmina)

Weather
  
4°C, Wind W at 21 km/h, 75% Humidity

Voivodeship
  
Lower Silesian Voivodeship

Points of interest
  
Stołowe Mountains, Skull Chapel - Czermna, Stołowe Mountains National, Park Zdrojowy w Kudowie‑Zdroju, Muzeum Zabawek w Kudowie‑Zdroju

Kudowa-Zdrój [kuˈdɔva ˈzdrui̯] (German: Bad Kudowa, Czech: Chudoba) is a town located below the Stołowe Mountains in Kłodzko County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in the southwest part of Poland, about 400 m (1,312 ft) above sea level. It has a population of about 10,000 and is located at the Polish-Czech border, just across from the Czech town of Náchod and some 40 km (25 mi) west of Kłodzko.

Contents

Map of Kudowa-Zdr%C3%B3j, Poland

Kudowa-Zdrój is a historic spa town where heart and circulatory system diseases were cured. In the downtown area, there is a park styled on 17th century revival, with exotic plants and a mineral water pump room. Due to its location, the town is famous for tourism, walking, biking and as the departure point for trips. Among the notable locations of the region are The Chapel of Skulls, The Moving Nativity Scene in Czermna, The Basilica in Wambierzyce, The Bear Cave in Kletno, and the heritage park in Pstrążna as well the natural surroundings of the nearby Table Mountains. It is situated 3 km (2 mi) from the Czech border and about 140 km (87 mi) from Prague.

History

Kudowa-Zdrój is one of the oldest spa resorts in Poland and Europe. It is first mentioned in a document by Henry the Older, son of the Hussite Czech king George of Podebrady. The original name of the village was Lipolitov but in the mid-16th century it was changed to Chudoba, later on Kudoba (Cudoba in the 19th century), Bad Kudowa and into Kudowa-Zdrój in 1945.

The oldest part of Kudowa is Czermna, dating back to the 16th century. The first record of a mineral waters in the area comes from 1580 from the chronicles of Louis of Náchod, under the name Cermenske Lazne. In 1625 (or, as some sources say, as early as 1621), G. Aelurius, a Protestant Lutheran monk, wrote in his work "Glaciografia" about the great taste of the mineral waters from Kudowa.

In 1847, Kudowa was visited by 300 patients. In 1850, A. Duflos made a chemical analysis of the local waters and claimed they have healing traits. Local doctor J. Jacob helped to establish the notion that Kudowa is a spa that helps heart related diseases, which had a significant impact on the number of people visiting the town. In 1900, the number of people who visited was 4,150. Thanks to development of business organizations, a railway line to Glatz and a local power plant the spa grew, and 8,000 visitors attended its facilities in 1906. In 1891, German-American editor Hermann Raster visited Kudowa-Zdrój to help his failing health. He died there in July of that same year. In 1920, the Gebrüder Martin und Paul Polka O.H.G. company bought the largest spa resort of the town. Famous visitors include Helmut von Moltke with his family, and Winston Churchill. Also, from 1911 to 1931, Raphael Friedeberg worked as a physician in the Spa.

Kudowa was part of Bohemia until 1742 when, together with the rest of the county of Glatz, it passed to Prussia. From 1818 until 1945, it was known as Bad Kudowa, and was part of the Prussian province of Lower Silesia. After 1945, most German inhabitants were forcibly expelled and replaced by Polish settlers. After becoming part of Poland it received municipal rights for the first time in its history. As the area was a part of the Czech Corner of Kłodzko Land, a population of ethnic Czechs lived in Kudowa-Zdrój (then Bad Kudowa) before 1945. Small groups of Germans and Czechs continued to live in Kudowa until 1960. A German-speaking school was used from 1951-1960, and a Czech-speaking school was used from 1947-1955 by these small groups.

Subdivisions

(with German names)

  • Brzozowie (Brzesowie, 1924–45: Birkhagen)
  • Bukowina Kłodzka (Bukowine, 1937–45: Tannhübel)
  • Czermna (Tscherbeney, 1937–45: Grenzeck)
  • Jakubowice (Jakobowitz, 1937–45: Wachtgrund)
  • Pstrążna (Straußeney, 1937–45: Straußdörfel)
  • Słone (Schlaney, 1937–45: Schnellau)
  • Zakrze (Sackisch)
  • Twin towns — Sister cities

    Kudowa-Zdrój is twinned with:

  •  Czech Republic, Náchod
  • References

    Kudowa-Zdrój Wikipedia