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Coat of arms of Katowice

Alternate names: Katowice [Pol], Kattowitz [Ger], Katovice [Cz], Stalinogród [Pol, 1953-56]. 50°16' N, 19°01' E. Between 1953-1956 it was renamed Stalinogród. 1900 Jewish population: 2,264.  Katovits: perihatah ve-shekiyatah shel ha-kehila ha-yehudit; sefer zikaron (Tel Aviv, 1996). JOWBR burial list: Kozilska Street Cemetery.

Katowice is a city in Silesia in southern Poland on the Kłodnica and Rawa rivers (tributaries of the Oder and the Vistula). Katowice is located in the Silesian Highlands about 50 km on N of the Silesian Beskids (part of the Carpathian Mountains) and about 100 km on SE of the Sudetes Mountains. A large local center of science, culture, industry, business and transportation, Katowice has been the capital of Silesian Voivodeship since its formation in 1999. Previously, it was the capital of the Katowice Voivodeship, and before then, of the Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship. Katowice area within a greater Silesian metropolitan area is about 5,294,000 people with a city population of 312,201 inhabitants. [May 2009]

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Parent Category: EASTERN EUROPE