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Mielec
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===Early history=== [[File:PL-Mielec, bazylika św. Mateusza 2013-09-07--18-09-09-001.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Baroque in Poland|Baroque]] Minor Basilica of St. Matthew]] The first mention of a place called Mielec occurs in the thirteenth century in the 1229 bull of [[Pope Gregory IX]]. In the second half of the fourteenth century, "Mielecka" was mentioned in a list of parishes. The city of Mielec, part of [[Sandomierz Voivodeship]] and [[Lesser Poland Province, Crown of the Kingdom of Poland|Lesser Poland Province]] of the Kingdom of Poland, was founded on 17 March 1457, when [[Casimir IV Jagiellon|King Casimir IV]] granted a charter to Jan Mielecki for the establishment of a city under the name of Nowy Targ. For unknown reasons Jan Mielecki did not go on to found the city; it was eventually established by his two sons, Jan and Bernardyn, by an Act of 18 December 1470. The [[Mielecki family]] owned the town of Mielec until the last of the Mieleckis died in 1771. Under their rule, there was intensive development of craft industries. In 1522, the first [[guild]] was founded. This was the [[blacksmith]]s' guild. It was followed by guilds of [[tailor]]s, cobblers, [[pottery|potters]], spinners, and weavers. The next owners of Mielec were the [[Ossolinski]] and [[House of Morsztyn|Morsztyn]] families. In 1775, Anna Ossilińska married Jan Pieniążek, bringing as a dowry her share of part of the city. The next owner was Ignacy Suchorzewski, who married Pieniążek's daughter Paulina. Suchorzewski sold Mielec's property to Ludwik Starzeński in 1847, who then disposed of it ten years later to a Jewish family named Gross. The last owner of Mielec was the [[Oborski]] family in 1891. [[File:Maciej Bogusz Stęczyński, Mielec 1847.jpg|thumb|left|Mielec in 1847 by Maciej Bogusz Stęczyński]] In 1853, the county town of Mielec governed an area in which there were 106 settlements and 91 castral municipalities. In 1892, on Kosciuszko Street a new City Council building and police barracks were built. The development of the county town was interrupted by a huge fire, which destroyed three quarters of the city. This catastrophe caused the city to apply for a state loan of 12 crowns, the receipt of which led to the rapid development of the city. By the beginning of the twentieth century, the market place in Mielec was surrounded by brick houses, and in 1902, a courthouse was built. In 1912, a gymnasium (or academic high school) and the office of County Council were established and buildings constructed to house them. [[World War I]] caused much damage to the infrastructure and economy of city of Mielec and the county.
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