Raków | ||
---|---|---|
Village | ||
Raków, Poland. Plac Wolności (Liberty Square), former marketplace (Rynek)
|
||
|
||
Coordinates: 50°40′25″N 21°2′44″E / 50.67361°N 21.04556°E | ||
Country | Poland | |
Voivodeship | Świętokrzyskie | |
County | Kielce County | |
Gmina | Raków | |
Population | 1,213 | |
Website | http://www.rakow.pl/ |
Raków [ˈrakuf] is a village in Kielce County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Raków. It lies in historic Lesser Poland, approximately 39 km (24 mi) south-east of the regional capital Kielce. The village has a population of 1,213.
Raków was founded in 1569 by Jan Sienieński , a Calvinist who was castellan of Żarnów, as the centre of the Polish Brethren and a place of religious tolerance. The town coat of arms includes a crayfish and is derived from the Warnia coat of arms of Sienieński's Arian wife, Jadwiga Gnoińska. The Socinian Racovian Academy was founded in 1602 by Jakub Sienieński, Jan Sienieński's son. By the 1630s, the town had grown to 15,000 inhabitants, with businesses centering on the Academy.
As the Counter-Reformation in Poland gathered force, pressure began to be used against the Socinians. On April 19, 1638 an incident occurred in which some young students of the Academy destroyed or removed a cross, giving the royal court the pretext needed to ban Arian activities, including printing and the schools, and sentenced teachers to exile, many heading south to the Principality of Transylvania. Jesuit scholar Szymon Starowolski justified the closing of Protestant schools (in 1638 and 1640), and Protestant centers and printing presses (in 1638, the press at Raków), as the "duty of good pastors" and as a legitimate act of the King and the Republic. The Arian church in Raków was demolished in 1640. In 1641 Jakub Zadzik, archbishop of Kraków, began construction of the magnificent Church of the Holy Trinity in Raków on the same site and settled Franciscan friars in Raków to reconvert the Polish Brethren. The friars left the town around 1649. The main Arian buildings were destroyed, and more destruction was brought by Cossacks and Hungarians in 1657. By 1700 the town had only 700 inhabitants left.