THORN (Polish Torun), a fortress town of Germany, in the
Prussian
province of West Prussia, situated on the right bank of the Vistula,
near the point where the river enters Prussian territory, 85 m. by rail
N.E. of Posen, 92 m. S. of Danzig and 12 m. from
the Russian frontier at Alexandrovo. Pop. (1895), 30,314; (1906), 43,435.
Its position as a bridge head commanding the passage of the Vistula makes
it a point of strategic importance; it was strongly fortified in 1818,
and in 1878 was converted into a fortress of the erst class. The defensive
works consist of a circle of outlying forts, about 2 1/2 m. from the centre
of the town – eight on the right and five on the left bank of the river.
The “ old town,” founded in 1231, and the “ new town,” founded thirty-three
years later, were united in 1454, and both retain a number of quaint buildings
dating from the 15th and 16th centuries, when Thorn was a nourishing member
of the Hanseatic League. The town-hall of the 14th and 16th centuries,
the churches of St John of the Virgin, and of St James (all of the 13th
– 14th centuries), the ruined castle of the Teutonic order (a tower, the
so-called “Dansker” ), and a leaning tower, the sole remnant of the old
environing walls, are among the most interesting of the ancient edifices.
Among modern buildings may be mentioned the Artushof, containing concert
and assembly halls, the new garrison church (1897), and the monument erected
in 1853 to Copernicus, who was a native of
Thorn. The ancient wooden bridge, now burned down, at one time the' only
permanent bridge across the lower Vistula, has been succeeded by a massive
iron railway viaduct, 3300 ft. long. Thorn carries on an active trade in
grain, timber, wine, groceries and minerals, and has ironworks, saw-mills,
and various other manufactures. It is famous for its Pfefferkuchen, a kind
of gingerbread. Part of the trade is carried on by passenger and cargo
vessels on the Vistula, which ply as far as Warsaw.
Thorn, founded in 1231 by the Teutonic order
as an outpost against the Poles, was colonized mainly from Westphalia.
The first peace of Thorn, between the order and the Poles, was concluded
in 1411. In 1454 the townspeople revolted from the knights of the order,
destroyed their castle, and attached themselves to the king of Poland.
This resulted in a war, which was terminated in 1466 by the second peace
of Thorn. In the 15th and 16th centuries Thorn was a Hanse town of
importance, and received the titles of “Queen of the Vistula” and “the
beautiful.” It embraced the Reformation in 1557, and in 1645 it was the
scene of a colloquium charitativum, or discussion betwixt the doctors of
the rival creeds, which, however, resulted in no agreement. In 1724 a riot
between the Protestant and Roman Catholic inhabitants was seized upon by
the Polish king as a pretext for beheading the burgomaster and nine other
leading Protestant citizens, an act of oppression which is known as the
“ blood-bath of Thorn.” The second
partition of Poland (1793) conferred Thorn upon Prussia; by the treaty
of Tilsit it was assigned to the duchy of Warsaw; but since the congress
of Vienna (1815) it has again been Prussian.
See Wernicke, Geschichte Thorns (Thorn,
1839 – 1842); Hoburg, Die Belagerungen der Stadt und Festung Thorn (Thorn,
1850); and Steinbrecht, Die Baukunst des deutschen Ritterordens in Preussen
(1st
part, Berlin, 1884); Uebrick, Thorn (Danzig, 1903).
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