Jarosław is located in the territory of the old Polish tribe of the
Lendians, which became part of the emerging Polish state under
Mieszko I. According to tradition, the town was established in 1031 by
Yaroslav the Wise, after the area was annexed from
Poland by the
Kievan Rus', although the first confirmed mention of the town comes from 1152. The region was eventually regained by Poland, and the settlement was granted
Magdeburg town rights by Polish Duke
Vladislaus II of Opole in 1375. The city quickly developed as an important trade centre and
port on the
San River, reaching the period of its greatest prosperity in the 16th and 17th centuries. It had
trade routes linking
Silesia with
Ruthenia,
Gdańsk, and
Hungary. Merchants from such distant countries as
Spain,
England,
Finland,
Armenia and
Persia arrived for the annual three-week-long
fair on the
feast of the Assumption. In 1575 a
Jesuit college was established in Jarosław. Jarosław was a
private town of
Polish nobility, including the
Tarnowski, Jarosławski,
Odrowąż,
Kostka,
Sieniawski,
Zamoyski,
Wiśniowiecki,
Koniecpolski,
Sobieski,
Sanguszko and
Czartoryski families. The Jarosławski family of
Leliwa coat of arms hailed from the town. In the 1590s
Tatars from the
Ottoman Empire pillaged the surrounding countryside. (See
Moldavian Magnate Wars,
The Magnate Wars (1593–1617), Causes.) They were unable to overcome the city's
fortifications, but their raids started to diminish the city's economic strength and importance. Outbreaks of
bubonic plague in the 1620s, and the invasion known as the
Swedish Deluge in 1655–60 further undermined the city's prominence. In March 1656, led by Polish national hero
Stefan Czarniecki, the Poles defeated the invading Swedes under King
Charles X Gustav in the
Battle of Jarosław. In the
Great Northern War of 1700-21, the region was repeatedly pillaged by
Russian,
Saxon, and
Swedish armies, causing the city to decline further. After the fall of the
Rákóczi's War of Independence against
Austria in 1711, Hungarian leader
Francis II Rákóczi and his court, including essayist
Kelemen Mikes, found refuge in Jarosław. In 1711, Rákóczi and some Hungarians left for
Gdańsk, while some stayed, and later on, several Hungarians were buried in the local Corpus Christi Collegiate Church, before their exhumation and burial in Hungary in 1907. In the mid-eighteenth century, Roman Catholics constituted 53.7% of the population, members of the Greek Catholic Church 23.9%, and Jews 22.3%. Jarosław was annexed by
Austria in the
First Partition of Poland in 1772. It was part of newly formed
Galicia (
Austrian Partition) until Poland regained independence in 1918 following World War I. In 1914,
Russian soldiers carried out a
pogrom in the town, killing more than 150 Jews. In the interbellum period the city was administratively located in the Polish
Lwów Voivodeship. Jaroslaw - Rynek. 1895-1949 (69712156) (cropped).jpg|Market square, after 1895 Jaroslaw. Rynek. 1915 (69712358) (cropped).jpg|Town hall, ca 1915 Jaroslaw - Stary zamek. 1915 (69712033) (cropped).jpg|Orsetti House, ca 1915 During the German
invasion of Poland in September 1939, which started
World War II, this was the site of the
Battle of Jarosław. Germany defeated the Poles and captured the town. Shortly afterwards the German
Einsatzgruppe I entered the town to commit various
atrocities against the population. Under
German occupation, the town was part of the
Kraków District of the
General Government. The
Polish resistance movement was active in the town, and from May 1940, the underground Polish newspaper
Odwet was distributed in Jarosław. In 1944, the town was captured by the
Red Army of the Soviet Union and restored to Poland, although with a
Soviet-installed
communist regime, which remained in power until the
Fall of Communism in the 1980s. Some local Polish resistance officers were arrested by the Soviets and imprisoned in a Soviet camp in
Trzebuska. The communists expelled most of Jarosław's Ukrainian population, at first to
Soviet territories and later to
territories regained from Germany. It was administratively located in the
Rzeszów Voivodeship (1945–1974) and
Przemyśl Voivodeship (1975–1998). ==Jewish Jarosław==