Mogielnica was granted
town rights modelled after
Środa Śląska in 1317 by Duke
Siemowit II of Masovia. It was administratively located in the Biała County in the
Rawa Voivodeship in the
Greater Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland. In 1815, the town fell to the
Russian Partition of Poland. On January 23, 1863, the second day of the
January Uprising, the local populace pushed Russian troops out of the town, who however soon recaptured it. On February 20, 1864, a clash between Polish insurgents and Russian troops took place near the town. In
World War I, the Tsarist regime, in reprisal for its own catastrophic failures in battle with Germany, expelled the Jews of Mogielnica. The Jewish paper,
Haynt, published in
Congress Poland, stated in its May 23, 1915 issue (under Russian military censorship): "The entire Jewish population was deported from Mogielnica, roughly 5,000 people. They were given a short period of time in which to liquidate their businesses." Some of the Jews returned to Mogielnica once
Poland re-emerged as a sovereign state in 1918.
World War II partisans In 1940, during the Nazi
Occupation of Poland,
German authorities established a
ghetto in Mogielnica to confine, persecute and exploit its
Jewish population. The ghetto was demolished on February 28, 1942, when its 1,500 inhabitants were transported
in cattle trucks to the
Warsaw Ghetto, the largest in all of Nazi-occupied Europe, with over 400,000 Jews crowded into an area of . From there, most victims were sent to the
Treblinka extermination camp. The Nazis demolished the 18th-century Jewish cemetery located on the left side of the road to
Grójec, near Przylesie Street, and used its headstones for pavement. A monument now stands in its place. ==Historical population==