Originally a part of
Lesser Poland, the area was acquired by the
Silesian Piast Duke
Vladislaus I of Opole through a 1274 agreement with the Polish Princeps
Bolesław V the Chaste. Zator then belonged to the Upper Silesian
Duchy of Opole and after Władysław's death in 1281 fell to the
Duchy of Cieszyn. It received
town privileges in 1292. From 1315 onwards, Zator belonged to the
Duchy of Oświęcim split off Cieszyn and in 1445 even became the capital of a Piast duchy in its own right, the
Duchy of Zator under Duke
Wenceslaus I, a
Bohemian vassal. It finally fell back to the
Kingdom of Poland, when in 1494 Wenceslaus' son
Jan V sold his lands to King
John I Albert. From 1564, Zator had been incorporated into the
Kraków Voivodeship of the
Lesser Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland. In the course of the 1772
First Partition of Poland it was annexed by the
Habsburg monarchy under Empress
Maria Theresa of Austria and incorporated into the Austrian
Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria. After the dissolution of
Austria-Hungary by the 1919
Treaty of Saint-Germain Zator again fell to Poland. During
World War II, Zator was incorporated to
Nazi Germany as a part of the
Province of Upper Silesia, and was liberated on January 26, 1945. Several hundred Jews lived in Zator. Most of them were murdered by the occupiers in the
Holocaust. From 1975 to 1998 it belonged to the
Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship. ==Places of interest==