Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › TykocinTykocin - Wikipedia

    Sito istituzionale. Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale. Tykocin è un comune urbano-rurale polacco del distretto di Białystok, nel voivodato della Podlachia. Ricopre una superficie di 207,34 km² e nel 2004 contava 6.530 abitanti.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TykocinTykocin - Wikipedia

    Tykocin [tɨˈkɔt͡ɕin] is a small town in north-eastern Poland, with 2,010 inhabitants (2012), located on the Narew river, in Białystok County in the Podlaskie Voivodeship. It is one of the oldest towns in the region, with its historic center designated a Historic Monument of Poland .

  3. Tykocin (łac. Tykocien, hebr. ‏Tiktin, Tyktin, Tuktin, Tikoczin, Tykoczyn‎) – miasto w województwie podlaskim, w powiecie białostockim, siedziba gminy miejsko-wiejskiej Tykocin, położone w Kotlinie Biebrzańskiej nad Narwią, na zachód od Białegostoku. W Tykocinie przebywali wielokrotnie królowie oraz książęta

  4. Tykocin, Poland. Tykocin (in Jewish sources, Tiktin; Rus. Tykotsin) is a village in Bialystok province, N.E. Poland. Tykocin was formerly a town on the border between the Kingdom of Poland and the Principality of Lithuania. In 1522 the noble family of Gashtold, who owned Tykocin, invited ten Jewish families from Grodno to settle there.

  5. The mass murders in Tykocin occurred on 25 August 1941, during World War II, where the local Jewish population of Tykocin was killed by German Einsatzkommando. Background The town of Tykocin was conquered by Nazi Germany during the Soviet and German invasion of Poland pursuant to their secret agreement known as the Molotov ...

  6. The Tykocin Royal Castle is a 15th-century castle located on the right bank of the river Narew in Tykocin, Poland. It fell into ruin in the 18th century and its reconstruction began in 2002.

  7. The Tykocin Synagogue is a historic synagogue building in Tykocin, Poland. [1] . The synagogue, in mannerist -early Baroque style, was built in 1642. [2] History. During the Nazi occupation of Poland in 1941, the synagogue was desecrated and then set up as a warehouse. After the end of the war, it remained in use as a warehouse for fertilizers.