Łowicz

Łowicz
Cathedral in Łowicz
Łowicz
Coordinates: 52°6′N 19°56′E / 52.100°N 19.933°E / 52.100; 19.933
Country Poland
VoivodeshipŁódź
CountyŁowicz
GminaŁowicz (urban gmina)
Establishedbefore 1136
Town rightsbefore 1298
Government
  MayorMariusz Siewiera (Ind.)
Area
  Total
23.41 km2 (9.04 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2021)
  Total
27,436
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
99-400 to 99-402
Area code+48 46
Vehicle registrationELC
Websitewww.lowicz.eu

Łowicz [ˈwɔvʲit͡ʂ] is a town in central Poland with 27,436 inhabitants (2021). It is situated in the Łódź Voivodeship. Together with a nearby station of Bednary, Łowicz is a major rail junction of central Poland, where the line from Warsaw splits into two directions—towards Poznań, and Łódź. Also, the station Łowicz Main is connected through a secondary-importance line with Skierniewice.

Łowicz was a residence of Polish primates in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. They served as regents when the town became a temporary "capital" of Poland during the interregnum. As a result, Łowicz has its own bishop and a Cathedral Basilica in spite of its considerably small size. The Cathedral Basilica is designated a Historic Monument of Poland, and the ruins of a former bishop's castle can be found on the outskirts of town. Also, the town was at the centre of the largest battle of the German invasion of Poland, the Battle of the Bzura River, in the opening campaign of World War II.

Łowicz has an important ethnographic museum (Muzeum w Łowiczu) exhibiting Polish art and historical artifacts from the region. Also, Łowicz features a popular skansen with traditional wooden houses. It is a vast open-air display of historical structures depicting traditional Polish village-life; a collection of artifacts spread over a 17-hectare (42 acre) site, just outside the town.

Łowicz is a prominent site of food production, i.e. fruit and vegetable preserves and dairy products, popular in Poland and abroad.

Near the town is the Maurzyce Bridge, the first welded road-bridge in the world, built in 1928 across the river Słudwia. It was designed in 1927 by Stefan Bryła from the Lwów University of Technology.