Brzeg
About Brzeg
Brzeg is a town in southwestern Poland with 36,110 occupants and the capital of Brzeg County. It is arranged in Silesia in the Opole Voivodeship on the left bank of the Oder. The town of Brzeg was first referenced as an exchanging and angling settlement in the year 1234. In 1248, Silesian Duke Henry III the White allowed the settlement German town rights and by the late 13th century the city ended up braced. Once in a while alluded to as the greenery enclosure town the town's size significantly extended after the development of dwelling houses which were situated on the city edges.
Towards the finish of World War II, on 6 February 1945, the Soviet armed force caught Brzeg, which brought about moderate annihilation of the town's structures and framework. As per the Yalta and Potsdam understandings, the territory was doled out to Poland. In this way, the town's local German populace was extradited and supplanted with Polish pilgrims from the Eastern Borderlands and Central Poland, accordingly totally trading the town's populace. Since 1950 the recreated town has been a piece of the Opole Voivodeship.