Radzim, West Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-west Poland)
Or to Radim Gaudentius, the first Archbishop of Gniezno.
Topics referred to by the same term
This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Radzim may refer to the following places in Poland: Radzim, a former fortress near Starczanowo, Poznań County (west-central Poland) Radzim, Kuyavian-Pomeranian...
Radim Gaudentius (Czech: svatý Radim, Polish: Radzim Gaudenty; c. 970 – c. 1020) was Archbishop of Gniezno and the first Polish archbishop. Radim was an...
or the present participle (in the active voice), e.g.: Cieszym, Myślim, Radzim, Borzym. Such names are repositories of perhaps the largest source of sociological...
executions. A concentration camp for Poles from the region was operated in Radzim, and many were either deported to other concentration camps or massacres...
Poland, subordinate only to the pope. The first appointed archbishop was Radzim Gaudenty. In 1018 a fire started in the temple and it took in seven years...
Kołobrzeg in Pomerania (assigned to bishop Reinbern). St. Adalbert's brother Radzim Gaudenty became the first archbishop of Gniezno. Otto III gave Bolesław...
a temporary camp established in the nearby village of Radzim. Some Poles were executed in Radzim, but more were murdered in Rudzki Most (present-day district...
The smelted iron ore was mined in Dobšiná, Mlynky, Rejdová (Romolová and Radzim - Kupferberg). (Petrík et al., 2005c; Mihok et al., 2009a). Petrík, J.,...