Because of my recent “peasant-mania” („Chłopomania” in Polish) obsession, I discovered something called Urzecze some time ago. I came across it while digging into the genealogy of my ancestors. On both sides of my family - my mother’s and my father’s - it turned out that our ancestors were Urzeczanie, and the region where my family has lived “forever” is actually a historical microregion called Urzecze.

Urzecze is a forgotten Warsaw/sub-Warsaw microregion stretching from the area of Mokotów all the way to Góra Kalwaria. Its culture was revived by Dr. Maurycy Stanaszek (Polish anthropologist, historian, and researcher).

When I learned about this region, I contacted Dr. Stanaszek and shared my family tree with him, which confirmed my earlier suspicions. I also gave him the oldest family photographs I managed to find at home.

Suddenly, I realized that some old family house was actually a typical example of Urzecze architecture, or that my grandfather making a living in his youth by weaving wicker baskets and fishing in the Vistula River was also a very typical Urzecze occupation. Some expressions I remembered older people using in my childhood turned out to be part of the Urzecze dialect.

These people were deeply connected to the Vistula River - and back then, the Vistula was basically a highway. They made their living through fishing, river transport, and draining wetlands along the riverbanks, something they had done for centuries. And most of them were actually… immigrants.

They arrived here by sailing down the Vistula at the end of the 17th century from areas that are now Latvia, Estonia, Finland, northern Germany, Western Pomerania, Pomerania, and the Netherlands. They knew how to drain marshlands, so the Polish nobility hired them on contracts. They lived under Olęder law and were free people.

One beautiful thing about Urzecze was how open it was - you only had to settle there to become one of them ❤️

And somehow, all of this was forgotten. Why? It feels as if the generation born after World War II completely cut itself off from this culture.

I honestly feel like I’ve fallen down a rabbit hole 😂 but at the same time, it’s such an amazing adventure. Last weekend, I went to the Urzecze Festival to learn more about the culture. It was a pretty surreal experience, because some of the traditions presented there reminded me of my childhood at my grandparents’ house (they also lived in Urzecze, on the same street as my parents, just a few houses away).

I’m definitely going to keep digging into this history. I still have several Urzecze festivals ahead of me, as well as other events connected more broadly with traditional peasant culture. I’ll definitely come back with more fun facts 😂

I also already have a few ideas for projects connected to all of this. I’m completely obsessed at this point - and I need to make use of it 😂

I’m attaching a photo showing women wearing traditional Urzecze folk costumes.

Like this post please if you found it interesting - I’ll know there’s someone here who wants to read more of this stuff :P

#Urzecze #PolishHistory #Genealogy #FolkCulture #Vistula #Wisla #WarsawHistory #Mazowsze #Poland #HistoriaPolski #KulturaLudowa #Historia #Chlopomania #Roots #FamilyHistory #TravelThroughHistory #Heritage #Ethnography #DiscoverPoland #TraditionalCulture #ForgottenHistory #SlavicCulture #Photography #PolishTraditions #Microhistory #polishculture #peasant #slavic

One major concern about this work is that the title might make some individuals think that it is a “true crime” book, or a “whodunnit. #History #ColonialHistory #Homicide #Microhistory #NewZealand #NorthIsland #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/8-554-en/
The Crewe Murders: Inside New Zealand’s Most Infamous Cold Case

A conundrum of history books is that some great research is written in an uninteresting fashion, and some beautifully written tomes are filled with errors in their research or lack citations entirely...

World History Encyclopedia

The Violent Truth About Israel's Expulsion of Palestinians in 1948 Is Nothing New

[...] The headline misses the mark. Palestinians told the "true story" of '48 long before these documents surfaced. The essence of that story has always been clear: the Hebrew army expelled them intentionally, and one of the means it employed was acts of murder and massacre.

[...] The subheadline does not fully align with the article itself: Raz mentions Palestinian prose literature and studies – by Saleh Abd al-Jawad and Adel Manna – based on oral testimonies. Those studies and literary works, even if published after the Nakba, drew on firsthand knowledge of what had occurred. That knowledge came from hundreds of thousands of people who experienced the events as they unfolded.

[...] Documents – especially those produced by the exploiting and profiting party, by the expeller and the massacre – add crucial detail. They allow for precision: the sequence of events, dates, types of weapons and ammunition, the names of those who gave orders, and the motives and objectives as defined by their authors. But to present such documents as if they alone reveal the truth – or as if truth exists only once they surface – is to grant the perpetrator the exclusive first and last word in determining what the true story is.

https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2026-03-03/ty-article/.premium/the-violent-truth-about-israels-expulsion-of-palestinians-in-48-is-nothing-new/0000019c-adb6-db6a-a7bc-efffd6bb0000 or https://archive.ph/XdgUs#selection-969.0-969.404

#Nakba #Palestine #Histodon #Zionism #Historiography #OralHistory #Microhistory

My grandma died a week ago :( been visiting people, organising ceremonies, supporting my familly, etc. for the last week
Today we buried her. And then i went and visited our local museum, she used to live in this building before it became a museum and it is exceptionaly well preserved.
The "art nouveau" parts are worth a visit alone 😄
#neutralmoresnet #prussia #belgium #MicroHistory #history

ENG Meet Rosaura, a matriarch who every Saturday brings her whole family to help sell sell her homemade homemade and organic products at Feria del Trueque. Her small agroecological mountain farm in La Legua is hours away from San Jose, so they drive they day before before and sleep on site. Despite Costa Ricas reputation as ecological destination, organic farming has seen no incentives from recent governments. The country has invested heavily in mechanized and extensive monocultive agriculture with one of the highest per capita use of pesticides, many forbidden in Europe.

ESP Conoce a Rosaura, matriarca que todos los sábados trae atoda su familia a vender productos caseros y orgánicos en la Feria del Trueque. Su finca agroecologica esta a horas de San José, por lo que viajan el dia antes y duermen en el lugar. A pesar de la reputación de Costa Rica como destino ecológico, la agricultura orgánica cuenta con cero incentivo por parte de los gobiernos recientes. El país ha invertido mucho en monocultivos mecanizado, con uno de los mayores usos per cápita de plaguicidas, muchos prohibidos en Europa.

#organic #healthylifestyle #CostaRica #sustainability #MicroHistory #fuji #reportage #organicfarming #bw_lover
#monochrome #blancoynegro #fujifilm #gfx100rf #JorgeAlbanPhotos #gfx #Documentary #Reportaje #fotografie
#photography #MonocromeMonday

'Relics of War', authored by Jennifer Raab, is a fascinating and, at the same time, poignant book, studying the American Civil War through the lens of one photograph. #History #AmericanCivilWar #Andersonville #ArtHistory #ClaraBarton #Microhistory #Photography #HistoryFact https://whe.to/ci/8-535-en/
Relics of War: The History of a Photograph

Centered on the period of the American Civil War, Relics of War: The History of a Photograph is unique in that, rather than focusing merely on the political facets of the War, it examines the impact...

World History Encyclopedia
This morning’s #AOM2025 PDW on #microhistory wasn’t just about method—it opened space for deeper ontological questions. I’m exploring how Giddens’ structuration theory might inform this: treating microhistory as the site where modalities of structure—interpretive schemes, norms, resources—become visible. Not a counterpoint to macrohistory, but the medium through which structure unfolds.

🗺️ Historical context matters! In 17th Century Tottenville History Comes Alive, I explore how this community connects to broader historical movements.

This perspective transforms dates and facts into human experiences that readers can connect with emotionally.

Available here: https://www.amazon.com/Century-Tottenville-History-Comes-Alive/dp/B08WK2LD44

#Microhistory #HistoricalContext #LocalHistory #NewYorkHistory #TottenvilleHistory #CommunityStories #HistoricalNarrative

17th Century Tottenville History Comes Alive: Meet the People. Experience the Events.: Mangino, Angie: 9798602236576: Amazon.com: Books

17th Century Tottenville History Comes Alive: Meet the People. Experience the Events. [Mangino, Angie] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. 17th Century Tottenville History Comes Alive: Meet the People. Experience the Events.

I am in the mood for a good, detailed microhistory on some random topic. In the past I have read books on the history of salt, the color blue, Dutch tulips, where do clothing donations actually go, soccer and it's historical relationship to global politics, history of the alphabet, etc.

So, watcha got for me?

I need a new book.

#bookstodon #reading #microhistory

New paper on the telegraph line is out! It’s a #microhistory of Strangways Springs//Pangki Warruna, exploring its evolution from a #pastoral property to a #telegraph station to a #railway stop, and how these transitions shaped innovation in #Australia 🤩📝

We also highlight the importance of #water in creating and sustaining these innovations (as is the case for technologies of today like #AI 😉).

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10761-025-00788-4

#openaccess #cybernetics #archaeology #techhistory #systemsthinking

Wool, Wires and Water: Technological Transitions at Strangways Springs - International Journal of Historical Archaeology

The Strangways Springs artesian mound spring complex in South Australia reveals a layered history in which resources, technology, labor, and culture are significant and changing variables. The site exists in Arabana country, and for thousands of years provided a location for human shelter, artesian waters, and life sustaining resources. The arrival of sheep stations in the “Far North” of South Australia represented a significant rupture and the creation of a new kind of economy based on wool. The establishment of an overland telegraph repeater station brought the latest technological developments to this remote frontier, which had the information of the world available instantly. Other developments such as the railway and wool scouring further secured the importance of locations like Strangways Springs in the continent's colonial infrastructure. This microhistory uses archaeology, archival research, and photography to explore these technological transitions and their impacts at Strangways Springs in the nineteenth century, providing important insights into the sociotechnical nexus that characterized emerging colonial worlds and new forms of modernity in settler Australia.

SpringerLink