I decided to look up the people and events immortalised in a few monuments I encountered on my travels during summer break. Sadly I could not determine the origin of a statue in Brugge as the inscription had become unreadable and the stone man standing on a socket in Zierikzee as I was too far away to read the table below it. And I omitted a statue of pope John Paul II in Stargard Szczecinski due to it being fairly obvious who was depicted there, and who he was.

Szczecin

Adam Mickiewicz

Adam Mickiewicz, a Polish-Lithuanian born in the territory by then occupied by Imperial Russia, was a famous poet of national romanticism. He grew up in Russia but with strong emotional ties to his true homeland, which also eventually led him to be arrested after being suspected of political opposition. He was then moved to St. Petersburg for 5 years, from where he eventually left the empire and headed to Rome and afterwards Paris, swearing not to return to his homeland till it be freed. During this time he wrote a lot of romantic poems about Lithuania, however in Paris his life soon became dominated by poverty and illness. He was a personal friend of Frederic Chopin, who visited him to play for him and also composes scores for a few of his written works. Eventually he died of cholera in Constantinople, to where he went to partake in the Crimean War, as a volunteer if a Polish legion.


1970 protests

This monument serves to remind of the victims of protests in 1970 in northern Poland, ignited by a sudden rise in food prices. In Gdansk, Gdynia, Elglag and Szczecin, the army fired on workers returning to work after demonstrations on December 17. The massacre's hundreds of causalities in turn provoked further strikes in other cities, all of which were violently and bloodily repressed. Eventually the government lowered the prices, raised the wages, and apologised to the workers.


Brugge

Jan Breydel and Pieter de Coninck

Jan Breydel and Pieter de Coninck 2


Dominating Brugge's marketplace Jan Breydel and Pieter de Coninck, a butcher and a weaver who were the leaders of the Bruges Martin in 1302, a nightly assault of Brugge's people on the French garrison stationed in the city at the time, as King Philip IV of France was trying to subdue the self-confident Flanders that was de jure a subject to his crown. In response to the massacre, the French rallied a large attack to punish the region and control it once and for all. This was however countered by two groups consisting of Flemish militias from Brugge, Gent, and a few other cities. Pieter de Coninck was one of their commanders, and in the Battle of the Golden Spurs they defeated the French decisively. Due to these events in which the Flemish people themselves rose up against their oppressors especially in the period of national romanticism their leaders were praised as heroes of Flanders ensuring the region's continues existence and identity as well as the preservation of the Dutch language there. It also left an impression on Europe in terms of military, as their militia consisted solely of well-armed infantry which was able to critically defeat the mounted French knights.
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