The name Odolany comes from a Polish male first name, Odolan. The form Odolany indicates that it was a family name and means that the area belonged to the descendants of Odolan.[2]
A neighbourhood of Odolany in the city of Szczecin was named after the neighbourhood in Warsaw. It was named as such after 1946, when, in the aftermath of World War II, it was incorporated from Germany into Poland.[3][4]
The central and southern portion of Odolany is covered by railway infrastructure, including the railway tracks, as well as technical, administrative and employee housing buildings of Polish State Railways.[9] Also in Odolany is the Warszawa Szczęśliwicemotive power depot.[10]
The Yellow Tavern (Polish: Żółta Karczma) was located in Odolany between what is now Ordona Street and Prądzyńskiego Street. It was a popular meeting place for nobility to engage in political discussions, debates, and vote buying, during the royal elections in Wola. During the elections, which were held between 1572 and 1791, the members of nobility would vote to choose the leader of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The building was destroyed during the Second World War.[13][14]
In 1890, Fort Ve-Shcha "Odolany" was built in the village as part of the inner circle of the series of fortifications of the Warsaw Fortress, built around Warsaw by the Russian Empire. Most of the fort has been destroyed, with its concrete bunker being the only remaining part of the building.[17][18]
The railway viaduct near Armatnia Street, build in 1901, which is the only remaining element of the Warsaw–Kalisz Railway line in Odolany. Photography made in 2019.
Between 1901 and 1903 in Odolany were built Russian gauge (1520 mm) railway tracks of the Warsaw–Kalisz Railway, which connected Warszawa Kaliska railway station in Warsaw with Kalisz railway station in Kalisz. The section of railway tracks in Odolany was located between the Warszawa Kaliska and Błonie railway stations.[11][19] The section included the railway viaduct, located near current Armatnia Street, which, built in 1902, was probably the first railway object in the Russian Empire to use reinforced concrete in its construction. In 1914, the railroad was rebuilt into standard-gauge (1,435 mm) railway tracks, though it consisted mostly of the provisional structures. After 1918, the railroad was rebuilt as permanent structure. The railway viaduct was not rebuilt with the standard-gauge and was disconected from the railway network. Today, it is the only remaining element of the original Warsaw–Kalisz Railway line in Odolany.[20]
On 1 April 1916, most of Odolany was incorporated into the city of Warsaw.[21] Its remaining western portion eventually became a gromada (village assembly) in the gmina (municipality) of Blizne. It was incorporated into Warsaw on 5 May 1951.[22]
The Wola Gallows near Mszczonowska Street, and a Tchorek plaque commemorating the victims hanged there by Nazi Germany occupant forces, on 16 October 1942. Photography made in 2018.
On 1 September 1939 Nazi Germanyinvaded Poland, beginning the Second World War.[24] The city of Warsaw capitulated to the invading forces on 28 September 1939, becoming part of the occupied territories of the General Government.[25] In the night of 7 to 8 October 1942, in the Operation Wieniec, sapper squadrons of the Home Army targeted the rail infrastructure near Warsaw, detonating bombs which destroyed railway tracks and derailed several trains. In retaliation, on 16 October 1942, the occupation forces executed 50 prisoners of the Pawiak prison by hanging. Among them, 9 prisoners were hanged near the railway tracks near Warszawa Szczęśliwice and several others at the Wola Gallows near Mszczonowska Street.[26]
Between 5 and 12 August 1944, in the Wola massacre, the occupant forces systematically killed between 40,000 and 50,000 Polish people who lived in the district of Wola, including the neighborhood of Odolany.[27][28]
↑"Warszawa Wola". atlaskolejowy.net (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2017-03-13. Retrieved 2023-05-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
↑Marian Chlewski: 130 lat Kolei Warszawsko-Wiedeńskiej. In: Młody Technik. issue 11–12, p. 83–87, 1975. Wydawnictwo Nasza Księgarnia. (in Polish).
↑Michał Jerczyński, Stanisław Koziarski, Andrzej Paszke: 150 lat Drogi Żelaznej Warszawsko-Wiedeńskiej. Warsaw: Centralna Dyrekcja Okręgowa Kolei Państwowych, 1995. ISBN 8390408805. (in Polish)
↑Stanisław Łagowski: Cytadela Warszawska. Pruszków: Oficyna Wydawnicza Ajaks, 2010, p. 99–100. ISBN 978-83-62046-23-2. (in Polish).
↑Lech Królikowski, Twierdza Warszawa. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Bellona, 2002. ISBN 8311093563. (in Polish).
↑W. Leszkowicz: Kolej Kaliska. Budowa. Eksploatacja. Znaczenie dla przemysłowego rozwoju. In: R. Kołodziejczyl: Studia z dziejów kolei żelaznych w Królestwie Polskim (1840-1914). Warsaw, 1970.
↑Maria Nietyksza, Witold Pruss: Zmiany w układzie przestrzennym Warszawy. In: Irena Pietrza-Pawłowska (editor): Wielkomiejski rozwój Warszawy do 1918 r.. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Książka i Wiedza, p. 43. 1973. (in Polish)
↑Elektryfikacja Warszawskiego Węzła Kolejowego. In: Stanisław Plewako: Elektryfikacja PKP na przełomie wieków XX i XXI: w siedemdziesiątą rocznicę elektryfikacji PKP. Warsaw: Z. P. Poligrafia, 2006, p. 76–79. ISBN 978-83-922944-6-7. (in Polish)
↑Czesław Grzelak, Henryk Stańczyk: Kampania polska 1939 roku. Początek II wojny światowej. Warsaw: Oficyna Wydawnicza Rytm, 2005, p. 5, 385. ISBN 83-7399-169-7. (in Polish)
↑Władysław Bartoszewski: 1859 dni Warszawy. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Znak, 2008, p. 67. ISBN 978-83-240-1057-8. (in Polish)
↑Władysław Bartoszewski: Warszawski pierścień śmierci 1939–1944. Warsaw: Interpress, 1970, p. 201–211. (in Polish)
↑Piotr Gursztyn: Rzeź Woli. Zbrodnia nierozliczona. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo DEMART SA, 2014. ISBN 978-83-7427-869-0. (in Polish)