Miasteczko


A miasteczko was a historical type of urban settlement similar to a market town in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. After the partitions of Poland at the end of the 18th-century, these settlements became widespread in the Austrian, German and Russian Empires. The vast majority of miasteczkos had significant or even predominant Jewish populations; these are known in English under the Yiddish term shtetl. Miasteczkos had a special administrative status other than that of town or city.
The meaning "small town" is somewhat misleading, since some 19th-century shtetls, such as Berdichev or Boguslav counted over 15,000 people. Therefore, after Russian authorities annexed parts of Poland, they had difficulties in formally defining what a miasteczko is.
Typically miasteczkos grew out of or still remained private towns belonging to Polish landlords, who sought to obtain royal privileges to establish markets and fairs, and to do business in liquor. The town owners favored the Jews in order for them to bring in trade, including trade in liquor.
After the incorporation of Polish lands into the Russian Empire, the authorities started converting private towns into state-owned towns. This process intensified after the Polish November Uprising. However the term mestechko continued to be applied to both private and state-seized towns.
In modern times in Poland miasteczko does not have a special administrative status, and the term is informally used for small towns, as well as for settlements which lost town privileges.
In modern Russia the borrowed term does not have universal official meaning, however some administrative divisions officially define the category of mestechko of rural settlements.