Turkish district - poviat in Poland, in Greater Poland Voivodeship, created in 1999 as part of an administrative reform. His seat is Turkish.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a5/POL_powiat_turecki_COA.svg/156px-POL_powiat_turecki_COA.svg.png)
An administrative division
The poviat consists of:
1 urban commune: Turek 2 urban-rural communes: Dobra, Tuliszków 6 rural communes: Brudzew, Kawęczyn, Malanów, Wykona, Turek, Władysławów 3 towns: Turek, Dobra, Tuliszków
They are divided into 297 village councils. The local community lives in 488 rural and 5 urban towns [2]. Population in each commune (data from September 30, 2008) [3]:
Turek town: 29,621 (1) gm. Brudzew: 6,168 (7) gm. Dobra: 6.471 (6) gm. Kawęczyn: 5,372 (8) gm. Malanów: 6,518 (5) gm. Wykona: 4.273 (9) gm. Tuliszków: 10.557 (2) commune Turek: 8.075 (3) gm. Władysławów: 8,032 (4) in total: 85,087
Worth seeing
in Turku
Main article: Turkish
except Turkish
According to the data of the National Center for Research and Documentation of Monuments, there are 107 monuments and complexes in the Turkish poviat, including 51 in the city of Turku itself. Moreover, the commune of Władysławów (13) has the greatest number of inscribed monuments and their complexes, and the smallest group in the commune of Wykona (only 3). Sacred art objects - churches, cemeteries - and court complexes prevail. It is worth noting, however, that in Turek alone as many as 43 items constitute the so-called the houses of weavers from the 19th century.