Kawęczyn-Wygoda is a neighbourhood, and an area of the Municipal Information System, in the city of Warsaw, Poland, located within the district of Rembertów.[2] It was later proposed by some archologies, such as Barbara Jankowska, that the archeological presence of artefacts of cultures of Corded Ware, Comb Ceramic, Trzciniec, and Bell Jar Urn, was proof that the cemetery was older than previously estimated.[2] Between 28 and 30 July 1656, Kawęczyn was partially the location of the Battle of Warsaw, fought by the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Crimean Khanate against the Swedish Empire and Brandenburg-Prussia, during the Second Northern War.In 1909, it was decided to decommission and demolish the fortifications of the Warsaw Fortress, due to the high costs of their maintenance, and as such the Fort Kawęczyn had been deconstructed in the next following years.[9] Between 1940 and 1944, during the Second World War, while under the German occupation, in Kawęczyn, soldiers of Nazi Germany had executed at least several dozen people, which were then buried there in mass graves.
The ruins of the
Granzow Villa
, the historical headquarters of the administration of the Kawęczyńskie Zakłady Cegielniane Kazimierza Granzowa (
Kazimierz Granzow's Kawęczyn Brick Factories
).