Karpacz 'karpacz (German: Krummhübel) is a spa town and ski resort in Jelenia Góra County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, south-western Poland, and one of the most important centres for mountain hiking and skiing, including ski jumping. Its population is about 4,500. Karpacz is situated in the Karkonosze Mountains – a resort with increasing importance for tourism as an alternative to the Alps.
Karpacz is located at above sea level. South of Karpacz on the border to the Czech Republic there is Mount Sněžka-Śnieżka (). Since 2020, the town has been hosting the annual international Economic Forum.
The first settlements in the area of Karpacz are noted by the official website of the city as being of probable Celtic origin and date to the 4th or 3rd century BC when they inhabited the region as part of gold-digging taking place in the area. The area was part of medieval Poland, after the establishment of the state in the 10th century. In the early 12th century the area was generally uninhabited, as mentioned in the oldest Polish chronicle Gesta principum Polonorum. The first mention of permanent location within the current boundaries of the town is dated to the beginning of 15th century and connected to the destruction of a village called Broniów, whose inhabitants moved to settle the area currently located at the altitude of the town's railway station.
The settlement was mentioned around the year 1599 because of lead and iron mining in the region. It was then part of the Habsburg-ruled Bohemian Crown. During the Thirty Years' War, many Czech Protestants settled at the site of today's town.
In 1742 it was annexed by Prussia and, subsequently, it was part of Germany between 1871 and 1945. Since the construction of the settlement's first railway connection in 1895, its history was connected with the development of metallurgy industries and with the progress of tourism. After the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, in 1945 it became again part of Poland. In accordance with the Potsdam Agreement, the German population was expelled from the village between 1945 and 1947.
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upright=1.3|vignette|Paysage des monts des Géants. Les monts des Géants (en Riesengebirge), appelés massif de Karkonosze en polonais et Krkonoše en tchèque, sont le plus haut massif des Sudètes, chaîne de montagnes constituant la frontière polono-tchèque. La Sniejka, la plus haute montagne de la Tchéquie avec ses d'altitude, située à la frontière polonaise, est le point culminant du massif. La désignation « monts des Géants » a été largement diffusée au cours du développement touristique au ; néanmoins, le nom allemand Riesenberg est utilisé pour la Sniejka depuis le début des temps modernes.
thumb|Sniejka. thumb|"Enfer" (Szczeliniec Wielki) dans les monts Tabulaires. thumb|Refuge Samotnia dans les monts des Géants. thumb|Riese. thumb|Château Fürstenstein. Les Sudètes (en Sudeten ; en tchèque et en Sudety ; nom complet en Krkonošsko-jesenická subprovincie) sont une chaîne de montagnes d'Europe centrale, qui fait partie du massif de Bohême. Les Sudètes sont à cheval sur l'Allemagne à l'ouest, la Pologne au nord et la Tchéquie au sud, et forment la frontière entre ces deux derniers pays.