Parzęczew was originally a ducal village, on the stream called Gnida, founded by the Pomian family who came from Greater Poland.
Despite repeated confirmation of privileges by successive monarchs, the peripheral town did not develop into a larger center, probably never exceeding the number of 1,000 inhabitants.
[3] Following the joint German-Soviet invasion of Poland, which started World War II in September 1939, Parzęczew was occupied by Germany, and annexed into the Third Reich.
[4] The Poles were soon enslaved as forced labour and either sent to Germany, German-occupied France or Austria or to German colonists in the county.
To this day, Parzęczew has retained the foundations of the urban spatial layout with a rectangular market square, in the center of which there is a church founded at the beginning of the 19th century by the Stokowski family, and small-town buildings around.