When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Recovered Territories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovered_Territories

    The "Recovered Territories" after the transfer still contained a substantial German population. The Polish administration set up a "Ministry for the Recovered Territories", headed by the then deputy prime minister Władysław Gomułka. [69] A "Bureau for Repatriation" was to supervise and organize the expulsions and resettlements.

  3. Polish population transfers in 1944–1946 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_population_transfers...

    The disputed territories were split in Riga between the Second Polish Republic and the Soviet Union representing Ukrainian SSR (part of the Soviet Union after 1923). In the following few years in Kresy , the lands assigned to sovereign Poland, some 8,265 Polish farmers were resettled with help from the government. [ 25 ]

  4. Territorial changes of Poland immediately after World War II

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_changes_of...

    Large territories of Polish Second Republic were ceded to the Soviet Union by the Moscow-backed Polish government, and today form part of Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine. Poland was instead given the Free State of Danzig and the German areas east of the rivers Oder and Neisse (see Recovered Territories), pending a final peace conference with ...

  5. Former eastern territories of Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Former_eastern_territories...

    The Polish government preferred to use the phrase Recovered Territories, asserting a sort of continuity because parts of these territories had centuries previously been ruled by ethnic Poles. Until 1973, the Federal Republic took a strict line in claiming an exclusive mandate for all of Germany.

  6. Treaty of Warsaw (1970) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Warsaw_(1970)

    After 1945, the former eastern territories of Germany were called Recovered Territories, while the term Kresy Zachodnie fell into disuse, though it was sometimes invoked to denote Polish claims to some East German territories such as Wolgast Pomerania, Milsko, Miśnia or Lausitz, raised typically only until early 1970s as counterclaims to ...

  7. Flight and expulsion of Germans from Poland during and after ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_and_expulsion_of...

    According to the Polish census of 1946, there were still 2,036,400 Germans in the "Recovered Territories", 251,900 in the pre-war Polish territories (primarily eastern Upper Silesia, Pomerelia and Greater Poland) and the former Free City of Danzig, and 417,000 in the process of "verification" as "new" Poles. [119]

  8. AOL Mail

    mail.aol.com/?rp=webmail-std/en-us/basic

    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

  9. Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_and_expulsion_of...

    [64] [54] Many of the 2.1 million Poles expelled from the Soviet-annexed Kresy, so-called 'repatriants', were resettled to former German territories, then dubbed 'Recovered Territories'. [62] Czech Edvard Beneš , in his decree of 19 May 1945, termed ethnic Hungarians and Germans "unreliable for the state", clearing a way for confiscations and ...