Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Poznań was the seat the German Central Bureau for Resettlement (UWZ, Umwandererzentralstelle), a special German institution established in November 1939 to coordinate the expulsion of Poles from occupied Polish territories. [25] Poznań's Jewish population, which had numbered 2,000 in 1939, [26] was largely murdered in the Holocaust.
Reichsmarine rally in German-occupied Poznań in April 1941. 1941 The German labor office in Poznań demanded that children as young as 12 register for work, but it is known that even ten-year-old children were forced to work. [48] Spring: Komitet Niesienia Pomocy joined the Union of Armed Struggle. [33]
The Republic of Krakow was established. 1820: January: Kraków Town Hall was demolished excluding the tower. 1824: The Lodka settlement was founded. 1825: December 1: Death of Alexander I of Russia. 1829: 24 May: Coronation of Nicholas I of Russia. 1830: November 29: November Uprising begins. 1831: Russian forces occupied Kraków. 1832 ...
His reign changed Kraków dramatically, as he moved the government to Warsaw in 1596. A series of wars ensued between Sweden and Poland. [21] The city was besieged and captured during the Swedish invasion in 1655. In December 1656, Kraków was occupied by the Transylvanian Prince George II Rákóczi, who was an ally of the Swedish king Charles ...
13–17 July: Kraków hosts the final round of the 2016 FIVB Volleyball World League. 26–31 July: Kraków hosts the World Youth Day 2016. 2017 June: Kraków co-hosts the 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship. August–September: Kraków co-hosts the 2017 Men's European Volleyball Championship. 2021 June: Honorary Consulate of Peru opened. [56]
The boundaries of Greater Poland have varied somewhat throughout history. Since the Late Middle Ages , Wielkopolska proper has been split into the Poznań and Kalisz voivodeships . In the wider sense, it also encompassed Sieradz , Łęczyca , Brześć Kujawski and Inowrocław voivodeships, which were situated further east, and the Santok Land ...
The rebuilt Royal Castle, Poznań in Poznań. The Greater Polish line of the Piasts was continued by the sons of Władysław Odonic, Przemysł I and his minor brother Bolesław the Pious, who first had to reconquer their heritage from the Silesian successors of Henry the Pious. Soon after a conflict arose between the brothers: in 1247 Bolesław ...
Fort VII, officially Konzentrationslager Posen (renamed later), was a Nazi German death camp set up in Poznań in German-occupied Poland during World War II, located in one of the 19th-century forts circling the city.