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One of the most famous of these planned destructions was the razing of Warsaw, the capital of Poland. [1] While extensively damaged by the failed Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and Warsaw Uprising , the city later underwent a planned demolition by German forces under order from Adolf Hitler and high officials within the Nazi government.
6,000 Polish people killed or wounded Fiszewo massacre 27 January 1832 Fiszewo Kingdom of Prussia: 12 Poles [3] Galician slaughter: early 1846 Western Galicia: peasants: about 1,000 nobles: Warsaw massacres of 1861 25–27 February and 8 April 1861 Warsaw Russian Empire: Over 200 Polish protesters [4] Białaszewo massacre 31 March 1863 Białaszewo
Pages in category "Polish military personnel killed in World War II" The following 137 pages are in this category, out of 137 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Polish military personnel killed in World War II (138 P) Polish resistance members of World War II (13 C, 169 P) Polish prisoners of war in World War II (3 C, 54 P)
According to research published in 2009 by the Institute of National Remembrance about 1.0 million Polish citizens from all ethnic groups were arrested, conscripted or deported by the Soviet occupiers from 1939 to 1941; including about 200,000 Polish military personnel held as prisoners of war; 100,000 Polish citizens were arrested and ...
Polish civilians killed in World War II (2 C, 245 P) Polish military personnel killed in World War II (137 P)-World War II massacres of Poles (6 C, 4 P) H.
The murders took place in the aftermath of World War II. In January and February 1946, units of the PAS Special Forces burned down the villages of Zaleszany, Wólka Wygonowska, Zanie, Szpaki, and Końcowizna. [2] They also executed 30 coachmen on 30 January 1945 near Puchały Stare, and a similar number of armed resistors in Zanie on 2 February ...
A memorial for the Polish Boy Scouts who died defending Katowice in September 1939. A number of fallen scouts were victims of the executions of 4 September 1939. Monument to the Defenders of Katowice, described on the inscription as "Silesian insurgents, Boy and Girl scouts, murdered in 1939 by the Hitlerite invaders, in forests, streets and ...