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  2. Silesian Voivodeship (1920–1939) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesian_Voivodeship_(1920...

    After the German invasion of Poland, the voivodeship was dissolved on 8 October 1939, and its territory was incorporated into the German Province of Upper Silesia. The territory returned to Polish possession at the end of the war, and the 1920 act giving autonomous powers to the Silesian Voivodeship was formally repealed by a law of 6 May 1945. [4]

  3. Lower Silesian Voivodeship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Silesian_Voivodeship

    Lower Silesian Voivodeship is divided into 30 counties , four of which are city counties. These are further divided into 169 gminy. Cistercian Lubiąż Abbey. Lower Silesia is divided into three additional delegation districts governed by the provincial government, with Wrocław serving as the capital of the administrative region: [24]

  4. Lower Silesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Silesia

    Lower Silesia is located mostly in the basin of the middle Oder River with its historic capital in Wrocław.. The southern border of Lower Silesia is mapped by the mountain ridge of the Western and Central Sudetes, which since the High Middle Ages formed the border between Polish Silesia and the historic Bohemian region of the present-day Czech Republic.

  5. Lower Silesian Agglomeration Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Silesian...

    Wrocław is a city of over half a million people in the southwest of Poland, the capital of the Lower Silesian Voivodeship. A city with a history spanning over a thousand years, it was damaged during World War II but has a relatively compact historic center and a number of peripheral housing estates built after the war.

  6. Province of Lower Silesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_Lower_Silesia

    The province was not congruent with the historical region of Lower Silesia, which now lies mainly in Poland. It additionally comprised the Upper Lusatian districts of Görlitz , Rothenburg and Hoyerswerda in the west, that until 1815 had belonged to the Kingdom of Saxony , as well as the former County of Kladsko in the southeast.

  7. History of Wrocław - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Wrocław

    In 1 Election result in Lower Silesia and Breslau showed a solid Socialist majority in 1924 and 1928. In 1925 the Silesian NSDAP was founded, the party however garnered only 1 per cent of the votes in 1928, well below the national average of 2,8 per cent. Arrest of 200 Nationalsocialists in Jäschkowitz, 15 km to the south of Breslau, 1930

  8. Silesian Uprisings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesian_Uprisings

    The Polish Government had decided to give Silesia considerable autonomy with the Silesian Parliament as a constituency and the Silesian Voivodeship Council as the executive body. Poland obtained almost exactly half of the 1,950,000 inhabitants, viz. , 965,000, but not quite a third of the territory, i.e., only 3,214 of 10,951 square kilometres ...

  9. Kłodzko Fortress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kłodzko_Fortress

    Kłodzko Fortress (Polish: Twierdza Kłodzko, German: Festung Glatz) is a unique fortification complex of the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in southwestern Poland.The fortress once was one of the biggest strongholds in Prussian Silesia, however, in the whole German Empire, it was regarded as a minor one. [1]