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  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • ...e with pictures proposed by Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs [http://www.poland.gov.pl/files/Flaga_polska.gif] and the presidential website.[http://www.pre ...''' ([[Polish language|Polish]]: ''Polska''), officially the ''Republic of Poland'' (Polish: ''Rzeczpospolita Polska''), is a large Slavic nation in [[Centra
    2 KB (341 words) - 11:34, 7 March 2024
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • * Library of Congress. ''A Country Study: Poland'' (1993), highly detailed factual report by U.S. government (it is in the p * ''Poland'' (Eyewitness Travel Guides by DK Publishing) (2007)
    3 KB (394 words) - 23:42, 22 January 2008
  • 364 bytes (54 words) - 01:24, 12 August 2008
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 09:55, 13 November 2007
  • 81 bytes (6 words) - 23:41, 22 January 2008
  • ''See [[Poland]] for an overview of the contemporary nation.'' ...h). By 1773 the political realm was down to only 84,000 square miles, and Poland was too weak and inefficient to prevent its German and Russian neighbors fr
    91 KB (13,963 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 22:23, 23 December 2007
  • * Library of Congress. ''A Country Study: Poland'' (1993), highly detailed factual report by U.S. government (it is in the p * ''Poland'' (Eyewitness Travel Guides by DK Publishing) (2007)
    14 KB (1,927 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • ...onsidered the start of the [[Second World War]], the '''German invasion of Poland''',code named Case White, began on 1 September 1939 after Germany had stag The campaign, which ended on 6 October, split Poland into three zones:
    2 KB (237 words) - 01:27, 1 January 2011
  • * [http://www.info-poland.buffalo.edu/classroom/potop/1655.html The reign of the Vasa dynasty (1587-1 ...://www.zum.de/whkmla/histatlas/eceurope/haxpoland.html historical atlas of Poland]
    718 bytes (103 words) - 00:26, 15 September 2013
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Poland, history]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Poland}}
    547 bytes (73 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • 182 bytes (27 words) - 13:04, 25 December 2010
  • 835 bytes (113 words) - 03:07, 28 December 2010

Page text matches

  • ...include>Occupied area of central Poland following the [[German invasion of Poland]], under [[Hans Frank]]
    132 bytes (17 words) - 22:50, 27 December 2010
  • ...}</noinclude>After the [[German invasion of Poland]], that part of Western Poland that was incorporated into the Reich and "germanized", with persecution and
    207 bytes (28 words) - 13:04, 28 December 2010
  • * Library of Congress. ''A Country Study: Poland'' (1993), highly detailed factual report by U.S. government (it is in the p * ''Poland'' (Eyewitness Travel Guides by DK Publishing) (2007)
    3 KB (394 words) - 23:42, 22 January 2008
  • * [http://www.info-poland.buffalo.edu/classroom/potop/1655.html The reign of the Vasa dynasty (1587-1 ...://www.zum.de/whkmla/histatlas/eceurope/haxpoland.html historical atlas of Poland]
    718 bytes (103 words) - 00:26, 15 September 2013
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[History of Poland]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 21:20, 23 September 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[German invasion of Poland]]
    39 bytes (5 words) - 06:29, 29 December 2010
  • Commander of [[Einsatzgruppe]] IV in Poland
    79 bytes (9 words) - 03:52, 18 November 2010
  • Commander of [[Einsatzgruppe]] V in Poland
    78 bytes (9 words) - 03:53, 18 November 2010
  • Commander of [[Einsatzgruppe]] III in Poland
    80 bytes (9 words) - 03:56, 18 November 2010
  • A native or inhabitant of [[Poland]].
    73 bytes (9 words) - 07:14, 3 February 2010
  • Commander of Einsatzgruppe II in Poland
    75 bytes (9 words) - 03:57, 18 November 2010
  • Commander of [[Einsatzgruppe]] '''z.B.v''' (Special Purpose) in Poland
    107 bytes (13 words) - 04:01, 18 November 2010
  • The historical region at borderland of [[Poland]] and [[Czechia]].
    102 bytes (12 words) - 02:08, 8 October 2010
  • The German attack on [[Poland]], beginning September 1, 1939
    96 bytes (10 words) - 06:55, 21 August 2008
  • ...in western [[Poland]]. With population of 565,000 people, Poznań is one of Poland's biggest cities. It is also an important centre of trade, industry, cultur ...factory. Kompania Piwowarska, one of two largest producers of [[beer]] in Poland is headquartered in Poznań, also owning a brewery in city. IT sector is ex
    1 KB (185 words) - 11:47, 14 January 2008
  • (1894–) [[Poland|Polish]]-born [[United States of America|American]] [[art|artist]].
    122 bytes (13 words) - 11:52, 2 February 2023
  • ====Poland====
    1 KB (152 words) - 14:37, 2 February 2023
  • ...]], the capital of [[Kaliningrad Oblast]], a Russian [[exclave]] between [[Poland]] and [[Lithuania]].
    154 bytes (18 words) - 15:35, 14 March 2009
  • ...e with pictures proposed by Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs [http://www.poland.gov.pl/files/Flaga_polska.gif] and the presidential website.[http://www.pre ...''' ([[Polish language|Polish]]: ''Polska''), officially the ''Republic of Poland'' (Polish: ''Rzeczpospolita Polska''), is a large Slavic nation in [[Centra
    2 KB (341 words) - 11:34, 7 March 2024
  • ...Poland under occupation and German control after the [[German invasion of Poland]], established by a decree of [[Adolf Hitler]] on 12 October 1939. The Ukra Western Poland was treated as part of Germany and designated the [[Warthegau]], and those
    1 KB (200 words) - 13:49, 31 December 2010
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Poland, history]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Poland}}
    547 bytes (73 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • ...mes '''Wartheland'''. As opposed to the [[Generalgouvernement]] in Central Poland, treated a colony, or the eastern part under Soviet control, the Warthegau
    1 KB (160 words) - 16:13, 15 May 2011
  • ...st Nazi death camp, in which more than two million people died, located in Poland; first commanded by [[Rudolf Hoess]].
    128 bytes (21 words) - 08:07, 12 May 2023
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1857-1924) [[Poland|Polish]]-[[Great Britain|British]] [[novel]]ist and [[short story]] writer;
    184 bytes (27 words) - 18:53, 5 August 2009
  • ...represented [[Generalgouvernement]] at [[Wannsee Conference]]; executed by Poland for [[war crime]]s
    200 bytes (24 words) - 02:44, 28 December 2010
  • Nazi lawyer, who directed the occupation of [[Poland]] (i.e., the [[Generalgouvernement]]); executed by the [[International Mili
    191 bytes (22 words) - 00:58, 28 December 2010
  • ...hite Eagle, Poland's highest civilian decoration, for his contributions to Poland's recovery of its independence.
    2 KB (252 words) - 08:24, 28 March 2024
  • ...onsidered the start of the [[Second World War]], the '''German invasion of Poland''',code named Case White, began on 1 September 1939 after Germany had stag The campaign, which ended on 6 October, split Poland into three zones:
    2 KB (237 words) - 01:27, 1 January 2011
  • ...Bohemia and Moravia; formerly part of Czechoslovakia; bordered by Germany, Poland, Slovakia and Austria.
    235 bytes (28 words) - 21:03, 11 August 2008
  • ...opulation c. 3.6 million; capital Vilnius) bordered by Latvia, Belorussia, Poland and the Russian Federation, and with a short coastline on the Baltic Sea.
    216 bytes (29 words) - 21:29, 11 August 2008
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A 13th-century brick castle in Poland, built by the Order of the Teutonic Knights. It was the Order's headquarter
    168 bytes (24 words) - 17:41, 12 March 2013
  • (1875-1953) German [[Field Marshal]]; commanded [[army group]]s in Poland, France and Russia; commander-in-chief West at the time of the [[Battle o
    197 bytes (26 words) - 02:25, 28 December 2010
  • ...gadefuehrer]]; member of the SD; Commanding Officer of Einsatzgruppe VI in Poland and B in Russia
    168 bytes (25 words) - 03:50, 18 November 2010
  • The period of the Second World War between the fall of Poland in October 1939 and the invasion of Norway in April 1940.
    155 bytes (24 words) - 16:15, 25 July 2023
  • ...ish uniform, to give a ''casus belli'' for [[Case White]], the invasion of Poland
    255 bytes (39 words) - 08:38, 10 July 2009
  • ...then killing units, which accompanied Army units advancing into Austria, Poland and Russia; units on [[Russian Front]] carried out mass murder in [[Holocau
    304 bytes (41 words) - 12:02, 18 May 2023
  • {{r|1939 German invasion of Poland}} ...n, commanded a [[field army]] in it, and was Military Governor of occupied Poland.
    1 KB (209 words) - 20:02, 29 November 2010
  • ...nfuehrer]]; [[SIPO]] chief in Krakow 1940; Commander of Einsatzgruppe I in Poland; trainer of Soviet Einsatzgruppe and staff to [[Reinhard Heydrich]]; [[Waff
    269 bytes (35 words) - 17:40, 11 December 2010
  • * Warsaw, Poland
    431 bytes (52 words) - 10:30, 28 March 2023
  • ...; later commanded Vaivara concentration camp and the Grini camp in Norway; Poland tried and executed him in 1947
    306 bytes (38 words) - 00:34, 9 November 2010
  • ...d forces moving into the Sudetenland and Austria, planned and commanded in Poland where he protested SS misconduct, relieved and later on the Western Front,
    335 bytes (48 words) - 11:43, 29 November 2010
  • ...ation adjoining Austria to the west, the Czech Republic to the north-west, Poland to the north, Ukraine to the east and Hungary to the south.
    262 bytes (39 words) - 01:41, 12 August 2008
  • ...lready been involved in armed conflict, such as Japan in China, Germany in Poland, and Italy in Ethiopia.
    283 bytes (43 words) - 21:19, 16 March 2009
  • German air operations in Europe began with [[Case White]], the invasion of Poland. After the end of that campaign and temporary peace with Russia, Hitler tur ==The invasion of Poland==
    2 KB (386 words) - 07:16, 21 August 2008
  • Air operations in Europe, from the invasion of Poland to the Normandy invasions, separate from articles on [[World War II, air wa
    288 bytes (41 words) - 07:58, 21 August 2008
  • .... He commanded the [[Thirteenth German Army]] in the [[German invasion of Poland]], and the [[Eighteenth German Army]] in the [[Battle of France]], being or ==Poland==
    3 KB (406 words) - 13:35, 8 January 2011
  • ...adah''' is a [[Passover]] [[Haggadah]] illustrated by [[Arthur Szyk]] in [[Poland]] in the [[1930s]], cited by the [[Times of London]] as "worthy to be plac ...Goebbels]] and [[Hermann Goering]] on two snakes. However, publishers in Poland and [[Czechoslovakia]] rejected it for fear of antagonizing [[Germany]]. In
    1 KB (215 words) - 08:22, 14 September 2013
  • ...with the [[North Sea]], [[Denmark]] and the [[Baltic Sea]] to the north; [[Poland]] and the [[Czech Republic]] to the east; [[Switzerland]] and [[Austria]] t
    423 bytes (55 words) - 03:28, 10 March 2010
  • ...900-1946) was a Nazi lawyer, who headed the colonial occupation of central Poland, the [[Generalgouvernement]]. [[G.M. Gilbert]], the staff psychologist at ==Poland==
    4 KB (660 words) - 12:53, 7 August 2013
  • ==Poland== ...zi SS and military ranks|Generaloberst]], he commanded [[Army Group North (Poland)]] in the Polish campaign.
    2 KB (402 words) - 01:48, 10 January 2011
  • {{rpl|Poland}}
    585 bytes (70 words) - 13:33, 26 September 2020
  • {{r|1920 Soviet invasion of Poland}}
    375 bytes (56 words) - 02:22, 26 December 2010
  • ...oth in [[Ukraine]] and in emigre communities in the United States, Canada, Poland, and elsewhere.
    550 bytes (75 words) - 15:40, 14 February 2008
  • ...Europe]]. It borders the [[Czech Republic]] and [[Austria]] to the west, [[Poland]] to the north, [[Ukraine]] to the east and [[Hungary]] to the south. Its c
    484 bytes (66 words) - 13:07, 7 October 2010
  • ...by a "secret additional protocol," signed a week before the invasion of Poland.<ref>{{citation
    2 KB (242 words) - 01:11, 29 December 2010
  • ...1938 [[Anschluss]], and then became a Nazi official in the occupations of Poland and the Netherlands. Especially for the occupations, in which he was deeply ...rank]] as head of the [[Generalgouvernement]] occupation administration in Poland.
    4 KB (675 words) - 10:32, 19 January 2011
  • ...are used in [[Germany]], [[Netherlands]], [[Hungary]], [[Switzerland]], [[Poland]], [[Japan]] and [[Australia]].
    947 bytes (126 words) - 21:15, 5 November 2008
  • ...aulus''''', original name '''Karol Wojtyła''' (born 18 May 1920, Wadowice, Poland–died 2 April 2005, Vatican City), was the Pope of the Catholic Church. He ...lieved God was calling him for priesthood. During the German occupation of Poland, he studied secretly. On the 1 November 1946, he was ordained to the priest
    3 KB (451 words) - 07:22, 27 April 2014
  • {{r|German invasion of Poland}}
    573 bytes (73 words) - 13:00, 25 December 2010
  • *[[German invasion of Poland|Poland]], the United Kingdom, and France (September 1939)
    2 KB (212 words) - 14:06, 5 January 2011
  • {{r|Poland Act}}
    400 bytes (59 words) - 13:18, 2 February 2023
  • ...Ambassador to the Republic of Korea (2004-2005), U.S. Ambassador to Poland|Poland (2000-2004), and the U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Macedonia|Republic
    2 KB (253 words) - 08:28, 21 March 2024
  • ...by the [[Jesuit]] order, which reclaimed large parts of Europe, such as [[Poland]]. In general, northern Europe became Protestant, and southern Europe staye
    681 bytes (94 words) - 08:19, 12 February 2009
  • ...torical region in [[Central Europe]]. Nowaday Silesia is divided between [[Poland]] (main part), [[Czechia]] and [[Germany]]. It has two parts - [[Lower Sile ...], [[Bohemia]], [[Lusatia]], [[Brandenburg]], [[Greater Poland]], [[Lesser Poland]] and [[Upper Hungary]] (present-day [[Slovakia]]).
    4 KB (564 words) - 04:23, 7 October 2013
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    670 bytes (85 words) - 18:12, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    529 bytes (71 words) - 18:10, 11 January 2010
  • ...f Denmark and Norway in April 1940. Having failed to prevent the defeat of Poland in September 1939, Britain and France expected to wage a long and exhaustin
    2 KB (339 words) - 16:35, 25 July 2023
  • ...tlestudiesgroup.org.uk/Malbork%20-%20Anthony%20Emery.pdf "Malbork Castle – Poland"], ''The Castle Studies Group Journal'' 21. pp. 138–156.
    657 bytes (83 words) - 17:46, 12 March 2013
  • ...t, [[Saxony-Anhalt]] in the north west and [[Brandenburg]] in the north. [[Poland]] and the [[Czech Republic]] bound Saxony in the east respectively in the s ...ny from south to north. The Neiße is Germany's and thus Saxony's border to Poland. The [[Ore Mountains]] lie on its southern border to the Czech Republic an
    2 KB (321 words) - 18:39, 13 January 2021
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    700 bytes (96 words) - 15:46, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    683 bytes (93 words) - 16:38, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Poland}}
    605 bytes (84 words) - 09:32, 21 November 2013
  • {{r|Poland}}
    796 bytes (107 words) - 18:08, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Poland}}
    716 bytes (100 words) - 20:25, 11 January 2010
  • *[[Karol Szymanowski]] (Poland), four symphonies *[[Krzysztof Penderecki]] (Poland), eight symphonies, 1973-present
    3 KB (296 words) - 19:17, 12 December 2012
  • Born in Poland and having done much of his professional work in the U.S., '''Mark Kac'''
    850 bytes (121 words) - 11:16, 10 February 2023
  • {{r|German invasion of Poland}}
    741 bytes (103 words) - 21:20, 14 March 2011
  • ...Croatia, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia, Finland, India, Iraq, North Korea, Libya, Poland, Romania, Russia, Syria, Vietnam, Yemen, and Yugoslavia.
    730 bytes (106 words) - 17:57, 11 October 2009
  • {{rpl|Poland, history}}
    962 bytes (121 words) - 16:42, 24 March 2024
  • '''1970 7" single''' (Poland: Daszkowska N 037)
    586 bytes (80 words) - 10:24, 10 December 2013
  • {{r|Poland}}
    915 bytes (124 words) - 15:48, 11 January 2010
  • '''1971 7" single''' (Poland: Dzwiekowa X 87) '''1971 7" single''' (Poland: Prasniewski N 677)
    2 KB (331 words) - 23:59, 9 January 2014
  • '''1970 7" single''' (Poland: Prasniewska N-370)
    582 bytes (83 words) - 03:53, 7 December 2013
  • ...alin (a country residence of the Polish Academy of Sciences near Warsaw in Poland)
    948 bytes (136 words) - 05:04, 7 October 2009
  • ...nds]] between them), [[Russia]], [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]] and [[Germany]]. The [[Kiel Canal]] is one of the main routes into the Ba
    986 bytes (138 words) - 09:34, 21 November 2013
  • * Gross, Jan T. ''Revolution from Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia'' (1988).
    3 KB (392 words) - 10:27, 14 March 2009
  • ...tself, had been burnt down. The country had no treasury. The war against [[Poland]] and [[Sweden]] was continuing and many territories had been seized. Socia ...ge for twenty thousand [[ruble]]s. He signed the [[truce of Deulino]] with Poland in 1618; it lasted for fourteen years. By this agreement, Russia lost some
    3 KB (390 words) - 06:55, 9 June 2009
  • ...tates of America]], [[France]], [[Great Britain]], [[India]], [[Japan]], [[Poland]], and [[Czechoslovakia]]. It went into force on July 24, 1929, at which ti ...., the Manchuria Incident? Italian operations in Ethiopia? the invasion of Poland?), it was one of the most quickly ignored international agreements.
    3 KB (389 words) - 05:11, 13 October 2013
  • ...rn Europe that borders [[Russia]] to the east, [[Ukraine]] to the south, [[Poland]] to the west, and [[Lithuania]] and [[Latvia]] to the north. Its capital i ...ough with a very substantial Polish population) that were part of interwar Poland were annexed by the [[USSR]] and attached to the Soviet Belarus. The territ
    3 KB (384 words) - 17:10, 26 May 2016
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    1 KB (145 words) - 15:49, 31 May 2010
  • {{r|Poland}}
    1 KB (171 words) - 07:46, 24 October 2014
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    1,009 bytes (143 words) - 16:51, 22 March 2023
  • * Library of Congress. ''A Country Study: Poland'' (1993), highly detailed factual report by U.S. government (it is in the p * ''Poland'' (Eyewitness Travel Guides by DK Publishing) (2007)
    14 KB (1,927 words) - 21:18, 23 September 2010
  • '''Marie Curie''' (born Maria Skłodowska in Warsaw, Poland on November 7, 1867), was a pioneer in [[radioactivity]] research and the f ...element|element]]s in 1898, [[polonium]] (named after Marie Curie's native Poland) and [[radium]], from a mineral called [[pitchblende]]. Marie and Pierre jo
    3 KB (459 words) - 08:09, 23 October 2021
  • {{r|German invasion of Poland}}
    1 KB (160 words) - 03:38, 10 January 2011
  • ...ares borders with [[Latvia]] to the north, [[Belarus]] to the southeast, [[Poland]], and the [[Russia]]n [[exclave]] of the [[Kaliningrad Oblast]] to the sou
    1 KB (158 words) - 14:01, 26 July 2017
  • ...t form: ''Česko'') is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It borders [[Poland]] to the north, [[Germany]] to the west, [[Austria]] to the south, and [[Sl
    1 KB (195 words) - 03:53, 15 April 2016
  • ...ck. Blitzkrieg was the breakthrough technique in the [[German invasion of Poland]] and the 1940 [[Battle of France]], while gluboky boi had a decisive role
    1 KB (187 words) - 14:15, 14 February 2011
  • ...own the [[Beer Hall Putsch]]. Recalled from retirement for the invasion of Poland, he again asked for, and received, retirement in 1942, after being promoted ...into retirement. He was recalled to command 12th Army for the invasion of Poland (September 1938 to May 1941).
    3 KB (454 words) - 05:26, 29 December 2010
  • ...ce to the Sudeten German Party, and helped fabricate border incidents with Poland. <ref>Maguire, p. 161</ref> ===Poland===
    6 KB (851 words) - 20:51, 4 January 2011
  • ...rzysztof Bojko}} contributing expert, [[Ariel Center for Policy Research]] Poland ...tyna Fruzińska}} contributing expert, [[Ariel Center for Policy Research]] Poland
    12 KB (1,591 words) - 12:41, 16 October 2009
  • *[[Sudetes]] ([[Czech Republic]], [[Germany]], [[Poland]])
    2 KB (165 words) - 14:06, 2 February 2023
  • ||Poland
    1 KB (177 words) - 10:25, 27 September 2013
  • ...22, 1939, he was made Military Governor of the German occupying forces in Poland.
    3 KB (494 words) - 02:51, 29 December 2010
  • *Poland
    1 KB (101 words) - 05:38, 19 September 2013
  • ...shing.com/products/journals/aag/AAG_April03/aag_44237.htm]): [[Warsaw]], [[Poland]]
    2 KB (230 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • {{Image|Malbork Castle, 2010.jpg|right|350px|[[Malbork Castle]], now in [[Poland]], served as the headquarters of the Teutonic Knights from 1309 to 1457.}}
    1 KB (225 words) - 07:23, 28 March 2013
  • {{r|Poland}}
    2 KB (235 words) - 05:37, 23 December 2020
  • ...him would be to defy President [[Paul von Hindenburg]]. After victories in Poland and France, he increasingly thought highly of Hitler's abilities, although ...ed at the Maginot Line rather than intervening under France's guarantee to Poland.<ref>Gilbert, p. 366</ref>
    6 KB (1,000 words) - 09:51, 28 September 2013
  • ...States of America]], [[Israel]], [[Palestine]], [[Jordan]], [[Brazil]], [[Poland]], [[Spain]], [[Germany]], [[Austria]], [[France]], [[Malta]], [[Turkey]],
    1 KB (207 words) - 14:07, 2 February 2023
  • ...] invading the Soviet Union, but the function started with the invasion of Poland, killing political undesirables and possible threats. The largest executio ...he groups were issued in September 1939, three weeks after the invasion of Poland. <ref>{{citation
    9 KB (1,266 words) - 12:05, 18 May 2023
  • '''1972 7" single''' (Poland: Glowala XN 82)
    1 KB (209 words) - 01:23, 20 April 2014
  • ...nd]], 1894 - [[New Canaan, Connecticut]], [[September 13]], 1951) was a [[Poland]]-born [[United States of America|American]] [[artist]], famous for his ant Szyk was born in [[Łódź]], Poland, to [[Jew]]ish parents. At one time, he was expelled from school for his a
    9 KB (1,458 words) - 10:21, 27 March 2023
  • ...nd additional export orders are being pursued in countries such as Israel, Poland, the Philippines, and Iraq. T-50 is also being marketed as a candidate for
    1 KB (220 words) - 01:45, 22 August 2011
  • [[Italy]], [[Poland]], [[Switzerland]], [[Czech Republic]], [[Slovenia]], [[Bosnia and Herzegov
    2 KB (239 words) - 18:02, 17 January 2008
  • ...ssia, which the Russians saw as a serious threat to their own ambitions in Poland and the Baltic.
    2 KB (253 words) - 12:05, 22 July 2023
  • ...tlestudiesgroup.org.uk/Malbork%20-%20Anthony%20Emery.pdf "Malbork Castle – Poland"], ''The Castle Studies Group Journal'' 21. p. 139.</ref> In 1283 the State ...tate of the Teutonic Knights was inaugurated.<ref>Emery, "Malbork Castle – Poland", pp. 141&ndash;142.</ref>
    14 KB (2,164 words) - 11:34, 7 March 2024
  • *[[Poland]]
    2 KB (261 words) - 21:27, 11 June 2008
  • * 2008: Chris Poland (''Misty Mountain Hop: A Millennium Tribute to Led Zeppelin'')
    2 KB (223 words) - 23:12, 22 February 2010
  • ...d supported the declaration of war against Germany after the invasion of [[Poland]]. ...that Britain could rearm against the Nazi menace. Hitler's Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, and following the debacle of the British expedition to
    5 KB (702 words) - 23:33, 12 July 2023
  • * 2 soldiers from [[Poland]] (Army )
    2 KB (276 words) - 11:27, 4 March 2010
  • | title=Poland mourns president's death in crash | url=http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/04/10/poland.president.plane.crash/index.html?hpt=T1
    14 KB (2,015 words) - 17:20, 12 March 2024
  • ...ties activities and outlawed its newspaper. Following Hitler's invasion of Poland, Daladier declared war on Germany two days after [[Neville Chamberlain]] of
    2 KB (309 words) - 12:51, 25 May 2008
  • ...ed at the conference, however space was left for them to sign the Charter. Poland did so on October 15 1945, becoming one of the original 51 states that made
    5 KB (650 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • {{r|Poland, history}}
    2 KB (306 words) - 14:12, 9 February 2024
  • ...of the Second World War and, in September 1939, led Army Group South into Poland. He subsequently led army groups in the [[Battle of France]] and in [[Opera
    2 KB (296 words) - 15:35, 2 January 2011
  • ...as estranged equally by Britain's half-hearted approach and the refusal of Poland to admit Soviet troops to its soil in the event of war. Further, Moscow ask ...and France formed a united front in behalf of Turkey, Greece, Romania, and Poland, pledging their armed support to these states if they were attacked by Germ
    10 KB (1,567 words) - 22:16, 16 January 2011
  • ...enths of thousands of refugees from the eastern parts of Germany lost to [[Poland]].
    2 KB (336 words) - 09:09, 6 June 2009
  • ...rs with [[Norway]], [[Finland]], [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]], [[Belarus]], [[Ukraine]], [[Georgia]], [[Azerbaijan]], [[Kazakhstan]], [
    2 KB (274 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • Vogel was born in the small town Satanów in the Podolia region of Poland (now western Ukraine) to a Jewish orthodox family. He grew up in [[Vilnius| ...1944, he was captured by the Nazis and deported to a concentration camp in Poland, where he died shortly afterwards.
    5 KB (728 words) - 08:24, 26 September 2007
  • The camps, all in Poland, were:
    2 KB (336 words) - 12:03, 18 May 2023
  • ...She was born and educated in the U.S., but did early fieldwork in Vilna, Poland, just before World War II. After war's end, she returned for both rescue an
    2 KB (378 words) - 12:03, 18 May 2023
  • ...sia]], the capital of [[Kaliningrad Oblast]], a Russian exclave between [[Poland]] and [[Lithuania]].
    2 KB (360 words) - 19:41, 16 February 2008
  • ...the dive. The scream of a diving Stuka was unmistakable and terrifying in Poland and France, but the slow Stuka was not survivable against the better-organi
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  • ...[[Heinz Guderian]] clearly was its prime executor in the 1939 invasion of Poland.<ref>{{citation ...atzgruppe]]n, not part of the military, also followed the breakthroughs in Poland and Russia, and were responsible for most atrocities against civilians and
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 05:59, 19 September 2013
  • ===Poland===
    8 KB (1,179 words) - 10:09, 28 February 2024
  • ===Poland=== ...y and the Soviet Union participated in an armed invasion and occupation of Poland, beginning with an initial German attack on September 1, 1939. The German i
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  • ...ry to Germany, and Bonnet in May rebuffed a Polish suggestion that France, Poland, and the UK should together discuss the Czech issue. For two months the Cze ...on. At the same time the 350 square miles of Teschen Silesia were ceded to Poland, which had exploited Czechoslovakia’s predicament in order to press for t
    8 KB (1,185 words) - 05:03, 9 October 2010
  • ...n was a political commissar while Tukhachevsky commanded the invasion of [[Poland]]. He commanded the main attack, in 1920-1921, into Poland.<ref>{{citation
    8 KB (1,175 words) - 07:24, 9 February 2011
  • ...he was sent, as a major, with a British assistance and observer mission to Poland, as chief of staff of the British Military Mission, with the secret assignm
    3 KB (436 words) - 07:28, 18 March 2024
  • ...nistration]] proposed placing [[Ground-Based Midcourse Interceptors]] in [[Poland]]. While much mass media coverage portrayed this as a shield against attack ...would be stationed in waters off the coasts of Romania, Eastern Italy, and Poland. There would be transportable forward X-based radars in Azerbaijan and [[Qa
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  • ...undaries), ed. by Anny Walczak, Lucyny Telky and Mariusza Granosika, Łódz (Poland): Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego, 2020, pp. 43-57.
    3 KB (312 words) - 10:13, 19 October 2022
  • ...d><td>{{headofstate|Poland}}</td><td>{{headofstate-enteredoffice|President|Poland}}</td>
    26 KB (3,148 words) - 12:14, 21 March 2024
  • ...burg Rights. In 1772 it was taken over by Russia in the First Partition of Poland.
    3 KB (441 words) - 09:04, 8 June 2009
  • ...d other Baltic states is made predominantly from wheat where as vodka from Poland is made from rye.
    3 KB (452 words) - 02:35, 11 February 2010
  • * Górecki, Piotr. ''Economy, Society, and Lordship in Medieval Poland, 1100-1250'' Holmes & Meier, 1992 [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=897 * ''The Cambridge History of Poland'' (vol 1 1941) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=58956854 online edition
    11 KB (1,473 words) - 07:19, 12 March 2009
  • ===Poland=== Woermann helped fabricate prewar border incidents with Poland. <ref name=Maguire/>
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  • *NILU Polska Ltd. in [[Katowice]], [[Poland]]
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  • [[Belz]] originated in Poland and is currently headquarted in Jerusalem, where the recently completed Bel [[Bobov]] originated in Poland and is currently located in Brooklyn, NY. It is led by the Halberstam rabbi
    10 KB (1,526 words) - 13:17, 11 March 2021
  • ...fare specialist. An anti-Nazi before 1933, he commanded Panzer forces into Poland and Russia, but was dismissed from command and the army, in 1942 for a tac
    3 KB (509 words) - 17:49, 29 December 2010
  • ...ydrich's formal title was “Chief of the Security Police and the SD.” After Poland was invaded, Himmler formally linked the Security Police and SD by decreein Heydrich had important roles both in provoking the war with Poland, and then in detaining and killing Polish opposition.
    15 KB (2,329 words) - 06:10, 15 September 2013
  • ...ide to revoke it.</ref>; the cession of most of West Prussia and Poznan to Poland, together with plebiscites to determine the frontier in [[Upper Silesia]] a ...was taken on March 20, 1921, two days after the [[Treaty of Riga]] between Poland and Soviet Russia, and gave results that were subsequently interpreted as p
    8 KB (1,223 words) - 02:10, 8 October 2010
  • ===Poland and Ukraine=== * Gross, Jan T. ''Revolution from Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia'' (1988).
    15 KB (2,153 words) - 01:20, 9 May 2008
  • ...lso spreading to non Russian parts of the Empire, including [[Finland]], [[Poland]], the Baltic provinces and [[Georgia]], where it was reinforced by nationa ...some unpopular legislation, but special military expeditions were sent to Poland, the Baltic Provinces and Georgia, were putting down the revolution was par
    8 KB (1,147 words) - 00:15, 21 February 2010
  • ...ge in 1723 and married Maria Leszczygska, daughter of Stanislas I, King of Poland. ...Peace of Vienna (1738), following French intervention in [[Poland, history|Poland]] on behalf of Stanislas Leszczygski, the king's father-in-law, who had bee
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  • |event='''1990''': Activism by Solidarity led to semi-free elections in Poland. The resulting coalition government was one of the major steps in the emerg
    4 KB (601 words) - 09:14, 2 September 2020
  • ...I]], most of Lower Silesia (including the city of Breslau) was returned to Poland and Breslau was renamed again as Wroclaw. The University of Breslau is now
    8 KB (1,182 words) - 08:51, 30 June 2023
  • ...oland at the time was under Russian, Prussian and Austrian [[Partitions of Poland|domination]], and not recognized as an independent country. It was Marie's
    10 KB (1,519 words) - 00:00, 28 October 2013
  • ...Warsaw Pact, several countries need MiG-29s to be interoperable with NATO. Poland has had such modifications both on its own aircraft and those it leased fro
    3 KB (489 words) - 05:20, 31 May 2009
  • ...nexed by [[Russia]] in 1793, as a consequence of the Second Partition of [[Poland]]. From 1919–1991, Minsk was the capital of the Byelorussian SSR.
    4 KB (627 words) - 19:33, 11 February 2010
  • ...liver Hazard Perry-class include Spain, Taiwan, Turkey, Egypt, Bahrain and Poland.
    3 KB (424 words) - 15:20, 14 April 2011
  • ...esignated [[Canadian Active Service Force]]) followed when the invasion of Poland by Germany was announced.
    4 KB (614 words) - 07:05, 11 June 2009
  • ...2, explores the development of antitrust law in Australia, Japan, Germany, Poland, and the European Union (EU)
    5 KB (682 words) - 05:19, 9 July 2008
  • ...ps at [[Warsaw]], [[Poland]] and shortly after arrives in [[Bialystok]], [[Poland]]. It is here where Sajer is trained along with his unit and becomes accust
    10 KB (1,597 words) - 10:50, 23 February 2024
  • ...territory that once belonged to the Russian Empire with the exception of [[Poland]] and [[Finland]], but with the addition of [[kaliningrad]].
    5 KB (708 words) - 19:53, 25 July 2021
  • ...ations/the-world-factbook/geos/pl.html][http://www.economist.com/countries/Poland/] |Poland
    38 KB (5,067 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • Poland: runs on 3 major banks. Runs on banks in Argentina, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Latvia, Turkey, Egypt and Mexico.
    13 KB (1,739 words) - 03:24, 23 March 2014
  • ...ard fought against the Turks with John Sobieski, king of [[Poland, history|Poland]]; and he distinguished himself in the wars against [[Louis XIV]] of France
    8 KB (1,296 words) - 08:16, 29 July 2023
  • ...ithuania]]. Later, the city and surrounding area became a voivodeship of [[Poland]] as part of the [[Union of Lublin]], a monarchical alliance that created t
    5 KB (673 words) - 10:40, 6 March 2014
  • ...essions in eastern europe : Social change and organizational innovation in poland. Nonprofit and civil society studies. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publ ...fessions in eastern Europe: Social change and organizational innovation in poland. Edited by Helmut K. Anheier. Nonprofit and civil society series. New York:
    10 KB (1,327 words) - 15:26, 28 August 2012
  • ...d great numbers of citizens, mostly Jewish, from Holland, France, Belgium, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Greece, or other countries. We executed about 400
    4 KB (655 words) - 10:18, 1 June 2023
  • ...s a 1994 film, which forms part of the ''[[Three Colours]]'' trilogy by [[Poland|Polish]] director [[Krzysztof Kieślowski]]. ''Red'' is the final film of t
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  • ...S. To its police activities the SS added protection of the German Volk in Poland and elsewhere, their "blood" and their unity, and also the protection of th ...to the second slot under Himmler. Meanwhile Himmler had special powers in Poland, where he feuded with the official supposedly in charge Hans Frank. <ref> B
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  • | Tried in Poland for war crimes and executed in Krakow in July 1948 | Killed in action in Poland in February 1945
    29 KB (4,284 words) - 09:57, 23 May 2023
  • | Poland
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  • * Kutnik, Jerzy. "The Declaration of Independence in Poland," ''The Journal of American History,'' Vol. 85, No. 4 (Mar., 1999), pp. 138
    8 KB (1,097 words) - 15:16, 20 March 2023
  • ...ew York, New York|New York City]], the son of [[Jew]]ish immigrants from [[Poland]]. He received his bachelor's degree in biology from the [[College of the C
    6 KB (889 words) - 10:16, 8 April 2023
  • ...ormalized method of decision making. One such method was originated by a [[Poland|Polish]] engineer, Janusz Bucki and is named B-ADSc (Bucki - Analyse Décis
    7 KB (1,018 words) - 06:19, 29 November 2013
  • ...mendation from [[Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski]], [[HSSPF]] for southeastern Poland, and his staff. <ref name=HT>{{citation
    6 KB (857 words) - 03:13, 27 March 2024
  • ...th derived their ideas from lessons learned in the 1920 Soviet invasion of Poland, commanded by Tukhachesky. <ref>{{citation
    6 KB (882 words) - 07:27, 9 February 2011
  • ...man Democratic Republic]], the erstwhile [[Soviet Union]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Poland]] and [[Czechoslovakia]]. For the first 5-6 years, participation was limite
    7 KB (1,063 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ===Operations in Poland and the Balkans===
    17 KB (2,638 words) - 17:07, 22 March 2024
  • ...rope join the EU (the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia ).
    8 KB (1,098 words) - 06:38, 1 February 2020
  • XIII. Establishment of an independent Poland with access to the sea <br />
    7 KB (1,086 words) - 04:23, 24 December 2007
  • ...own Gleiwitz radio station, which were a pretext for a punitive attack on Poland, cannot be reasonably justified as preventive, as the Polish military was n
    7 KB (1,107 words) - 07:37, 28 March 2024
  • Wincenty Michal Barzynski, born in Poland, served as a Roman Catholic missionary to the new Polish communities in Tex
    7 KB (941 words) - 15:47, 9 December 2011
  • ....S. [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]], or trials by occupied powers such as Poland.
    7 KB (1,027 words) - 13:24, 10 January 2011
  • ...ion, it either shipped equipment through satellite states such as Bulgaria,Poland and Romania, or arranged for the satellites to ship from their own stocks o
    8 KB (1,156 words) - 07:31, 18 March 2024
  • *[[Poland]], joined 24/10/1945
    9 KB (751 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...name ("the Ukraine") but the more modern usage is to simply use "Ukraine". Poland long controlled Ukraine, calling its inhabitants "Ruthenians." The neighboring countries bordering on Ukraine are [[Russia]], [[Poland]], [[Belarus]], [[Hungary]], [[Romania]], [[Moldova]], and [[Slovakia]].
    38 KB (5,632 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...th Israel movement in 1912 in Kattowitz ([[Katowice]]), [[Germany]] (now [[Poland]]). The American Agudath Israel was founded in 1939. There is an Agudat Isr
    9 KB (1,346 words) - 21:48, 10 September 2011
  • ...d race relations in the United States, and to promote [[Zionism]]. Born in Poland in 1940, Mr. Foxman was saved from the Holocaust as an infant by his Polish
    8 KB (1,169 words) - 04:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...Walter Norman Haworth]] and Sir [[Edmund Hirst]] and, independently, the [[Poland|Polish]] [[Tadeus Reichstein]], succeeded in synthesizing the vitamin, the
    7 KB (1,147 words) - 15:21, 8 April 2023
  • In May 1939, when Hitler had already determined to attack [[Poland]] in the summer or autumn of that year, the parents of a severely deformed ...lled in the [[Gdynia]] area. Similar measures were taken in other areas of Poland destined for incorporation into Germany<ref>Browning, 186-87.</ref>. At [[P
    36 KB (5,677 words) - 14:10, 2 February 2023
  • ...he Alps in the south. Its direct neighbors are [[Denmark]] in the north, [[Poland]] and the [[Czech Republic]] in the east, [[Austria]] and [[Switzerland]] i
    9 KB (1,216 words) - 11:04, 23 May 2023
  • ...any, India, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Namibia, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Russian Federation, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, United Kingdom o ...pect of the Faroe Islands and Greenland), European Union, Iceland, Norway, Poland, Russian Federation.
    24 KB (3,694 words) - 10:10, 24 August 2010
  • ...BCE to the [[Solidarity]] movement started in the Lenin Shipyards, Gdansk (Poland) 1981, often draw on or depend upon anarchistic motivations, even if their
    8 KB (1,151 words) - 09:23, 26 March 2024
  • ...roximately 250 persons organized in the Karaites Religious Organization of Poland [http://www.karaimi.home.pl/|//www.karaimi.home.pl/])
    17 KB (2,632 words) - 19:32, 17 February 2018
  • - [[Poland]] -
    9 KB (1,506 words) - 07:07, 26 March 2024
  • ...rom Germany and the occupied countries to labour camps, either in occupied Poland or further east in the Soviet Union, which it was assumed would soon be com ...po]]. When [[Hans Frank]], head of the [[Generalgouvernement]] in occupied Poland, heard of the meeting, he demanded to be represented, and Heydrich quickly
    32 KB (5,144 words) - 00:49, 24 October 2013
  • [[Poland]], the [[University of Alberta]], [[Canada]], and [[Shinshu University]], [
    9 KB (1,289 words) - 00:39, 24 October 2013
  • '''Pôle''' ''Poland'' = '''pôle''' ''wood'' = '''pôll''' ''election '''Pôlish''' ''Poland''
    21 KB (3,201 words) - 10:25, 21 December 2020
  • ...and Jan Rutkowski (1886-1949), the founders of modern economic history in Poland and of the journal ''Roczniki Dziejów Spolecznych i Gospodarczych'' (1931-
    16 KB (2,340 words) - 22:44, 14 September 2013
  • ...arents, Sendel and Rivka Grynszpan, were [[Jew]]s who had emigrated from [[Poland]] in 1911 and settled in Hannover, where Sendel opened a tailor's shop, fro ...prevent the 70,000 Polish Jews living in Germany and Austria returning to Poland, so that path was also closed: in any case Grynszpan had only grandparents
    37 KB (6,269 words) - 13:16, 2 February 2023
  • ===Poland=== ...he Wartheland region in a study of efforts to "Germanize" areas of western Poland. There were four major deportation operations between December 1939 and Mar
    24 KB (3,775 words) - 07:21, 8 November 2010
  • ''See [[Poland]] for an overview of the contemporary nation.'' ...h). By 1773 the political realm was down to only 84,000 square miles, and Poland was too weak and inefficient to prevent its German and Russian neighbors fr
    91 KB (13,963 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...the number had reached 11,000. By 2001, immigrants from Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, the Philippines, and Romania were pouring into the country and 36,000 work
    8 KB (1,136 words) - 20:01, 30 November 2013
  • Upon invitation of the city of Dantzig ([[Gdansk]]) he traveled to Poland in the summer of 1591, probably to give advise about Dantzig's harbor.
    8 KB (1,266 words) - 03:23, 27 April 2010
  • *[[Confederation of Reformed Evangelical Churches in Poland]]
    12 KB (1,624 words) - 22:36, 11 October 2013
  • ...815 and Poland would not be a state until 1918.</ref> Napoleon's impact on Poland was dramatic, including the Napoleonic legal code, the abolition of serfdom ...peace of Vienna, had caused Czar Alexander anxiety lest the restoration of Poland should be contemplated, and this was a factor that led to Napoleon's invasi
    34 KB (5,171 words) - 16:57, 24 May 2014
  • ...Modernization Background of the "Meat Problem" in the People's Republic of Poland]. ''Przeglad Historyczny'' 2005 96(4): 587-605. Issn: 0033-2186 </ref>
    17 KB (2,558 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...o do so. Some equipment was shipped from satellite states such as Bulgaria,Poland and Romania. North Korea both shipped Soviet-designed weapons it made, as w ...viet-bloc weapons were also exported to Iran via Syria, Libya, Romania and Poland- and directly from the Soviet Union.<ref name=Timmerman-Ch07>{{citation
    27 KB (4,119 words) - 07:35, 18 March 2024
  • === Poland ===
    30 KB (4,343 words) - 13:59, 18 February 2024
  • In May 1939, when Hitler had already determined to attack [[Poland]] in the summer or autumn of that year, the parents of a severely deformed ...lled in the [[Gdynia]] area. Similar measures were taken in other areas of Poland destined for incorporation into Germany<ref>Browning, 186-87.</ref>. At [[P
    43 KB (6,828 words) - 18:39, 16 March 2024
  • A matter concerning Poland's "Law of 26 October 1982 on Education in Sobriety and the Fight against Al | title = Case of Witold Litwa v. Poland
    27 KB (4,133 words) - 07:30, 18 March 2024
  • <td>[[Poland]]</td><td>[[Warsaw]]</td><td>[[Polish złoty]]</td> ...adofstate|Poland}}<br><small>''since {{headofstate-enteredoffice|President|Poland}}''</small></td>
    59 KB (8,218 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • ...nterwar period, and as late as 1940, notwithstanding the German success in Poland in 1939, the RAF still possessed no air formation that could rapidly respon ...Milch and airplane designer Ernst Heinkel built a huge factory at Budzyn, Poland, called the "Ultra Project" designed to use Jews as slave laborers to buil
    35 KB (5,408 words) - 04:44, 13 October 2013
  • |Poland ([[ZPAV]])
    12 KB (1,705 words) - 11:48, 27 January 2014
  • ...t part of his life Copernicus worked and lived in Frombork, in the east of Poland at the Baltic Sea. This city is the seat of the diocese [[Warnia]] (in Germ
    10 KB (1,519 words) - 13:20, 8 November 2012
  • .... conquered in [[World War II]] ([[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]], [[Czechoslovakia]], [[Hungary]], [[Romania]], [[Bulgaria]]), those taken
    11 KB (1,738 words) - 12:13, 13 March 2024
  • [https://sobieski.org.pl/en/nuclear-power-for-poland Nuclear power for Poland, 2020] and the
    10 KB (1,443 words) - 12:35, 24 June 2023
  • ...very cold", which, while he was told was Alaska, could have been northern Poland.<ref name=ABC2005-12-05>{{citation
    11 KB (1,692 words) - 15:14, 24 March 2024
  • ...outh Korea and Taiwan have it, and at least a temporary installation is in Poland.
    10 KB (1,518 words) - 10:53, 27 March 2024
  • ...hat specifically ordered the death of the Jewish populations of Germany or Poland. Critics counter this argument by noting that very few Nazi documents used ...red "that Jews were gassed to death at the Auschwitz Concentration Camp in Poland during the summer of 1944" was a fact.<ref>http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.
    22 KB (3,570 words) - 10:04, 25 March 2024
  • ===Poland=== In [[Poland]] moderate republicanism was also an important ideology. In Poland republicans were those who supported the status quo of having a very weak m
    43 KB (6,485 words) - 08:54, 2 March 2024
  • ...a peace pact with [[Stalin]]'s Russia in August 1939, and finally invaded Poland in September 1939. ...ary moves were brilliantly successful, as in the "blitzkrieg" invasions of Poland (1939), Norway (1940), the Low Countries (1940), and above all the stunning
    30 KB (4,610 words) - 06:55, 17 September 2013
  • ...olish language." The Institute includes several units located elsewhere in Poland, including the Comparative Grammar Unit in Poznań, a unit for the Dictiona
    11 KB (1,658 words) - 11:51, 2 February 2023
  • ...m being relieved. This theory did not work as well in Russia as it had in Poland and France. On 10 July, the Eleventh German Army had part of its 198th A difference from the West and Poland was that Soviet [[T-34 tank|T-34]] medium and [[KV tank|KV heavy tanks]] we
    20 KB (2,978 words) - 05:57, 18 October 2013
  • ...[[Russia, history|Russia]], which also obtained most of [[Poland, history|Poland]]. The Holy Roman Empire (abolished by Napoleon) was not restored; a German
    20 KB (3,091 words) - 11:10, 23 February 2024
  • |Poland
    21 KB (1,982 words) - 02:18, 8 May 2009
  • ...and Taxis]]. Their range extended from the Baltic to the Adriatic and from Poland to the Straits of Gibraltar. These services eventually became extinct or we
    11 KB (1,785 words) - 05:50, 20 April 2023
  • ...d training its army. In 1919, Captain de Gaulle volunteered for service in Poland and spent a year teaching at the Infantry School of the Polish army; he bec
    27 KB (4,160 words) - 09:39, 28 July 2014
  • ====[[Poland]]====
    31 KB (4,068 words) - 16:25, 29 February 2024
  • ...Polish military alliance]] which supposedly guaranteed British support for Poland if attacked. Chamberlain issued the [[declaration of war]] against Germany
    12 KB (1,690 words) - 09:56, 19 January 2024
  • ...tual support in case of a war and in effect giving Hitler a free hand in [[Poland]], seeing [[World War II]] break out on September 1939.
    11 KB (1,729 words) - 05:59, 25 September 2007
  • ...[[Latvia]], and [[Lithuania]]); the Central European "Visegrad Group" ([[Poland]], [[Czech Republic]], [[Slovakia]], [[Hungary]]); and the former members o ...languages are widely spoken in Eastern and Central Europe (from Russia to Poland and to the Balkans), and the Germanic languages are spoken in Northern and
    38 KB (5,651 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...oducing kerosene from hand-dug oil wells near the town of Krosno, now in [[Poland]]. The first large petroleum refinery was built in Ploesti, [[Romania]] in
    13 KB (1,952 words) - 09:37, 6 March 2024
  • In 1849, as his health was failing, Balzac travelled to [[Poland]] to visit [[Eveline Hanska]], a wealthy Polish lady, with whom he had corr
    11 KB (1,708 words) - 19:29, 7 October 2009
  • ...and their ways to be distinctly inferior. Miernik is ordered to return to Poland. He tells the others that he is fearful for his life if he does so and see
    12 KB (1,973 words) - 12:45, 10 September 2016
  • ...in 2004, "When talking about Ronald Reagan, I have to be personal. We in Poland took him so personally. Why? Because we owe him our liberty. This can't be
    22 KB (3,346 words) - 10:08, 28 February 2024
  • ...oducing kerosene from hand-dug oil wells near the town of Krosno, now in [[Poland]]. The first large petroleum refinery was built in Ploesti, [[Romania]] in
    14 KB (2,061 words) - 09:37, 6 March 2024
  • ...itle=Lessons of Chernobyl: Nuclear Power is Safe}}</ref> While working on Poland, he observed that the amount of radioactive exposure had increased 2.6 mill
    12 KB (1,841 words) - 08:30, 12 September 2013
  • ...ents included duty at the [[U.S. Embassy to Hungary]], as interim AID to [[Poland]], as Desk Officer for [[People's Republic of China|China]], Special Assis
    13 KB (1,920 words) - 10:32, 23 March 2024
  • ...o a wave of bank failures in Germany, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland, and led indirectly to the departure of Britain and others from the [[gold
    14 KB (2,096 words) - 05:27, 31 October 2010
  • After [[World War II]] Germany ceded territory in the east to [[Poland]], [[Russia]], and the [[Czech Republic]]. As a result, three dialects have
    15 KB (2,156 words) - 08:39, 2 March 2024
  • | Poland (ZPAV)
    21 KB (2,962 words) - 00:45, 10 January 2014
  • *: [[Luke P. Poland]] ''([[Republican Party (United States)|R]])'' *: [[Luke P. Poland]] (1815-1887), ''[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]'' ...appoi
    83 KB (10,837 words) - 11:30, 10 March 2024
  • ...ollectivism in samples from Bulgaria, Canada, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Poland, and the U.S.A. (total N = 1,018). Both at the individual level and the soc
    15 KB (2,114 words) - 09:38, 26 March 2024
  • ...British support for Poland if attacked by Germany. When Germany did invade Poland, Chamberlain issued a [[declaration of war]] on 3 September 1939 and formed
    32 KB (5,004 words) - 23:50, 12 July 2023
  • ...erly<ref name="pmid2200894">{{cite journal| author=Margolis KL, Nichol KL, Poland GA, Pluhar RE| title=Frequency of adverse reactions to influenza vaccine in ...ain.<ref name="pmid2200894">{{cite journal| author=Margolis KL, Nichol KL, Poland GA, Pluhar RE| title=Frequency of adverse reactions to influenza vaccine in
    37 KB (5,103 words) - 13:22, 2 February 2023
  • ...Polish military alliance]] which supposedly guaranteed British support for Poland if attacked.<ref>Jenkins 2001, p. 543.</ref> Chamberlain issued the [[decla ...d, Churchill had worried about the countries of eastern Europe, especially Poland, which had been overrun by the [[Red Army]].<ref>Gilbert 1991, pp. 848–84
    49 KB (6,934 words) - 14:07, 13 July 2023
  • ...other surge, in Eastern Europe, since the fall of the Soviet Union, with [[Poland|Polish]] [[Solidarity (political movement)|Solidarity (''solidarnosc'')]] b
    16 KB (2,280 words) - 13:54, 20 March 2023
  • # 11 Poland
    13 KB (1,966 words) - 00:46, 21 October 2013
  • *2: [[Luke P. Poland]] ''([[Republican Party (United States)|R]])'' *2: [[Luke P. Poland]] (1815-1887), ''[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]''
    93 KB (12,315 words) - 11:34, 10 March 2024
  • ...workers, first "guest workers" from France and later slave labourers from Poland, Ukraine and other eastern countries, were brought in to replace them. Ley
    14 KB (2,270 words) - 19:44, 30 December 2010
  • ...f Austria and Czechoslovakia to submit to German rule. In 1939, he invaded Poland, starting [[World War II]]. During this War, Hitler's Germany took over mos
    15 KB (2,423 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...1/> Also in the 1500s, oil from seeps in the [[Carpathian Mountains]] of [[Poland]] was burned in street lamps of the Polish town of [[Krosno]].<ref name=Geo ...40 metres (100 to 130 feet) deep in Europe at [[ Bóbrka]], near Krosno in Poland by [[Ignacy Łukasiewicz]], a Polish pharmacist. That was followed in 1857
    30 KB (4,497 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...la]], where she was intercepted by a Polish [[Lublin R-XIII]] from [[Puck, Poland|Puck]] naval airbase and forced to leave Polish airspace. During this time, After the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|German invasion of Poland]] started the [[Second World War]] on [[1 September]], the ''Luftwaffe'' or
    36 KB (5,619 words) - 09:59, 28 July 2023
  • *2: [[Luke P. Poland]] ''([[Republican Party (United States)|R]])'' *2: [[Luke P. Poland]] (1815-1887), ''[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]''
    101 KB (13,424 words) - 11:35, 10 March 2024
  • ...which William's father later pursued in Ohio. In 1852 the family moved to Poland, Ohio, where William attended a local school. He entered Allegheny College
    15 KB (2,416 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • *September 1, 1939: Germans invade Poland [[Case White]] ...Stuka]] [[bomber aircraft|dive bomber]]s in the blitzkriegs that shattered Poland in 1939 and France in 1940, proved to civilians that air power would domina
    50 KB (7,821 words) - 07:37, 28 March 2024
  • ...nted by most European countries. The exceptions are six countries - Italy, Poland, Romania, the Russian Federation, Turkey, and Ukraine - which together prov
    21 KB (3,170 words) - 15:19, 20 March 2023
  • ...significant communications changes two days before the German invasion of Poland, and the intelligence significance was noted and forwarded to Washington.
    16 KB (2,457 words) - 05:16, 3 September 2010
  • ...ptember 2005, when production was moved by its owners, [[Kraft Foods]], to Poland. However, the historic factory building can still be seen, situated next to
    17 KB (2,621 words) - 20:16, 11 March 2024
  • ...in 2004, "When talking about Ronald Reagan, I have to be personal. We in Poland took him so personally. Why? Because we owe him our liberty. This can't be
    32 KB (4,880 words) - 08:57, 25 March 2024
  • ...Lecture 12] Faculty of Chemistry, [[Silesian University of Technology]], [[Poland]]</ref>
    21 KB (3,171 words) - 09:37, 6 March 2024
  • ...pose Hitler and prevent war, but nothing came of this. When Hitler invaded Poland on 1 September, the conspirators were unable to move. ...rophe. He was shocked and disgusted by the behaviour of the SS in occupied Poland, but gave no support to his senior officer there, General [[Johannes Blasko
    69 KB (11,160 words) - 16:45, 10 February 2024
  • ...entry into the Second World War]] in September 1939, after Germany invaded Poland. The first Canadian Army units arrived in Britain in December 1939. The ec
    18 KB (2,571 words) - 14:46, 3 March 2024
  • ...esperately needed hard currency and creating an informal relationship with Poland.</ref> (Finland also took his advice not to join.) Instead he imposed the
    34 KB (5,164 words) - 01:13, 9 February 2024
  • ...ogy, or the limits of a technology. Dive bombers were quite successful in Poland and France, but against unsophisticated air defenses. While the assault tea ...apable of [[dive bombing]], based on the success of the [[Ju-87 Stuka]] in Poland and France. Stukas were quickly withdrawn from the [[Battle of Britain]]; t
    67 KB (10,624 words) - 07:37, 28 March 2024
  • ...nce, that in 1863 simultaneous peasant revolts and an armed rebellion in [[Poland]] would cripple [[Alexander II|Alexander]]'s regime<ref name=Ulman1977>Ulma
    22 KB (3,194 words) - 14:06, 2 February 2023
  • ...ies of the Soviet Union during the Cold War period were [[East Germany]] [[Poland]], [[Czechoslovakia]], [[Hungary]] and [[Bulgaria]] together with [[Mongoli ...at Stalin always wanted control over the western border regions, including Poland and the Baltics. Was the goal a buffer against German militarism or against
    45 KB (6,965 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...onsibilities. Planning intensity intensified in April 2002. It deployed to Poland and conducted Exercise VICTORY STRIKE, a training exercise with Iraq in min
    20 KB (3,015 words) - 06:11, 10 March 2024
  • ...figures, had last held government office in 1929. After [[Germany invaded Poland]] on 1 September 1939, the United Kingdom and France [[Declarations of war Once Germany had rapidly overrun Poland in September 1939, there was a sustained period of military inactivity for
    67 KB (10,380 words) - 00:18, 19 July 2023
  • ...y and Medicine, Department of Pathophysiology, Medical University of Lodz, Poland. R. Schwartz is an MD, MPH and Professor and Head of Dermatology, Professor
    24 KB (3,263 words) - 14:11, 25 June 2010
  • ...Paris, [[Ernst vom Rath]], in revenge for the deportation of his family to Poland and the persecution of German Jews.<ref>For Grynszpan, his actions and the ...st [[Poland]]. From May onwards, he orchestrated a “hate campaign” against Poland, fabricating stories about atrocities against ethnic Germans in [[Danzig]]
    64 KB (10,407 words) - 18:09, 28 December 2010
  • ...other countries, including Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy, Portugal, Poland, and Russia. Active groups are also found in Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, an
    21 KB (3,214 words) - 01:23, 27 December 2007
  • ...Austria, Switzerland, Northern Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Great Britain, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Russia, Mongolia, north-west C
    20 KB (3,054 words) - 14:20, 8 March 2024
  • ...f the foreigners in Naples. Many of them are labourers from [[Ukraine]], [[Poland]], [[Albania]], and [[Romania]]. Non-Europeans such as the [[Han Chinese|Ch
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  • Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.<ref name=nineteen/>
    27 KB (3,849 words) - 04:20, 7 October 2013
  • ...ermany, the United States of America, France, Great Britain, India, Japan, Poland, and Czechslovakia. It went into force on July 24, 1929, at which time 32 m
    25 KB (3,799 words) - 13:05, 7 August 2013
  • ...xford UP, Oxford, 2005. ISBN 0-19-820615-1</ref> Many emigrated to France, Poland<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/immig_emig/scotland/s_ne/]</ref> Italy a
    29 KB (4,253 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...sohn was born in 1887 in [[Allenstein]], East [[Prussia]] (today Olysztyn, Poland).
    25 KB (3,967 words) - 19:42, 6 March 2024
  • ...by the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and Protestants lost ground in [[Poland]] Bohemia, Austria, and Hungary.
    57 KB (9,349 words) - 07:52, 11 October 2013
  • ...For his part, Stalin insisted on the redrawing of the eastern frontier of Poland along the so-called Curzon line, to reunited eastern and western Ukraine. ...ith the Allied armies advancing into Germany and the Soviets in control of Poland, the issues had to come out into the open. In February, Roosevelt, despite
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  • ...aguay]], [[History of Peru]], [[History of the Philippines]], [[History of Poland]], [[History of Portugal]], [[History of Qatar]], [[History of Romania]], [ #[[Poland]]
    60 KB (9,521 words) - 17:02, 5 March 2024
  • ...were conducted by forces from the U.S., the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland, and was supported in various ways by many other countries, some of which a ...uneven quality. A Polish official, Marek Belka, was deputy head of ORHA. Poland does have peacekeeping experience, but not in this sensitive environment. I
    84 KB (12,644 words) - 16:38, 24 March 2024
  • The last European witch execution took place in [[Poland]] in 1792. In the previous years, [[France]], [[Germany]] and [[Switzerland
    26 KB (4,296 words) - 08:17, 20 January 2024
  • *EK100W ([[Poland]]) - A Gaussian plume model used for air quality impact assessments of pol
    35 KB (5,287 words) - 21:27, 15 December 2013
  • ...t either shipped equipment through satellite states such as [[Bulgaria]],[[Poland]] and [[Romania]], or arranged for the satellites to ship from their own st
    26 KB (4,099 words) - 12:25, 24 March 2024
  • XIII. Establishment of an independent Poland with access to the sea <br /> ...nent of anti-Semitism was sympathetic to the plight of Jews, especially in Poland. As President, Wilson repeatedly stated in 1919 that U.S. policy was to "ac
    50 KB (7,719 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • Milwaukee attracted postwar immigrants from Ireland, Germany, Hungary, Poland and other central European nations. Milwaukee became one of the 15 largest ...niversaries and holidays; organizing fine arts competitions and history of Poland quizzes; propagating Polish history and the history of the Polonia abroad i
    72 KB (10,654 words) - 10:21, 16 August 2023
  • ...ccurred with respect to the forced population transfers in Czechoslovakia, Poland and Hungary before and during the war. This is clearly not the case with re
    31 KB (4,631 words) - 11:27, 14 March 2024
  • ...both played down the idea of an EU split on Libya after Bulgaria, Germany, Poland and Malta - for a variety of reasons - said they would play no part in mili
    32 KB (4,794 words) - 17:31, 22 March 2024
  • ...from the former USSR. From 30,000 to 40,000 each came from Iran, Romania, Poland, Bosnia, Ethiopia, and Afghanistan
    28 KB (4,435 words) - 03:31, 14 October 2013
  • .../2003/03/20030327-10.html] including Japan, Italy, Spain, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Turkey and the UK.
    33 KB (4,932 words) - 12:06, 14 February 2024
  • ...ant Christianity and rejects the concept of the Trinity. It developed in [[Poland]] and [[Transylvania]] in the 1560s, and spread to England in the seventeen
    32 KB (4,703 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ..., though their people can vote in elections to the European Parliament), [[Poland]], [[Portugal]] (including the [[Azores]] and [[Madeira]]), [[Romania]], [[
    39 KB (5,841 words) - 05:10, 3 July 2023
  • * Allen, Debra J. ''The Oder-Neisse Line: The United States, Poland, and Germany in the Cold War'' (2003) 309 pp. [http://www.amazon.com/Oder-N
    38 KB (5,175 words) - 21:33, 11 September 2009
  • ...Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Luxembourg]], [[Malta]], the [[Netherlands]], [[Poland]], [[Portugal]], [[Romania]], [[Slovakia]], [[Slovenia]], [[Spain]], [[Swed
    32 KB (4,918 words) - 09:16, 6 March 2024
  • | | 18 May 1920, Wadowice, Kraków, Poland
    42 KB (4,795 words) - 11:38, 26 August 2020
  • ...rket was an issue in the 1920s (focused on immigrants from [[Italy]] and [[Poland]]), with rhetoric similar to that in the 2000s (focused on immigrants from
    30 KB (4,395 words) - 08:36, 23 February 2024
  • *''Poland'': autocephaly was recognised by the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 1924.<ref>[
    41 KB (6,425 words) - 13:07, 1 November 2014
  • ...the Soviet Bloc, the information on East Germany was thought best, fair on Poland, and worst on China. ...at least in part, to put pressure on Władysław Gomułka| Gomulka [leader of Poland]. We believe that the Soviets will exert greater efforts to obtain Gomulka'
    70 KB (10,476 words) - 04:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...f the [[European Union]] are Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
    46 KB (6,755 words) - 04:20, 26 October 2013
  • <tr><th align="left">Poland</th><th align="left"> </th></tr>
    53 KB (8,307 words) - 09:59, 9 March 2024
  • ...ism|nationalists]]".<ref>{{cite news|title=A veto gives the rule of law in Poland a reprieve|url=https://www.economist.com/news/europe/21725575-governing-law ...ociety|open societies]]', Soros financially supported dissidents including Poland's [[Solidarity (Polish trade union)|Solidarity]] movement, [[Charter 77]] i
    140 KB (19,538 words) - 22:24, 25 March 2024
  • ...[[Ashkenazi]]; Ashkenazim, who are descendants of Jews from [[Germany]], [[Poland]], [[Austria]] and [[Eastern Europe]],
    38 KB (5,654 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...[NATO]]; NATO seeks new role; begins expansion to east with membership for Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic
    30 KB (4,428 words) - 12:14, 13 March 2024
  • ...st group of immigrants comes from the United Kingdom (112,548) followed by Poland (63,267), Lithuania (24,628), Nigeria (16,300), Latvia (13,319), China (11,
    35 KB (5,225 words) - 08:30, 24 September 2023
  • ...s were leaders of the left or Socialist movements (as in Britain, Germany, Poland, Japan, Canada and the U.S.).<ref name=Eley>{{cite book|author=Geoff Eley|t
    35 KB (5,511 words) - 10:14, 28 February 2024
  • ''ballot'' '''pôll''' = ''Poland'' '''Pôle''' = ''wood'' '''pôle
    36 KB (5,897 words) - 19:42, 22 August 2017
  • After the "[[Phony War]]" following the fall of Poland, Germany turned the Western Front into very real war on 10 May 1940. From t
    48 KB (7,406 words) - 16:27, 13 February 2011
  • ...ntries that stayed longest on the exchange rates, (such as Switzerland and Poland), had high real wages and low output, whereas those that abandoned it early
    52 KB (8,210 words) - 10:49, 23 February 2024
  • ...l support from the Baltic countries, a group of Ukrainian nationalists and Poland; Estonia once voted to recognize, but the act never was followed through du
    46 KB (6,323 words) - 04:34, 21 March 2024
  • ...ttoman Empire]]), the United Kingdom, [[Austria-Hungary]], [[Portugal]], [[Poland]], [[Switzerland]], [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], North America, [[
    44 KB (6,841 words) - 23:32, 7 October 2013
  • ...entative, was arrested in September 1939, following the German invasion of Poland.
    54 KB (8,437 words) - 17:34, 14 March 2024
  • ...v wanted it done on the basis of certain territorial concessions regarding Poland and the Baltic countries. Churchill and Eden worked for a compromise and ev ...79.</ref> Churchill faced some strong criticism for the Yalta agreement on Poland. For example, 27 Tory MPs voted against him when the matter was debated in
    171 KB (25,027 words) - 00:22, 13 July 2023
  • ...owerful and prominent. In 1229, responding to an appeal from the [[Duke of Poland]], they began a crusade against the pagan Slavs of Prussia. They became sov
    53 KB (8,332 words) - 13:11, 8 March 2024
  • ...y have been broken by the British cryptanalyst, Dilwyn Knox, in the 1920s. Poland gave critical information to the French and British in 1939, and production
    61 KB (9,303 words) - 07:31, 18 March 2024
  • ...ok place on the "Western Front" (northern France) and the "Eastern Front" (Poland), with other campaigns in Italy, Greece, Turkey, Palestine, Iraq and East A
    53 KB (8,509 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • | quote = A native of Poland, she has resided in the United States unlawfully for most of her 21 years.
    72 KB (10,930 words) - 16:52, 12 March 2024
  • ...is better in Eastern Europe, particularly in more developed states such as Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary, where it ranges from 70-90%, while only 5
    72 KB (10,807 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ..., lénd, fâil, pâil''' ''bucket'', '''pâle''' ''pallid'', '''Pôle''' ''Poland'' = '''pôle''' ''wood'', '''pál, låw, lîght''' (*lîte), '''léss
    42 KB (7,225 words) - 15:50, 28 April 2017
  • ...musicians in Europe. Today it is the still the favored folk instrument in Poland, and is played as a folk instrument in Czechoslovakia, Romania, Moldavia, L
    63 KB (9,800 words) - 11:57, 12 September 2013
  • ...e on Space Research; after arriving in [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]] from Poland, he traveled to Moscow where he met [[Premier of the Soviet Union|Premier]]
    68 KB (10,486 words) - 08:56, 2 March 2024
  • ...d to consider that Germany might first defeat East European allies such as Poland and Czechoslovakia. The lesson for intelligence here is not to assume a ve
    69 KB (10,272 words) - 12:20, 26 February 2024
  • ...ntral Europe|Central]] and [[Eastern Europe]], namely in [[Germany]] and [[Poland]], were called [[Ashkenazi]]. [[Sephardic Jews]] can trace their tradition
    77 KB (11,978 words) - 12:10, 18 May 2023
  • ...d for much of the 20th century, during which many Catholics from Italy and Poland also migrated to Scotland. Much of Scotland (particularly the West Central
    68 KB (10,286 words) - 17:33, 11 March 2024
  • ...ly boosted by immigration, especially from Ireland,a nd more recently from Poland.
    75 KB (11,160 words) - 14:52, 20 March 2024