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Georgia–Poland relations

Georgia–Poland relations refers to foreign relations between Georgia and Poland. Both nations enjoy close and historically friendly relations, rooted in similar experiences, solidarity and shared struggles against foreign imperialism, especially that of Russia.[1]

Georgian-Polish relations

Georgia

Poland

Both countries are full members of the OSCE, the Council of Europe, the World Trade Organization and the United Nations. Poland is a member of the European Union, which Georgia applied for in 2022.

History edit

 
Visit of President of Georgia Giorgi Margvelashvili to the Senate of Poland in 2014

The documented ties between Georgia and Poland reach back to the 15th century, when the Georgian (Kartlian) King Konstantin sent a diplomatic mission to the Polish King Alexander Jagiellon. Later, Polish King Jan III Sobieski tried to establish contacts with Georgia.[citation needed] Many Georgians participated in military campaigns led by Poland in the 17th century. Bogdan Gurdziecki, a Georgian, who was the greatest authority on all things Persian working in the Polish king's diplomatic service, made frequent diplomatic trips to Persia, on which he obtained, among other things, guarantees upholding earlier privileges for missionaries.[citation needed] Already during the rule of King John II Casimir Vasa, he sent on missions to Isfahan, and King Jan III Sobieski availed himself of Gurdziecki's talents in like manner (in 1668, 1671, 1676–1678, in 1682–1684, and in 1687). Gurdziecki remained at the court of the shah for several years in the capacity of special resident and representative of the Polish king; it was he who delivered to the shah Suleiman news about the victory of the Polish-led Christian forces at Vienna (1683).[citation needed]

In the late 18th century, Poland lost its independence in the course of the Partitions of Poland, and its territory was annexed by Prussia (later Germany), Russia and Austria, while Georgia was annexed by Russia in the 19th century.[1] Since then, the history of the two nations was intertwined and there were migrations, often forced, in both directions. Already in 1794, the Russians were sending captured Polish prisoners of war from the Kościuszko Uprising to the Caucasus region, including Georgia.[2] Following the partitions and then following the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising of 1830–1831, many Poles who were forcibly conscripted to the Russian Army were sent to Georgia.[3] In 1832, the Russians discovered a Georgian independence conspiracy and then deported some of its participants to the Russian Partition of Poland.[4] Among them was Giorgi Eristavi, Georgian poet and playwright, who learned Polish during his exile and later translated poems of the Polish national poet Adam Mickiewicz into Georgian.[4] Since the 1830s, Polish officials, teachers, midwives, craftsmen, merchants and doctors also settled in Georgia, and many married local Georgians.[5] About 4,000 Poles, mostly soldiers, lived in Georgia as of 1840.[6] By the mid-19th century, Polish communities existed in various Georgian cities, including Tbilisi, Kutaisi, Gori, Signagi, and Telavi.[7] In 1870 a Polish Catholic church was built in Tbilisi, which served its Polish community.[1] Poles in Georgia were under the watchful eye of the Russian authorities, as they were constantly considered a potential threat.[8]

 
Memorial plaque to Ludwik Młokosiewicz in Lagodekhi

Poles made great contributions in the fields of architecture, geography, arts, botany and zoology in Georgia. In the 1840s, Pole Władysław Bahrynowski [pl] established a botanical garden in Sukhumi.[9] Great contributions to the botany and zoology of Georgia were made by Ludwik Młokosiewicz, a Pole, who initially came to Lagodekhi in 1853 to do his compulsory military service in the Russian Army, but eventually stayed permanently.[10] Młokosiewicz discovered various species of plants and animals on Georgian soil, and founded the Lagodekhi Protected Areas.[11][12] He invented a method to eradicate malaria in Georgia, which earned him widespread respect among the Georgian people.[13] Młokosiewicz also expanded the knowledge of Georgian fauna and flora in Poland by maintaining contacts with museums and institutions in Warsaw, to which he sent Georgian botanical and zoological specimens, as well as through scientific publications.[14]

Józef Chodźko conducted pioneering geographical and geodetic surveys of Georgian lands.[15] Polish architects worked in various Georgian cities, including Tbilisi, Kutaisi, Batumi, Poti and Sukhumi, designing many residential houses as well as theaters, schools, courts, incl. the present Supreme Court of Georgia.[16] Aleksander Szymkiewicz even became a city councillor and the municipal architect of Tbilisi, while Józef Kognowicki became the municipal engineer of Tbilisi, responsible for constructing the city's modern water supply and sewage system.[16] Polish architects were also involved in the restoration of historic Georgian churches, and contributed to the construction of roads and railroads and the expansion of seaports in Poti, Batumi and Sukhumi.[16] Ferdynand Rydzewski headed the construction of the Surami Tunnel under the Surami Pass, the longest railroad tunnel in the Caucasus.[17] Before 1914 about 500 Poles were employed in the construction of railroads, roads, bridges, public buildings and pipelines on Georgian lands.[12] Polish artists (musicians, writers, painters) also lived in Georgian cities, some being founders or co-founders of art schools in Tbilisi.[18] Polish painter Zygmunt Waliszewski spent his youth in Batumi and Tbilisi, and the first years of his career in Tbilisi, before returning to Poland after it regained independence.[8]

In 1863, Petre Nakashidze, future Georgian lecturer and activist, was an eyewitness of the Polish January Uprising in the Russian Partition of Poland. His accounts began to be published by the Georgian press, but after the first part was published, the Russian censorship intervened and stopped the publication of the subsequent parts.[19] A fundraising for Polish insurgents was organized in Tbilisi in the spring of 1863.[20] In the second half of the 19th century, some ethnic Georgian officers and officials were sent to the Russian Partition of Poland.[21] The commander of the Dęblin and Warsaw fortresses was Ivane Kazbegi, who later settled in restored independent Poland in the interbellum and joined the Polish Army.[21] Young Georgians came to study in Warsaw, where they sought inspiration and examples for their national liberation activity.[22] In Warsaw, Georgian students founded the League for the Liberation of Georgia, which was discovered by Russians and its members were arrested, including future writer Shio Aragvispireli.[22] Future leader of independent Georgia and then the Georgian government-in-exile Noe Zhordania studied at the Veterinary Institute in Warsaw.[22]

 
Memorial to the Georgian officers of the Polish Army who sacrificed their lives to Poland, at the Warsaw Uprising Museum.

Both countries regained independence in 1918. In 1918, the Polish Regency Council sent diplomat Wacław Ostrowski to Georgia. Ostrowski organized a Polish consular agency in Tbilisi and began talks with Noe Zhordania on a military alliance.[23] In 1920 the consular agency was upgraded into a consulate, and then in 1921 into a consulate general with a plan to further upgrade it into an embassy.[23] Poland and Georgia had established good relations and signed an alliance. Both countries were invaded by Soviet Russia. Poland successfully repelled the Russian invasion and secured its independence, but Georgia was conquered. Poland maintained contacts with the Georgian government-in-exile.[23] As a result of repatriation of Poles to Poland, their number in Georgia decreased from over 15,000 in 1914 to 3,000 in 1926.[24] Many Georgian military officers found refuge in Poland and joined the Polish Army. The officers fought in Polish defense during the joint German-Soviet invasion of Poland which started World War II in 1939. Many then joined the Polish resistance movement and some also fought in the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. Several Georgian officers were also among Poles murdered by the Russians in the large Katyn massacre in 1940. Poles in Georgia were among the victims of the so-called Polish Operation and Kulak Operation, carried out by the Soviet Union during the Great Purge in 1937–1938.[1] Among the victims was painter, graphic artist and illustrator Henryk Hryniewski.

After Operation Barbarossa in 1941, many Polish refugees from Soviet-occupied eastern Poland ended up in Georgia, where they encountered local Poles as well as friendly Georgians.[25] After the Sikorski–Mayski agreement, the Polish embassy in Moscow was allowed to establish local offices in the Georgian SRR and organize care for the Polish population in Georgia.[26] Many Poles then joined the newly formed Anders' Army.[26] In July 1942 the Soviets liquidated the Polish offices in Georgia and then mostly arrested their officials in order to replace them with newly formed puppet Polish structures, subordinated to the communist authorities.[26] During the war, about 10,000 Polish refugees ended up in Georgia, however their number gradually decreased, as many Poles joined the Anders' Army, then the First Polish Army and also returned to Poland.[27] According to official data, in January 1945 there were still 1,879 registered refugees from Poland in Georgia.[28] After the war, in the years 1946-1948, 3,000 people were repatriated from Georgia to Poland.[29]

Modern relations edit

 
Lech and Maria Kaczynski Boulevard under construction in Batumi, Georgia

The diplomatic relation was reestablished on 28 April 1992,[23] following the restoration of independent Georgia in 1991. In 1993 a friendship and cooperation treaty and a cultural and scientific cooperation agreement were signed.[23]

In 2007 in Warsaw presidents Lech Kaczyński and Mikheil Saakashvili unveiled a monument to Georgian officers of the Polish Army who lost their lives in the Katyn massacre, in the Warsaw Uprising and on many fronts of World War II.[30] In 2011 the Museum of Georgian Officers of the Polish Army was opened in the former house of Nikoloz Matikashvili, Georgian Major of the Polish Army, in Piaseczno near Warsaw.[31]

During the Russo-Georgian War in 2008, Poland strongly supported Georgia. The President of Poland, Lech Kaczyński, flew to Tbilisi along with other Central and Eastern European presidents to rally against the Russian military buildup and subsequent military conflict.

After several attacks on the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs website, the Polish president allowed the Georgian MFA to publish its messages on his website.

April 11, 2010, was declared a day of national mourning in Georgia to commemorate the 96 victims of the Smolensk air disaster, including Polish President Lech Kaczyński, with the Georgian president's administration stating that "Georgia lost the greatest friend in the international community, Poland and Europe lost the greatest politician."[32] Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili attended the state funeral of Lech and Maria Kaczyński in Kraków despite the air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption.[33]

In 2004–2018, Poland spent over 140 million PLN for implementation of more than 300 projects in Georgia as part of a development assistance programme.[23] Since the introduction of visa-free travel in 2017, there has been an increase in emigration from Georgia to Poland, mainly for work.[34] In 2018, a Polish-Georgian Parliamentary Assembly and a Polish Institute in Georgia were established.[23] On May 20, 2018, a celebration of the 100th anniversary of Georgia's independence was held in Warsaw, including at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, where the most important ceremonies on Polish national days are held.[35] In November 2021, Poland donated 468,000 COVID-19 vaccines to Georgia.[36] In 2021 the number of Georgian citizens with valid residence permits in Poland exceeded 10,000.[37]

Resident diplomatic missions edit

 
Embassy of Georgia in Warsaw
 
Honorary Consulate of Georgia in Wrocław
  • Georgia has an embassy in Warsaw.
  • Poland has an embassy in Tbilisi.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Wielki Terror w sowieckiej Gruzji 1937–1938. Represje wobec Polaków (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. 2016. p. 42. ISBN 978-83-8098-080-8.
  2. ^ Woźniak, Andrzej (1998). "Polacy w Gruzji w pierwszej połowie XIX wieku". Niepodległość i Pamięć (in Polish). Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie (5/2 (11)): 30. ISSN 1427-1443.
  3. ^ Woźniak (1998), p. 30, 39
  4. ^ a b Woźniak, Andrzej (1992). "Gruzini w XIX-wiecznej Warszawie". In Kolbaja, Dawid (ed.). Pro Georgia II (in Polish). Warszawa: Towarzystwo Gruzińsko-Polskie. p. 29. ISBN 83-900527-1-7.
  5. ^ Woźniak (1998), p. 40–41
  6. ^ Woźniak (1998), p. 39
  7. ^ Woźniak (1998), p. 41
  8. ^ a b Wojtasiewicz, Wojciech (2012). "Wkład Polaków w rozwój Gruzji w drugiej połowie XIX i na początku XX wieku". In Stawowy-Kawka, Irena (ed.). Międzycywilizacyjny dialog w świecie słowiańskim w XX i XXI wieku (in Polish). Kraków: Księgarnia Akademicka. p. 67. ISBN 978-83-7638-199-2.
  9. ^ Chodubski, Andrzej (1982). "Ludwik Młokosiewicz (1831–1909) – pionier badań flory i fauny Kaukazu". Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki (in Polish). No. 27/2. p. 424.
  10. ^ Chodubski, p. 422
  11. ^ Chodubski, p. 423, 425
  12. ^ a b Wojtasiewicz, p. 63
  13. ^ Chodubski, p. 425
  14. ^ Chodubski, p. 425–427
  15. ^ Wojtasiewicz, p. 62–63
  16. ^ a b c Wojtasiewicz, p. 65–66
  17. ^ Wojtasiewicz, p. 64
  18. ^ Wojtasiewicz, p. 67–68
  19. ^ Woźniak, Andrzej (1995). "Gruzińskie echa "polskiego powstania"". Niepodległość i Pamięć (in Polish). Muzeum Niepodległości w Warszawie (2/1 (2)): 161–162. ISSN 1427-1443.
  20. ^ Woźniak (1995), p. 162
  21. ^ a b Woźniak (1992), p. 30
  22. ^ a b c Woźniak (1992), p. 31
  23. ^ a b c d e f g "Poland in Georgia. Bilateral relations". Gov.pl website. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  24. ^ Wielki Terror w sowieckiej Gruzji 1937–1938. Represje wobec Polaków, p. 42–43
  25. ^ Głowacki, Albin (1992). "O uchodźcach polskich w Gruzji w latach II wojny światowej". In Kolbaja, Dawid (ed.). Pro Georgia II (in Polish). Warszawa: Towarzystwo Gruzińsko-Polskie. p. 14. ISBN 83-900527-1-7.
  26. ^ a b c Głowacki, p. 15
  27. ^ Głowacki, p. 16
  28. ^ Głowacki, p. 16–17
  29. ^ Głowacki, p. 18
  30. ^ "Nowy pomnik w Parku Wolności". 1944.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  31. ^ "Dom Muzeum Gruzińskich Oficerów Wojska Polskiego". Piaseczno.eu (in Polish). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  32. ^ "Day of Mourning in Georgia over Kaczynski's Death". Civil Georgia. 11 April 2010. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  33. ^ Wojtasiewicz, p. 60–61
  34. ^ Leszek Rudziński. "Gruzini coraz częściej wybierają Polskę. Przyjeżdżają głównie za pracą". Polska Times (in Polish). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  35. ^ "Obchody stulecia odzyskania przez Gruzję niepodległości". Studium Europy Wschodniej UW (in Polish). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  36. ^ "Polska przekazała 468 tys. dawek szczepionki przeciw Covid-19 dla Gruzji". Portal Gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  37. ^ "Rośnie liczba Gruzinów w Polsce i w Łódzkiem". TVP3 Łódź (in Polish). 3 December 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2022.

External links edit

georgia, poland, relations, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Georgia Poland relations news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Georgia Poland relations refers to foreign relations between Georgia and Poland Both nations enjoy close and historically friendly relations rooted in similar experiences solidarity and shared struggles against foreign imperialism especially that of Russia 1 Georgian Polish relationsGeorgia PolandBoth countries are full members of the OSCE the Council of Europe the World Trade Organization and the United Nations Poland is a member of the European Union which Georgia applied for in 2022 Contents 1 History 2 Modern relations 3 Resident diplomatic missions 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Visit of President of Georgia Giorgi Margvelashvili to the Senate of Poland in 2014The documented ties between Georgia and Poland reach back to the 15th century when the Georgian Kartlian King Konstantin sent a diplomatic mission to the Polish King Alexander Jagiellon Later Polish King Jan III Sobieski tried to establish contacts with Georgia citation needed Many Georgians participated in military campaigns led by Poland in the 17th century Bogdan Gurdziecki a Georgian who was the greatest authority on all things Persian working in the Polish king s diplomatic service made frequent diplomatic trips to Persia on which he obtained among other things guarantees upholding earlier privileges for missionaries citation needed Already during the rule of King John II Casimir Vasa he sent on missions to Isfahan and King Jan III Sobieski availed himself of Gurdziecki s talents in like manner in 1668 1671 1676 1678 in 1682 1684 and in 1687 Gurdziecki remained at the court of the shah for several years in the capacity of special resident and representative of the Polish king it was he who delivered to the shah Suleiman news about the victory of the Polish led Christian forces at Vienna 1683 citation needed In the late 18th century Poland lost its independence in the course of the Partitions of Poland and its territory was annexed by Prussia later Germany Russia and Austria while Georgia was annexed by Russia in the 19th century 1 Since then the history of the two nations was intertwined and there were migrations often forced in both directions Already in 1794 the Russians were sending captured Polish prisoners of war from the Kosciuszko Uprising to the Caucasus region including Georgia 2 Following the partitions and then following the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising of 1830 1831 many Poles who were forcibly conscripted to the Russian Army were sent to Georgia 3 In 1832 the Russians discovered a Georgian independence conspiracy and then deported some of its participants to the Russian Partition of Poland 4 Among them was Giorgi Eristavi Georgian poet and playwright who learned Polish during his exile and later translated poems of the Polish national poet Adam Mickiewicz into Georgian 4 Since the 1830s Polish officials teachers midwives craftsmen merchants and doctors also settled in Georgia and many married local Georgians 5 About 4 000 Poles mostly soldiers lived in Georgia as of 1840 6 By the mid 19th century Polish communities existed in various Georgian cities including Tbilisi Kutaisi Gori Signagi and Telavi 7 In 1870 a Polish Catholic church was built in Tbilisi which served its Polish community 1 Poles in Georgia were under the watchful eye of the Russian authorities as they were constantly considered a potential threat 8 nbsp Memorial plaque to Ludwik Mlokosiewicz in LagodekhiPoles made great contributions in the fields of architecture geography arts botany and zoology in Georgia In the 1840s Pole Wladyslaw Bahrynowski pl established a botanical garden in Sukhumi 9 Great contributions to the botany and zoology of Georgia were made by Ludwik Mlokosiewicz a Pole who initially came to Lagodekhi in 1853 to do his compulsory military service in the Russian Army but eventually stayed permanently 10 Mlokosiewicz discovered various species of plants and animals on Georgian soil and founded the Lagodekhi Protected Areas 11 12 He invented a method to eradicate malaria in Georgia which earned him widespread respect among the Georgian people 13 Mlokosiewicz also expanded the knowledge of Georgian fauna and flora in Poland by maintaining contacts with museums and institutions in Warsaw to which he sent Georgian botanical and zoological specimens as well as through scientific publications 14 Jozef Chodzko conducted pioneering geographical and geodetic surveys of Georgian lands 15 Polish architects worked in various Georgian cities including Tbilisi Kutaisi Batumi Poti and Sukhumi designing many residential houses as well as theaters schools courts incl the present Supreme Court of Georgia 16 Aleksander Szymkiewicz even became a city councillor and the municipal architect of Tbilisi while Jozef Kognowicki became the municipal engineer of Tbilisi responsible for constructing the city s modern water supply and sewage system 16 Polish architects were also involved in the restoration of historic Georgian churches and contributed to the construction of roads and railroads and the expansion of seaports in Poti Batumi and Sukhumi 16 Ferdynand Rydzewski headed the construction of the Surami Tunnel under the Surami Pass the longest railroad tunnel in the Caucasus 17 Before 1914 about 500 Poles were employed in the construction of railroads roads bridges public buildings and pipelines on Georgian lands 12 Polish artists musicians writers painters also lived in Georgian cities some being founders or co founders of art schools in Tbilisi 18 Polish painter Zygmunt Waliszewski spent his youth in Batumi and Tbilisi and the first years of his career in Tbilisi before returning to Poland after it regained independence 8 In 1863 Petre Nakashidze future Georgian lecturer and activist was an eyewitness of the Polish January Uprising in the Russian Partition of Poland His accounts began to be published by the Georgian press but after the first part was published the Russian censorship intervened and stopped the publication of the subsequent parts 19 A fundraising for Polish insurgents was organized in Tbilisi in the spring of 1863 20 In the second half of the 19th century some ethnic Georgian officers and officials were sent to the Russian Partition of Poland 21 The commander of the Deblin and Warsaw fortresses was Ivane Kazbegi who later settled in restored independent Poland in the interbellum and joined the Polish Army 21 Young Georgians came to study in Warsaw where they sought inspiration and examples for their national liberation activity 22 In Warsaw Georgian students founded the League for the Liberation of Georgia which was discovered by Russians and its members were arrested including future writer Shio Aragvispireli 22 Future leader of independent Georgia and then the Georgian government in exile Noe Zhordania studied at the Veterinary Institute in Warsaw 22 nbsp Memorial to the Georgian officers of the Polish Army who sacrificed their lives to Poland at the Warsaw Uprising Museum Both countries regained independence in 1918 In 1918 the Polish Regency Council sent diplomat Waclaw Ostrowski to Georgia Ostrowski organized a Polish consular agency in Tbilisi and began talks with Noe Zhordania on a military alliance 23 In 1920 the consular agency was upgraded into a consulate and then in 1921 into a consulate general with a plan to further upgrade it into an embassy 23 Poland and Georgia had established good relations and signed an alliance Both countries were invaded by Soviet Russia Poland successfully repelled the Russian invasion and secured its independence but Georgia was conquered Poland maintained contacts with the Georgian government in exile 23 As a result of repatriation of Poles to Poland their number in Georgia decreased from over 15 000 in 1914 to 3 000 in 1926 24 Many Georgian military officers found refuge in Poland and joined the Polish Army The officers fought in Polish defense during the joint German Soviet invasion of Poland which started World War II in 1939 Many then joined the Polish resistance movement and some also fought in the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 Several Georgian officers were also among Poles murdered by the Russians in the large Katyn massacre in 1940 Poles in Georgia were among the victims of the so called Polish Operation and Kulak Operation carried out by the Soviet Union during the Great Purge in 1937 1938 1 Among the victims was painter graphic artist and illustrator Henryk Hryniewski After Operation Barbarossa in 1941 many Polish refugees from Soviet occupied eastern Poland ended up in Georgia where they encountered local Poles as well as friendly Georgians 25 After the Sikorski Mayski agreement the Polish embassy in Moscow was allowed to establish local offices in the Georgian SRR and organize care for the Polish population in Georgia 26 Many Poles then joined the newly formed Anders Army 26 In July 1942 the Soviets liquidated the Polish offices in Georgia and then mostly arrested their officials in order to replace them with newly formed puppet Polish structures subordinated to the communist authorities 26 During the war about 10 000 Polish refugees ended up in Georgia however their number gradually decreased as many Poles joined the Anders Army then the First Polish Army and also returned to Poland 27 According to official data in January 1945 there were still 1 879 registered refugees from Poland in Georgia 28 After the war in the years 1946 1948 3 000 people were repatriated from Georgia to Poland 29 Modern relations edit nbsp Lech and Maria Kaczynski Boulevard under construction in Batumi GeorgiaThe diplomatic relation was reestablished on 28 April 1992 23 following the restoration of independent Georgia in 1991 In 1993 a friendship and cooperation treaty and a cultural and scientific cooperation agreement were signed 23 In 2007 in Warsaw presidents Lech Kaczynski and Mikheil Saakashvili unveiled a monument to Georgian officers of the Polish Army who lost their lives in the Katyn massacre in the Warsaw Uprising and on many fronts of World War II 30 In 2011 the Museum of Georgian Officers of the Polish Army was opened in the former house of Nikoloz Matikashvili Georgian Major of the Polish Army in Piaseczno near Warsaw 31 During the Russo Georgian War in 2008 Poland strongly supported Georgia The President of Poland Lech Kaczynski flew to Tbilisi along with other Central and Eastern European presidents to rally against the Russian military buildup and subsequent military conflict After several attacks on the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs website the Polish president allowed the Georgian MFA to publish its messages on his website April 11 2010 was declared a day of national mourning in Georgia to commemorate the 96 victims of the Smolensk air disaster including Polish President Lech Kaczynski with the Georgian president s administration stating that Georgia lost the greatest friend in the international community Poland and Europe lost the greatest politician 32 Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili attended the state funeral of Lech and Maria Kaczynski in Krakow despite the air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajokull eruption 33 In 2004 2018 Poland spent over 140 million PLN for implementation of more than 300 projects in Georgia as part of a development assistance programme 23 Since the introduction of visa free travel in 2017 there has been an increase in emigration from Georgia to Poland mainly for work 34 In 2018 a Polish Georgian Parliamentary Assembly and a Polish Institute in Georgia were established 23 On May 20 2018 a celebration of the 100th anniversary of Georgia s independence was held in Warsaw including at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier where the most important ceremonies on Polish national days are held 35 In November 2021 Poland donated 468 000 COVID 19 vaccines to Georgia 36 In 2021 the number of Georgian citizens with valid residence permits in Poland exceeded 10 000 37 Resident diplomatic missions edit nbsp Embassy of Georgia in Warsaw nbsp Honorary Consulate of Georgia in Wroclaw Georgia has an embassy in Warsaw Poland has an embassy in Tbilisi See also editForeign relations of Georgia Foreign relations of Poland Georgia EU relations Georgian emigration in Poland Armenia Poland relations Azerbaijan Poland relationsReferences edit a b c d Wielki Terror w sowieckiej Gruzji 1937 1938 Represje wobec Polakow in Polish Warszawa Instytut Pamieci Narodowej 2016 p 42 ISBN 978 83 8098 080 8 Wozniak Andrzej 1998 Polacy w Gruzji w pierwszej polowie XIX wieku Niepodleglosc i Pamiec in Polish Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie 5 2 11 30 ISSN 1427 1443 Wozniak 1998 p 30 39 a b Wozniak Andrzej 1992 Gruzini w XIX wiecznej Warszawie In Kolbaja Dawid ed Pro Georgia II in Polish Warszawa Towarzystwo Gruzinsko Polskie p 29 ISBN 83 900527 1 7 Wozniak 1998 p 40 41 Wozniak 1998 p 39 Wozniak 1998 p 41 a b Wojtasiewicz Wojciech 2012 Wklad Polakow w rozwoj Gruzji w drugiej polowie XIX i na poczatku XX wieku In Stawowy Kawka Irena ed Miedzycywilizacyjny dialog w swiecie slowianskim w XX i XXI wieku in Polish Krakow Ksiegarnia Akademicka p 67 ISBN 978 83 7638 199 2 Chodubski Andrzej 1982 Ludwik Mlokosiewicz 1831 1909 pionier badan flory i fauny Kaukazu Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki in Polish No 27 2 p 424 Chodubski p 422 Chodubski p 423 425 a b Wojtasiewicz p 63 Chodubski p 425 Chodubski p 425 427 Wojtasiewicz p 62 63 a b c Wojtasiewicz p 65 66 Wojtasiewicz p 64 Wojtasiewicz p 67 68 Wozniak Andrzej 1995 Gruzinskie echa polskiego powstania Niepodleglosc i Pamiec in Polish Muzeum Niepodleglosci w Warszawie 2 1 2 161 162 ISSN 1427 1443 Wozniak 1995 p 162 a b Wozniak 1992 p 30 a b c Wozniak 1992 p 31 a b c d e f g Poland in Georgia Bilateral relations Gov pl website Retrieved 24 December 2021 Wielki Terror w sowieckiej Gruzji 1937 1938 Represje wobec Polakow p 42 43 Glowacki Albin 1992 O uchodzcach polskich w Gruzji w latach II wojny swiatowej In Kolbaja Dawid ed Pro Georgia II in Polish Warszawa Towarzystwo Gruzinsko Polskie p 14 ISBN 83 900527 1 7 a b c Glowacki p 15 Glowacki p 16 Glowacki p 16 17 Glowacki p 18 Nowy pomnik w Parku Wolnosci 1944 pl in Polish Retrieved 24 December 2021 Dom Muzeum Gruzinskich Oficerow Wojska Polskiego Piaseczno eu in Polish Retrieved 24 December 2021 Day of Mourning in Georgia over Kaczynski s Death Civil Georgia 11 April 2010 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Wojtasiewicz p 60 61 Leszek Rudzinski Gruzini coraz czesciej wybieraja Polske Przyjezdzaja glownie za praca Polska Times in Polish Retrieved 24 December 2021 Obchody stulecia odzyskania przez Gruzje niepodleglosci Studium Europy Wschodniej UW in Polish Retrieved 24 December 2021 Polska przekazala 468 tys dawek szczepionki przeciw Covid 19 dla Gruzji Portal Gov pl in Polish Retrieved 24 December 2021 Rosnie liczba Gruzinow w Polsce i w Lodzkiem TVP3 Lodz in Polish 3 December 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2022 External links editGeorgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs about relations with Poland Georgian embassy in Warsaw in Georgian and Polish only Polish embassy in Tbilisi Portals nbsp Politics nbsp Georgia country nbsp Poland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgia Poland relations amp oldid 1189468711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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