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Lubusz Voivodeship

Lubusz Voivodeship (Polish: województwo lubuskie [vɔjɛˈvut͡stfɔ luˈbuskʲɛ] ) is a voivodeship (province) in western Poland.

Lubusz Voivodeship
województwo lubuskie
Location within Poland
Division into counties
Country Poland
Seats
Counties
Government
 • BodyVoivode,
Executive board,
Sejmik
 • VoivodeMarek Cebula (PO)
 • Voivodeship marshalMarcin Jabłoński (PO)
 • Chairperson of the SejmikWacław Maciuszonek (BS)
Area
 • Total13,987.93 km2 (5,400.77 sq mi)
Population
 (2019-06-30[1])
 • Total1,013,031
 • Density72/km2 (190/sq mi)
 • Urban
657,844
 • Rural
355,187
GDP
 • Total€12.179 billion
 • Per capita€12,100
ISO 3166 codePL-08
Vehicle registrationF
HDI (2019)0.862[3]
very high · 14th
Websitelubuskie.pl
  • further divided into 83 gminas
Historical regions in present-day Lubusz Voivodeship and in Poland

It was created on January 1, 1999, out of the former Gorzów Voivodeship and Zielona Góra Voivodeship, pursuant to the Polish local government reforms adopted in 1998. The province's name recalls the historic Lubusz Land[4] (Lebus or Lubus), although parts of the voivodeship belong to the historic regions of Silesia, Greater Poland and Lusatia. Until 1945, it mainly formed the Neumark within the Prussian Province of Brandenburg.

The functions of regional capital are shared between two cities: Gorzów Wielkopolski and Zielona Góra. Gorzów serves as the seat of the centrally-appointed voivode, or governor, and Zielona Góra is the seat of the elected regional assembly (sejmik) and the executive elected by that assembly, headed by a marshal (marszałek). In addition, the voivodeship includes a third city (Nowa Sól) and a number of towns.

The region is mainly flat, with many lakes and woodlands. In the south, around Zielona Góra, grapes are cultivated.

Lubusz Voivodeship borders West Pomeranian Voivodeship to the north, Greater Poland Voivodeship to the east, Lower Silesian Voivodeship to the south, and Germany (Brandenburg and Saxony) to the west.

History edit

 
A2 autostrada with view towards west in the Voivodeship

By conquest the first leaders of the Polans, Mieszko I and especially Bolesław I added a number of surrounding territories to the newly established core Polish state, and Lebus Land or Lubusz in Lusatia came under Polish rule. Part of the historic province was located on the western bank of the Oder River, where the main settlement Lubusz, later known as the German town of Lebus, was located.

In 1250 the Lebus Land was acquired by the Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg. The Lebus Land stayed with Brandenburg throughout (as Electorate within the Holy Roman Empire until 1806, as Prussian Province of Brandenburg since 1815, with Prussia as part of the new Empire of Germany since 1871 and thereafter as a part of the newly created Weimar Republic.

Under the terms laid down by Joseph Stalin in the Potsdam Agreement, the borders of Poland and Germany were redrawn and the area of the Lubusz Voivodeship fell within the new borders of Poland.

In 1998, the government of Jerzy Buzek decided to introduce an administrative reform, with its principles including the restoration of counties and a steep reduction in the number of voivodeships. A general consensus existed among scholars that the local administration exercised through the 49 existing voivodeships established in 1975 was inefficient, anachronistic, impractical, detrimental to maintaining regional identity, and untenable. However, the reform draft accepted by the government surprised the public and caused widespread outcry, as its authors foresaw creation of only 12 large voivodships, thus going much further than the widely expected reconstitution of the 17 voivodeships existing prior to the 1975 reform. As a consequence, the original draft made no provision for a separate Lubusz voivodeship – Gorzów was to become along with Kostrzyn, Strzelce Krajeńskie and Drezdenko a part of West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Zielona Góra was to be included along with Krosno, Nowa Sól, Żagań, Gubin and Żary in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship, while a narrow horizontal strip encompassing Międzyrzecz, Sulęcin, Świebodzin, Słubice and Sulechów was to be assigned to the Greater Poland Voivodeship as a bizarre sort-of corridor to the German border. However, mass protests broke out as a result in the cities such as Bydgoszcz, Koszalin, Opole or Kielce. Many of the people opposing the draft reform initially demanded retaining as many as 25 voivodeships (including the 2 ones seated in Gorzów and Zielona Góra), a number nevertheless widely regarded as a demand intentionally excessive to serve as an initial negotiating bargain, actually aiming to restore the 17 voivodeships existing prior to 1975 as an ultimate compromise. As Poland was at the time governed under political cohabitation, the opposition party constituting the political background of the President decided to capitalize on the popular discontent which erupted against the government on an unanticipated scale; the most obvious mean readily available for the opposition was a presidential veto, which in fact ensued. In order to salvage the reform from being killed altogether, the government was, in the face of lacking the supermajority required to overturn the veto at the time, forced to reconsider the original shape of the reform and to reconcile it with the reservations of the President and his political background, with the result of a compromise adjustment increasing the number of voivodeships to 16, with Lubusz Voivodeship included among the four additional ones created according to the agreement.

The path leading to such and outcome was far from smooth. The government made an effort to highlight and exploit the decades-long animosity between the approximately same-size two principal cities, spreading scare against its inevitable re-ignition and explosion in any of these two cities after designating the other one as the voivodeship capital, and hoping to use the engineered scare as the main argument in the ongoing discussions against creating the Lubusz voivodeship, The animosity, existing indeed between the cities, has been historically rooted in a widespread perception among Gorzów inhabitants that the 1950 decision to designate Zielona Góra as the voivodeship capital instead of their larger and more populous city, was taken by the anticlerical communist government due to a hidden motivation of punishing Gorzów for becoming the see of the newly established Roman Catholic apostolic administration governing the majority of the Recovered Territories, with the ensuing discrimination of the city by the voivodeship authorities in the years 1950-1975 in terms of establishing any new public cultural and educational institutions, other public investments or public funds allocations, in vivid contrast to the unjust favoring of their own seat, the city of Zielona Góra; a sentiment reinforced further by the surprise relocation of the see of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gorzów to Zielona Góra in 1992, renamed as a result the Roman Catholic Diocese of Zielona Góra-Gorzów, and finally and perhaps most importantly, by the historical, perpetual and almost sacred rivalry between the motorcycle speedway clubs located in both cities. The objective of the local elites in Zielona Góra was in turn to become a single capital centre, reverting to the situation before 1975, while any prospect of sharing the governing institutions was for a long time treated with their hostility. In spite of that, the looming threat of a "everybody lose" scenario set to materialize in case of a possible implementation of the original reform draft, paved the way for neutralizing this argument through forcing both rival sides into the breakthrough reconciliation accord known as the Paradyż Agreement, brokered by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Zielona Góra-Gorzów and formalized in a document signed during a highly publicized local summit in the Gościkowo-Paradyż Abbey on 13 March 1998. This compromise agreement, was negotiated and concluded between the delegations of both rival cities, composed of the respectively aligned most powerful local and national scene politicians and business people, with its most important provision being the unusual arrangement to divide and distribute the governing institutions of the voivodeship more or less equally between the two cities. On the basis of this broadly supported agreement, an effective public pressure endorsed jointly by the two centers was successfully exerted on the central government which ultimately acquiesced to the demand of establishing Lubusz Voivodeship.[5]

Nevertheless, creating any new type of public institution at voivodeship level in Poland continues to ignite almost automatically a fierce battle in the Lubusz Voivodeship regarding the seat of the institution. There have also been numerous attempts to relocate some of the existing public institutions under various pretexts from one city to another, in some cases successful, as well as of merging a pair of equal institutions of a type existing in both cities, in order to make one of them a branch of the other, with obscure or no justification in most cases for such merger. Nevertheless, a general local majority consensus prevails that the compromise, although unsatisfactory for any of the two cities, spared both of them the fate of a number of cities which lost in 1999 entirely the status of a voivodeship capital and all voivodeship-level institutions, along with the associated attractiveness and prestige of the city as a place to live, crucial for its growth, with the ensuing profoundly detrimental phenomena.

Geography edit

The Lubusz Voivodeship is a land of forests and lakes; forests cover 48% of the area. The river Oder, flowing through the voivodeship, is one of the few large European rivers retaining broadleaved and riparian forests. Areas with the highest natural values are protected as national parks (Drawa National Park and Warta Mouth National Park), landscape parks and wildlife reserves. The 19th century Muskau Park, located on both sides of the Polish–German border, has entered the UNESCO World Heritage List. The voivodeship abounds in lakes, especially in its central and northern parts; around those lakes numerous bathing resorts, holiday centres and farms offering tourist services have been established.[6]

Cities and towns edit

 
Zielona Góra is the seat of the provincial assembly
 
Gorzów Wielkopolski is the seat of the voivodeship governor
 
Nowa Sól is part of historic Lower Silesia
 
Żagań
 
Świebodzin
 
Słubice

The voivodeship contains 3 cities and 40 towns. These are listed below in descending order of population (as of 2021):[1]

Cities (governed by a city mayor or prezydent miasta):
  1. Zielona Góra (140,708)
  2. Gorzów Wielkopolski (121,714)
  3. Nowa Sól (37,931)

Towns:

  1. Żary (36,783)
  2. Żagań (25,110)
  3. Świebodzin (21,428)
  4. Kostrzyn nad Odrą (17,656)
  5. Międzyrzecz (17,580)
  6. Słubice (16,510)
  7. Sulechów (16,477)
  8. Gubin (16,427)
  9. Lubsko (13,647)
  10. Wschowa (13,635)
  11. Szprotawa (11,447)
  12. Krosno Odrzańskie (11,079)
  13. Sulęcin (9,930)
  14. Drezdenko (9,883)
  15. Strzelce Krajeńskie (9,771)
  16. Skwierzyna (9,412)
  17. Kożuchów (9,231)
  18. Witnica (6,640)
  19. Rzepin (6,454)
  20. Nowogród Bobrzański (5,033)
  21. Zbąszynek (4,980)
  22. Sława (4,242)
  23. Bytom Odrzański (4,219)
  24. Jasień (4,188)
  25. Czerwieńsk (3,911)
  26. Ośno Lubuskie (3,884)
  27. Babimost (3,859)
  28. Iłowa (3,831)
  29. Kargowa (3,762)
  30. Małomice (3,499)
  31. Dobiegniew (3,011)
  32. Gozdnica (2,941)
  33. Cybinka (2,764)
  34. Nowe Miasteczko (2,710)
  35. Torzym (2,521)
  36. Łęknica (2,382)
  37. Trzciel (2,330)
  38. Lubniewice (2,078)
  39. Otyń (1,657)
  40. Szlichtyngowa (1,268)

Administrative division edit

Lubusz Voivodeship is divided into 14 counties (powiats): 2 city counties and 12 land counties. These are further divided into 82 gminas.

The counties are listed in the following table (ordering within categories is by decreasing population).

English and
Polish names
Area
(km2)
Population
(2019)
Seat Other towns Total
gminas
Cities with powiat rights
Zielona Góra 279 140,871 1
Gorzów Wielkopolski 86 123,691 1
Land counties
Żary County
powiat żarski
1,393 96,496 Żary Lubsko, Jasień, Łęknica 10
Nowa Sól County
powiat nowosolski
771 86,284 Nowa Sól Kożuchów, Bytom Odrzański, Nowe Miasteczko 8
Żagań County
powiat żagański
1,131 79,297 Żagań Szprotawa, Iłowa, Małomice, Gozdnica 9
Zielona Góra County
powiat zielonogórski
1,350 75,626 Zielona Góra* Sulechów, Nowogród Bobrzański, Babimost, Czerwieńsk, Kargowa 9
Gorzów County
powiat gorzowski
1,213 71,669 Gorzów Wielkopolski* Kostrzyn nad Odrą, Witnica 7
Międzyrzecz County
powiat międzyrzecki
1,388 57,851 Międzyrzecz Skwierzyna, Trzciel 6
Świebodzin County
powiat świebodziński
937 55,753 Świebodzin Zbąszynek 6
Krosno Odrzańskie County
powiat krośnieński
1,390 55,018 Krosno Odrzańskie Gubin 7
Strzelce-Drezdenko County
powiat strzelecko-drezdenecki
1,248 49,156 Strzelce Krajeńskie Drezdenko, Dobiegniew 5
Słubice County
powiat słubicki
1,000 47,018 Słubice Rzepin, Ośno Lubuskie, Cybinka 5
Wschowa County
powiat wschowski
625 38,960 Wschowa Sława, Szlichtyngowa 3
Sulęcin County
powiat sulęciński
1,177 35,238 Sulęcin Torzym, Lubniewice 5
* seat not part of the county

Economy edit

The gross domestic product (GDP) of the province was 10.8 billion euros in 2018, accounting for 2.2% of Polish economic output. The GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 17,600 euros or 58% of the EU27 average in the same year. The GDP per employee was 67% of the EU average.[7]

Protected areas edit

 
The Muskau Park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
Drawa National Park
 
Potok Sucha, a protected nature reserve in the Szprotawa Commune

Protected areas in Lubusz Voivodeship include two national parks and eight landscape parks. These are listed below.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Population. Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019. As of 30th June". stat.gov.pl. Statistics Poland. 2019-10-15. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  2. ^ "EU regions by GDP, Eurostat". Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Sub-national HDI - Subnational HDI - Global Data Lab". globaldatalab.org. Radboud University Nijmegen. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
  4. ^ It is likely that it was a response to the names of some German military units; they have been named after lands that since at least 1945 belong to Poland and the very city of Lubusz is located just outside the Polish border in Germany.
  5. ^ "Warto było? Oni tworzyli nasze województwo | Łącznik Zielonogórski". www.lzg24.pl.
  6. ^ Związek Województw Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej (Union of the Voivodeships of the Republic of Poland) (2010). Polska — Rozwój Regionów.
  7. ^ "Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30% to 263% of the EU average in 2018". Eurostat.

External links edit

  • Polish Government Link, Lands conquered by Mieszko I and Boleslaw I
  • Official website of Lubusz Voivodeship
  • - TURYSTYKA

52°11′43″N 15°20′51″E / 52.19528°N 15.34750°E / 52.19528; 15.34750

lubusz, voivodeship, 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, octobe. 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 Lubusz Voivodeship news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Lubusz Voivodeship Polish wojewodztwo lubuskie vɔjɛˈvut stfɔ luˈbuskʲɛ is a voivodeship province in western Poland Lubusz Voivodeship wojewodztwo lubuskieVoivodeshipFlagCoat of armsBrandmarkLocation within PolandDivision into countiesCountry PolandSeatsGorzow Wielkopolski governor Zielona Gora assembly Counties2 cities 12 land counties Gorzow WielkopolskiZielona GoraGorzow CountyKrosno Odrzanskie CountyMiedzyrzecz CountyNowa Sol CountySlubice CountyStrzelce Drezdenko CountySulecin CountySwiebodzin CountyWschowa CountyZagan CountyZary CountyZielona Gora CountyGovernment BodyVoivode Executive board Sejmik VoivodeMarek Cebula PO Voivodeship marshalMarcin Jablonski PO Chairperson of the SejmikWaclaw Maciuszonek BS Area Total13 987 93 km2 5 400 77 sq mi Population 2019 06 30 1 Total1 013 031 Density72 km2 190 sq mi Urban657 844 Rural355 187GDP 2 Total 12 179 billion Per capita 12 100ISO 3166 codePL 08Vehicle registrationFHDI 2019 0 862 3 very high 14thWebsitelubuskie plfurther divided into 83 gminas Historical regions in present day Lubusz Voivodeship and in Poland It was created on January 1 1999 out of the former Gorzow Voivodeship and Zielona Gora Voivodeship pursuant to the Polish local government reforms adopted in 1998 The province s name recalls the historic Lubusz Land 4 Lebus or Lubus although parts of the voivodeship belong to the historic regions of Silesia Greater Poland and Lusatia Until 1945 it mainly formed the Neumark within the Prussian Province of Brandenburg The functions of regional capital are shared between two cities Gorzow Wielkopolski and Zielona Gora Gorzow serves as the seat of the centrally appointed voivode or governor and Zielona Gora is the seat of the elected regional assembly sejmik and the executive elected by that assembly headed by a marshal marszalek In addition the voivodeship includes a third city Nowa Sol and a number of towns The region is mainly flat with many lakes and woodlands In the south around Zielona Gora grapes are cultivated Lubusz Voivodeship borders West Pomeranian Voivodeship to the north Greater Poland Voivodeship to the east Lower Silesian Voivodeship to the south and Germany Brandenburg and Saxony to the west Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Cities and towns 4 Administrative division 5 Economy 6 Protected areas 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp A2 autostrada with view towards west in the Voivodeship By conquest the first leaders of the Polans Mieszko I and especially Boleslaw I added a number of surrounding territories to the newly established core Polish state and Lebus Land or Lubusz in Lusatia came under Polish rule Part of the historic province was located on the western bank of the Oder River where the main settlement Lubusz later known as the German town of Lebus was located In 1250 the Lebus Land was acquired by the Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg The Lebus Land stayed with Brandenburg throughout as Electorate within the Holy Roman Empire until 1806 as Prussian Province of Brandenburg since 1815 with Prussia as part of the new Empire of Germany since 1871 and thereafter as a part of the newly created Weimar Republic Under the terms laid down by Joseph Stalin in the Potsdam Agreement the borders of Poland and Germany were redrawn and the area of the Lubusz Voivodeship fell within the new borders of Poland In 1998 the government of Jerzy Buzek decided to introduce an administrative reform with its principles including the restoration of counties and a steep reduction in the number of voivodeships A general consensus existed among scholars that the local administration exercised through the 49 existing voivodeships established in 1975 was inefficient anachronistic impractical detrimental to maintaining regional identity and untenable However the reform draft accepted by the government surprised the public and caused widespread outcry as its authors foresaw creation of only 12 large voivodships thus going much further than the widely expected reconstitution of the 17 voivodeships existing prior to the 1975 reform As a consequence the original draft made no provision for a separate Lubusz voivodeship Gorzow was to become along with Kostrzyn Strzelce Krajenskie and Drezdenko a part of West Pomeranian Voivodeship Zielona Gora was to be included along with Krosno Nowa Sol Zagan Gubin and Zary in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship while a narrow horizontal strip encompassing Miedzyrzecz Sulecin Swiebodzin Slubice and Sulechow was to be assigned to the Greater Poland Voivodeship as a bizarre sort of corridor to the German border However mass protests broke out as a result in the cities such as Bydgoszcz Koszalin Opole or Kielce Many of the people opposing the draft reform initially demanded retaining as many as 25 voivodeships including the 2 ones seated in Gorzow and Zielona Gora a number nevertheless widely regarded as a demand intentionally excessive to serve as an initial negotiating bargain actually aiming to restore the 17 voivodeships existing prior to 1975 as an ultimate compromise As Poland was at the time governed under political cohabitation the opposition party constituting the political background of the President decided to capitalize on the popular discontent which erupted against the government on an unanticipated scale the most obvious mean readily available for the opposition was a presidential veto which in fact ensued In order to salvage the reform from being killed altogether the government was in the face of lacking the supermajority required to overturn the veto at the time forced to reconsider the original shape of the reform and to reconcile it with the reservations of the President and his political background with the result of a compromise adjustment increasing the number of voivodeships to 16 with Lubusz Voivodeship included among the four additional ones created according to the agreement The path leading to such and outcome was far from smooth The government made an effort to highlight and exploit the decades long animosity between the approximately same size two principal cities spreading scare against its inevitable re ignition and explosion in any of these two cities after designating the other one as the voivodeship capital and hoping to use the engineered scare as the main argument in the ongoing discussions against creating the Lubusz voivodeship The animosity existing indeed between the cities has been historically rooted in a widespread perception among Gorzow inhabitants that the 1950 decision to designate Zielona Gora as the voivodeship capital instead of their larger and more populous city was taken by the anticlerical communist government due to a hidden motivation of punishing Gorzow for becoming the see of the newly established Roman Catholic apostolic administration governing the majority of the Recovered Territories with the ensuing discrimination of the city by the voivodeship authorities in the years 1950 1975 in terms of establishing any new public cultural and educational institutions other public investments or public funds allocations in vivid contrast to the unjust favoring of their own seat the city of Zielona Gora a sentiment reinforced further by the surprise relocation of the see of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gorzow to Zielona Gora in 1992 renamed as a result the Roman Catholic Diocese of Zielona Gora Gorzow and finally and perhaps most importantly by the historical perpetual and almost sacred rivalry between the motorcycle speedway clubs located in both cities The objective of the local elites in Zielona Gora was in turn to become a single capital centre reverting to the situation before 1975 while any prospect of sharing the governing institutions was for a long time treated with their hostility In spite of that the looming threat of a everybody lose scenario set to materialize in case of a possible implementation of the original reform draft paved the way for neutralizing this argument through forcing both rival sides into the breakthrough reconciliation accord known as the Paradyz Agreement brokered by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Zielona Gora Gorzow and formalized in a document signed during a highly publicized local summit in the Goscikowo Paradyz Abbey on 13 March 1998 This compromise agreement was negotiated and concluded between the delegations of both rival cities composed of the respectively aligned most powerful local and national scene politicians and business people with its most important provision being the unusual arrangement to divide and distribute the governing institutions of the voivodeship more or less equally between the two cities On the basis of this broadly supported agreement an effective public pressure endorsed jointly by the two centers was successfully exerted on the central government which ultimately acquiesced to the demand of establishing Lubusz Voivodeship 5 Nevertheless creating any new type of public institution at voivodeship level in Poland continues to ignite almost automatically a fierce battle in the Lubusz Voivodeship regarding the seat of the institution There have also been numerous attempts to relocate some of the existing public institutions under various pretexts from one city to another in some cases successful as well as of merging a pair of equal institutions of a type existing in both cities in order to make one of them a branch of the other with obscure or no justification in most cases for such merger Nevertheless a general local majority consensus prevails that the compromise although unsatisfactory for any of the two cities spared both of them the fate of a number of cities which lost in 1999 entirely the status of a voivodeship capital and all voivodeship level institutions along with the associated attractiveness and prestige of the city as a place to live crucial for its growth with the ensuing profoundly detrimental phenomena Geography editThe Lubusz Voivodeship is a land of forests and lakes forests cover 48 of the area The river Oder flowing through the voivodeship is one of the few large European rivers retaining broadleaved and riparian forests Areas with the highest natural values are protected as national parks Drawa National Park and Warta Mouth National Park landscape parks and wildlife reserves The 19th century Muskau Park located on both sides of the Polish German border has entered the UNESCO World Heritage List The voivodeship abounds in lakes especially in its central and northern parts around those lakes numerous bathing resorts holiday centres and farms offering tourist services have been established 6 Cities and towns edit nbsp Zielona Gora is the seat of the provincial assembly nbsp Gorzow Wielkopolski is the seat of the voivodeship governor nbsp Nowa Sol is part of historic Lower Silesia nbsp Zagan nbsp Swiebodzin nbsp Slubice The voivodeship contains 3 cities and 40 towns These are listed below in descending order of population as of 2021 1 Cities governed by a city mayor or prezydent miasta Zielona Gora 140 708 Gorzow Wielkopolski 121 714 Nowa Sol 37 931 Towns Zary 36 783 Zagan 25 110 Swiebodzin 21 428 Kostrzyn nad Odra 17 656 Miedzyrzecz 17 580 Slubice 16 510 Sulechow 16 477 Gubin 16 427 Lubsko 13 647 Wschowa 13 635 Szprotawa 11 447 Krosno Odrzanskie 11 079 Sulecin 9 930 Drezdenko 9 883 Strzelce Krajenskie 9 771 Skwierzyna 9 412 Kozuchow 9 231 Witnica 6 640 Rzepin 6 454 Nowogrod Bobrzanski 5 033 Zbaszynek 4 980 Slawa 4 242 Bytom Odrzanski 4 219 Jasien 4 188 Czerwiensk 3 911 Osno Lubuskie 3 884 Babimost 3 859 Ilowa 3 831 Kargowa 3 762 Malomice 3 499 Dobiegniew 3 011 Gozdnica 2 941 Cybinka 2 764 Nowe Miasteczko 2 710 Torzym 2 521 Leknica 2 382 Trzciel 2 330 Lubniewice 2 078 Otyn 1 657 Szlichtyngowa 1 268 Administrative division editLubusz Voivodeship is divided into 14 counties powiats 2 city counties and 12 land counties These are further divided into 82 gminas The counties are listed in the following table ordering within categories is by decreasing population English and Polish names Area km2 Population 2019 Seat Other towns Total gminas Cities with powiat rights Zielona Gora 279 140 871 1 Gorzow Wielkopolski 86 123 691 1 Land counties Zary County powiat zarski 1 393 96 496 Zary Lubsko Jasien Leknica 10 Nowa Sol County powiat nowosolski 771 86 284 Nowa Sol Kozuchow Bytom Odrzanski Nowe Miasteczko 8 Zagan County powiat zaganski 1 131 79 297 Zagan Szprotawa Ilowa Malomice Gozdnica 9 Zielona Gora County powiat zielonogorski 1 350 75 626 Zielona Gora Sulechow Nowogrod Bobrzanski Babimost Czerwiensk Kargowa 9 Gorzow County powiat gorzowski 1 213 71 669 Gorzow Wielkopolski Kostrzyn nad Odra Witnica 7 Miedzyrzecz County powiat miedzyrzecki 1 388 57 851 Miedzyrzecz Skwierzyna Trzciel 6 Swiebodzin County powiat swiebodzinski 937 55 753 Swiebodzin Zbaszynek 6 Krosno Odrzanskie County powiat krosnienski 1 390 55 018 Krosno Odrzanskie Gubin 7 Strzelce Drezdenko County powiat strzelecko drezdenecki 1 248 49 156 Strzelce Krajenskie Drezdenko Dobiegniew 5 Slubice County powiat slubicki 1 000 47 018 Slubice Rzepin Osno Lubuskie Cybinka 5 Wschowa County powiat wschowski 625 38 960 Wschowa Slawa Szlichtyngowa 3 Sulecin County powiat sulecinski 1 177 35 238 Sulecin Torzym Lubniewice 5 seat not part of the countyEconomy editThe gross domestic product GDP of the province was 10 8 billion euros in 2018 accounting for 2 2 of Polish economic output The GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 17 600 euros or 58 of the EU27 average in the same year The GDP per employee was 67 of the EU average 7 Protected areas edit nbsp The Muskau Park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site nbsp Drawa National Park nbsp Potok Sucha a protected nature reserve in the Szprotawa Commune Protected areas in Lubusz Voivodeship include two national parks and eight landscape parks These are listed below Drawa National Park partly in Greater Poland and West Pomeranian Voivodeships Warta Mouth National Park Warta Mouth Landscape Park partly in West Pomeranian Voivodeship Barlinek Gorzow Landscape Park partly in West Pomeranian Voivodeship Gryzyna Landscape Park Krzesin Landscape Park Lagow Landscape Park Muskau Bend Landscape Park UNESCO World Heritage Site Przemet Landscape Park partly in Greater Poland Voivodeship Pszczew Landscape Park partly in Greater Poland Voivodeship See also editList of German exonyms in the Lubusz VoivodeshipReferences edit a b Population Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2019 As of 30th June stat gov pl Statistics Poland 2019 10 15 Retrieved 2020 03 25 EU regions by GDP Eurostat Retrieved 18 September 2023 Sub national HDI Subnational HDI Global Data Lab globaldatalab org Radboud University Nijmegen Retrieved 2021 12 13 It is likely that it was a response to the names of some German military units they have been named after lands that since at least 1945 belong to Poland and the very city of Lubusz is located just outside the Polish border in Germany Warto bylo Oni tworzyli nasze wojewodztwo Lacznik Zielonogorski www lzg24 pl Zwiazek Wojewodztw Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Union of the Voivodeships of the Republic of Poland 2010 Polska Rozwoj Regionow Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30 to 263 of the EU average in 2018 Eurostat External links editPolish Government Link Lands conquered by Mieszko I and Boleslaw I Official website of Lubusz Voivodeship Tourism in Lubuskie TURYSTYKA 52 11 43 N 15 20 51 E 52 19528 N 15 34750 E 52 19528 15 34750 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lubusz Voivodeship amp oldid 1221018402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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