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Recovered Territories

The Recovered Territories or Regained Lands (Polish: Ziemie Odzyskane), also known as the Western Borderlands (Polish: Kresy Zachodnie), and previously as the Western and Northern Territories (Polish: Ziemie Zachodnie i Północne), Postulated Territories (Polish: Ziemie Postulowane) and Returning Territories (Polish: Ziemie Powracające), are the former eastern territories of Germany and the Free City of Danzig that became part of Poland after World War II, at which time most of their German inhabitants were forcibly deported.[1][2] The rationale for the term "Recovered" was that these territories formed part of the Polish state, and were lost by Poland in different periods over the centuries.[3] It also referred to the Piast Concept that these territories were part of the traditional Polish homeland under the Piast dynasty, after the establishment of the state in the Middle Ages. Over the centuries, however, they had become predominantly German-speaking through the processes of German eastward settlement (Ostsiedlung), political expansion (Drang nach Osten), as well as language shift due to Germanisation of the local Polish, Slavic and Baltic Prussian population.[4] Therefore, aside from certain regions such as West Upper Silesia, Warmia and Masuria, as of 1945 most of these territories did not contain sizeable Polish-speaking communities.

Map showing Poland's borders pre-1938 and post-1945. The Eastern Borderlands is in gray while the Recovered Territories are in pink.

While most regions had long periods of Polish rule, spanning hundreds of years, some were controlled by Polish dukes and kings for short periods of up to several decades at a time. Various regions, when not under Polish rule, were in different times under the authority of the Bohemian (Czech) Kingdom, Hungary, Austria, Sweden, Denmark, Brandenburg, Prussia, and Germany. Many areas were also part of various Polish-ruled duchies, created as a result of the fragmentation of Poland, which began in the 12th century.

The great majority of the previous inhabitants either fled from the territories during the later stages of the war or were expelled by the Soviet and Polish communist authorities after the war ended, although a small German minority remains in some places. The territories were resettled with Poles who moved from central Poland, Polish repatriates forced to leave areas of former eastern Poland that had been annexed by the Soviet Union, Poles freed from forced labour in Nazi Germany, with Ukrainians forcibly resettled under "Operation Vistula", and other minorities which settled in post-war Poland, including Greeks and Macedonians.[5]

However, contrary to the official declaration that the former German inhabitants of the Recovered Territories had to be removed quickly to house Poles displaced by the Soviet annexation, the Recovered Territories initially faced a severe population shortage.[6] The Soviet-appointed communist authorities that conducted the resettlement also made efforts to remove many traces of German culture, such as place names and historic inscriptions on buildings.

The post-war border between Germany and Poland (the Oder–Neisse line) was recognized by East Germany in 1950 and by West Germany in 1970, and was affirmed by the re-united Germany in the German–Polish Border Treaty of 1990.

Origin and use of the term

 
 

History of Brandenburg and Prussia
Northern March
965 – 983
Old Prussians
pre – 13th century
Lutician federation
983 – 12th century
Margraviate of Brandenburg
1157 – 1618 (1806) (HRE)
(Bohemia 1373 – 1415)
Teutonic Order
1224 – 1525
(Polish fief 1466 – 1525)
Elector of Brandenburg
1356 – 1806
Duchy of Prussia
1525 – 1618 (1701)
(Polish fief 1525 – 1657)
Malbork Voivodeship and Prince-Bishopric of Warmia within Royal (Polish) Prussia
(Poland 1454/1466 – 1772)
Brandenburg-Prussia
1618 – 1701
Kingdom of Prussia
1701 – 1918
Free State of Prussia (Germany)
1918 – 1947
Klaipėda Region
(Lithuania)
1920 – 1939 / 1945 – present
Działdowo area
(Poland 1918-present)
Warmia, Masuria, Powiśle within Recovered Territories
(Poland 1945 – present)
Berlin and Brandenburg
(Germany)
1947 – 1952 / 1990 – present
Kaliningrad Oblast
(Russia)
1945 – present
 
Polish nationalist propaganda from the 1930s: "Nie jestesmy tu od wczoraj. Sięgaliśmy daleko na zachód." (We are not here since yesterday. Once we reached far west.)

The term "Recovered Territories" was officially used for the first time in the Decree of the President of the Republic of 11 October 1938 after the annexation of Zaolzie by the Polish army.[7] It became the official term[8] coined in the aftermath of World War II to denote the former eastern territories of Germany that were being handed over to Poland, pending a final peace conference with Germany which eventually never took place.[9] The term "Recovered Territories" is a collective term for different areas with different histories, which can be grouped into three categories:

The underlying concept was to define post-war Poland as heir to the medieval Piasts' realm,[10][11][12] which was simplified into a picture of an ethnically homogeneous state that matched post-war borders,[13] as opposed to the later Jagiellon Poland, which was multi-ethnic and located further east.[14] The argument that this territory in fact constituted "old Polish lands"[15][16] seized on a pre-war concept developed by Polish right-wing circles attached to the SN.[17] One reason for post-war Poland's favoring a Piast rather than a Jagiellon tradition was Joseph Stalin's refusal to withdraw from the Curzon line and the Allies' readiness to satisfy Poland with German territory instead.[18] The original argument for awarding formerly German territory to Poland – compensation – was complemented by the argument that this territory in fact constituted former areas of Poland.[15][17][19][20] Dmitrow says that "in official justifications for the border shift, the decisive argument that it presented a compensation for the loss of the eastern half of the pre-war Polish territory to the USSR, was viewed as obnoxious and concealed. Instead, a historical argumentation was foregrounded with the dogma, Poland had just returned to 'ancient Piast lands'."[17] Objections to the Allies' decisions and criticism of the Polish politicians' role at Potsdam were censored.[17] In a commentary for Tribune, George Orwell likened the transfer of German population to transferring the whole of the Irish and Scottish population.[21] Also, the Piasts were perceived to have defended Poland against the Germans, while the Jagiellons' main rival had been the growing Duchy of Moscow, making them a less suitable basis for post-war Poland's Soviet-dominated situation.[18][20] The People's Republic of Poland under the Polish Workers' Party thus supported the idea of Poland based on old Piast lands.[18][19] The question of the Recovered Territories was one of the few issues that did not divide the Polish Communists and their opposition, and there was unanimity regarding the western border. Even the underground anti-Communist press called for the Piast borders, that would end Germanisation and Drang nach Osten.[22] The official view was that the Poles had always had the inalienable and inevitable right to inhabit the Recovered Territories, even if prevented from doing so by foreign powers.[23] Furthermore, the Piast concept was used to persuade the Allied Powers, who found it difficult to define a Polish "ethnographic territory", to assume that it would be an intolerable injustice to not "give the territories back".[12]

 
US Department of State demographics map from 10 January 1945 Germany – Poland Proposed Territorial Changes

By 1949, the term "Recovered Territories" had been dropped from Polish communist propaganda, but it is still used occasionally in common language.[24] On the grounds that those areas should not be regarded as unique territories within the Polish state, the authorities began to refer to them instead as the "Western and Northern Lands".[24][25] Wolff and Cordell say that along with the debunking of communist historiography, "the 'recovered territories' thesis ... has been discarded", and that "it is freely admitted in some circles that on the whole 'the recovered territories' had a wholly German character", but that this view has not necessarily been transmitted to the whole of Polish society.[26] The term was also used outside Poland. In 1962, Pope John XXIII referred to those territories as the "western lands after centuries recovered", and did not revise his statement, even under pressure of the German embassy. The term is still sometimes considered useful, due to the Polish existence in those lands that was still visible in 1945, by some prominent scholars, such as Krzysztof Kwaśniewski.[27]

History before 1945

 
Early Piast Poland at the death of Mieszko I in 992, who is considered as the first historical ruler of Poland and the creator of the Polish state, after his realm was recognized by the papacy.

Several different West Slavic tribes inhabited most of the area of present-day Poland from the 6th century. Duke Mieszko I of the Polans, from his stronghold in the Gniezno area, united various neighboring tribes in the second half of the 10th century, forming the first Polish state and becoming the first historically recorded Piast duke. His realm roughly included all of the area of what would later be named the "Recovered Territories", except for the Warmian-Masurian part of Old Prussia and eastern Lusatia.

 
Map (published in 1917 in the United States) showing Poland at the death of Boleslaw III in 1138

Mieszko's son and successor, Duke Bolesław I Chrobry, upon the 1018 Peace of Bautzen expanded the southern part of the realm, but lost control over the lands of Western Pomerania on the Baltic coast. After fragmentation, pagan revolts and a Bohemian invasion in the 1030s, Duke Casimir I the Restorer (reigned 1040–1058) again united most of the former Piast realm, including Silesia and Lubusz Land on both sides of the middle Oder River, but without Western Pomerania, which became part of the Polish state again under Bolesław III Wrymouth from 1116 until 1121, when the noble House of Griffins established the Duchy of Pomerania. On Bolesław's death in 1138, Poland for almost 200 years was subjected to fragmentation, being ruled by Bolesław's sons and by their successors, who were often in conflict with each other. Władysław I the Elbow-high, crowned King of Poland in 1320, achieved partial reunification, although the Silesian and Masovian duchies remained independent Piast holdings.

In the course of the 12th to 14th centuries, Germanic, Dutch and Flemish settlers moved into East Central and Eastern Europe in a migration process known as the Ostsiedlung. In Pomerania, Brandenburg, Prussia and Silesia, the indigenous West Slav (Polabian Slavs and Poles) or Balt population became minorities in the course of the following centuries, although substantial numbers of the original inhabitants remained in areas such as Upper Silesia. In Greater Poland and in Eastern Pomerania (Pomerelia), German settlers formed a minority.

Despite the loss of several provinces, medieval lawyers of the Kingdom of Poland created a specific claim to all formerly Polish provinces that were not reunited with the rest of the country in 1320. They built on the theory of the Corona Regni Poloniae, according to which the state (the Crown) and its interests were no longer strictly connected with the person of the monarch. Because of that no monarch could effectively renounce Crown claims to any of the territories that were historically and/or ethnically Polish. Those claims were reserved for the state (the Crown), which in theory still covered all of the territories that were part of, or dependent on, the Polish Crown upon the death of Bolesław III in 1138.

This concept was also developed to prevent from loss of territory after the death of King Casimir III the Great in 1370, when Louis I of Hungary, who ruled Hungary with absolute power, was crowned King of Poland. In the 14th century Hungary was one of the greatest powers of Central Europe, and its influence reached various Balkan principalities and southern Italy (Naples). Poland in personal union with Hungary was the smaller, politically weaker and peripheral country. In the Privilege of Koszyce (1374) King Louis I guaranteed that he would not detach any lands from the Polish Kingdom.[28] The concept was not new, as it was inspired by similar Bohemian (Czech) laws (Corona regni Bohemiae).

Some of the territories (such as Pomerelia and Masovia) reunited with Poland during the 15th and 16th centuries. However all Polish monarchs until the end of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795 had to promise to do everything possible to reunite the rest of those territories with the Crown.[29]

Many significant events in Polish history are associated with these territories, including the victorious battles of Cedynia (972), Niemcza (1017), Psie Pole and Głogów (1109), Grunwald (1410), Oliwa (1627), the lost battles of Legnica (1241) and Westerplatte (1939), the life and work of astronomers Nicolaus Copernicus (16th century) and Johannes Hevelius (17th century), the creation of the oldest Polish-language texts and printings (Middle Ages and the Renaissance era), the creation of the standards and patterns of the Polish literary language (Renaissance era), Polish maritime history, the establishment of one of the first Catholic dioceses in Poland in the Middle Ages (in Wrocław and Kołobrzeg), as well as the Polish Reformation in the Renaissance era.

Significant figures were born or lived in these territories. Astronomer Jan of Głogów and scholar Laurentius Corvinus, who were teachers of Nicolaus Copernicus at the University of Kraków, both hailed from Lower Silesia. Jan Dantyszek (Renaissance poet and diplomat, named the Father of Polish Diplomacy) and Marcin Kromer (Renaissance cartographer, diplomat, historian, music theoretician) were bishops of Warmia. The leading figures of the Polish Enlightenment are connected with these lands: philosopher, geologist, writer, poet, translator, statesman Stanisław Staszic and great patron of arts, writer, linguist, statesman and candidate for the Polish crown Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski were both born in these territories, Ignacy Krasicki (author of the first Polish novel, playwright, nicknamed the Prince of Polish Poets) lived in Warmia in his adulthood, and brothers Józef Andrzej Załuski and Andrzej Stanisław Załuski (founders of the Załuski Library in Warsaw, one of the largest 18th-century book collections in the world) grew up and studied in these territories. Also painters Daniel Schultz, Tadeusz Kuntze and Antoni Blank, as well as composers Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki and Feliks Nowowiejski were born in these lands.

By the time that Poland regained her independence in 1918, Polish activist Dr. Józef Frejlich was already claiming that the lands situated on the right bank of the Oder river, including inner industrial cities such as Wrocław, and Baltic ports such as Szczecin and Gdańsk, were economic parts of Poland that had to be united with the rest of the "economic territory of Poland"[30] into a united and independent state, as a fundamental condition of the economic revival of Poland after World War I.[31]

After the successful Greater Poland uprising, the cession of Pomerelia to Poland following the Treaty of Versailles and the Silesian Uprisings that allowed Poland to obtain a large portion of Upper Silesia, the territorial claims of the Second Polish Republic were directed towards the rest of partially Polish speaking Upper Silesia and Masuria under German control, as well as the city of Danzig, the Czechoslovakian part of Cieszyn Silesia and other bordering areas with significant Polish population. The Polish population of these lands was subject to Germanisation and intensified repressions, especially after the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933.

Most of long Germanized Lower Silesia, Farther Pomerania and Eastern Prussia remained undisputed.[32] However, in reaction to Hitler's Germany threats to Poland shortly before the outbreak of World War II, Polish nationalists displayed maps of Poland including those ancient Polish territories as well, claiming their intention to recover them.

In the interwar period the German administration, even before the Nazis took power, conducted a massive campaign of renaming of thousands of placenames, to remove traces of Slavic origin.

Pomerania

 
Location of the annexed part (orange) of the Province of Pomerania and of the other "Recovered Territories" (green)

The Pomeranian (Western Pomeranian) parts of the Recovered Territories came under Polish rule several times from the late 10th century on, when Mieszko I acquired at least significant parts of them. Mieszko's son Bolesław I established a bishopric in the Kołobrzeg area in 1000–1005/07, before the area was lost again. Despite further attempts by Polish dukes to again control the Pomeranian tribes, this was only partly achieved by Bolesław III in several campaigns lasting from 1116 to 1121. Successful Christian missions ensued in 1124 and 1128; however, by the time of Bolesław's death in 1138, most of West Pomerania (the Griffin-ruled areas) was no longer controlled by Poland. Shortly after, the Griffin Duke of Pomerania, Boguslav I., achieved the integration of Pomerania into the Holy Roman Empire. The easternmost part of later Western Pomerania (including the city of Słupsk) in the 13th century was part of Eastern Pomerania, which was re-integrated with Poland, and later on, in the 14th and 15th centuries formed a duchy, which rulers were vassals of Jagiellon-ruled Poland. Over the following centuries Western Pomerania was largely Germanized, although a small Slavic Polabian minority remained. Indigenous Slavs and Poles faced discrimination from the arriving Germans, who on a local level since the 16th century imposed discriminatory regulations, such as bans on buying goods from Slavs/Poles or prohibiting them from becoming members of craft guilds.[33] The Duchy of Pomerania under the native Griffin dynasty existed for over 500 years, before it was partitioned between Sweden and Brandenburg-Prussia in the 17th century. At the turn of the 20th century there lived about 14,200 persons of Polish mother-tongue in the Province of Pomerania (in the east of Farther Pomerania in the vicinity of the border with the province of West Prussia), and 300 persons using the Kashubian language (at the Łeba Lake and the Lake Gardno), the total population of the province consisting of almost 1.7 million inhabitants. The Polish communities in many cities of the region, such as Szczecin and Kołobrzeg, faced intensified repressions after the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933.

Gdańsk, Lębork and Bytów

 
Gdańsk was a principal seaport of Poland since the Middle Ages. From the mid-15th to the early 18th century it was the largest city of Poland. Lost by Poland in the Second Partition in 1793.
 
Location of the former Free City of Danzig (orange) and of the other "Recovered Territories" (green)

The region of Pomerelia at the eastern end of Pomerania, including Gdańsk (Danzig), was part of Poland since its first ruler Mieszko I. As a result of the fragmentation of Poland, it was ruled in the 12th and 13th centuries by the Samborides, who were (at least initially) more closely tied to the Kingdom of Poland than were the Griffins. After the Treaty of Kępno in 1282, and the death of the last Samboride in 1294, the region was ruled by kings of Poland for a short period, although also claimed by Brandenburg. After the Teutonic takeover in 1308 the region was annexed to the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights.

Most cities of the region joined or sided with the Prussian Confederation, which in 1454 started an uprising against Teutonic rule and asked the Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon to incorporate the region to Poland. After the King agreed and signed the act of incorporation, the Thirteen Years' War broke out, ending in a Polish victory. The Second Peace of Thorn (1466) made Royal Prussia a part of Poland. It had a substantial autonomy and a lot of privileges. It formed the Pomeranian Voivodeship, located within the province of Royal Prussia in the Kingdom of Poland, as it remained until being annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the partitions of 1772 and 1793. A small area in the west of Pomerelia, the Lauenburg and Bütow Land (the region of Lębork and Bytów) was granted to the rulers of Pomerania as a Polish fief, before being reintegrated with Poland in 1637, and later on, again transformed into a Polish fief, which it remained until the First Partition, when three quarters of Royal Prussia's urban population were German-speaking Protestants.[34] After Poland regained independence in 1918, a large part of Pomerelia was reintegrated with Poland, as the so-called Polish Corridor, and so was not part of the post-war so-called Recovered Territories.

Lubusz Land and parts of Greater Poland

 
Location of East Brandenburg (orange) and of the other "Recovered Territories" (green)
 
A 19th-century map of Piast-ruled Greater Poland: Lubusz Land, stretched on both sides of the Oder, marked in yellow, northwestern parts of Greater Poland annexed by Brandenburg, marked in green

The medieval Lubusz Land on both sides of the Oder River up to the Spree in the west, including Lubusz (Lebus) itself, also formed part of Mieszko's realm. In the period of fragmentation of Poland the Lubusz Land was in different periods part of the Greater Poland and Silesian provinces of Poland. Poland lost Lubusz when the Silesian duke Bolesław II Rogatka sold it to the Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg in 1249. The Bishopric of Lebus, established by Polish Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth, remained a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Gniezno until 1424, when it passed under the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Magdeburg. The Lubusz Land was part of the Lands of the Bohemian (Czech) Crown from 1373 to 1415.

Brandenburg also acquired the castellany of Santok, which formed part of the Duchy of Greater Poland, from Duke Przemysł I of Greater Poland and made it the nucleus of their Neumark ("New March") region. In the following decades Brandenburg annexed further parts of northwestern Greater Poland. Later on, Santok was briefly recaptured by the Poles several times. Of the other cities, King Casimir III the Great recovered Wałcz in 1368. The lost parts of Greater Poland were part of the Lands of the Bohemian (Czech) Crown from 1373 to 1402, when despite an agreement between the Luxembourg dynasty of Bohemia and the Jagiellons of Poland on the sale of the region to Poland, it was sold to the Teutonic Order. During the Polish–Teutonic War (1431–35) several towns of the region rebelled against the Order to join Poland, among them Choszczno, Drawno and Złocieniec.[35] The present-day Polish Lubusz Voivodeship comprises most of the former Brandenburgian Neumark territory east of the Oder.

 
Location of Posen-West Prussia (orange) and of the other "Recovered Territories" (green)
 
Birthplace of Stanisław Staszic, a leading figure of Polish Enlightenment, in Piła (nowadays a museum)

A small part of northern Greater Poland around the town of Czaplinek was lost to Brandenburg-Prussia in 1668. Bigger portions of Greater Poland were lost in the Partitions of Poland: the northern part with Piła and Wałcz in the First Partition and the remainder, including the western part with Międzyrzecz and Wschowa in the Second Partition. During Napoleonic times the Greater Poland territories formed part of the Duchy of Warsaw, but after the Congress of Vienna Prussia reclaimed them as part of the Grand Duchy of Posen (Poznań), later Province of Posen. After World War I, those parts of the former Province of Posen and of West Prussia that were not restored as part of the Second Polish Republic were administered as Grenzmark Posen-Westpreußen (the German Province of Posen–West Prussia) until 1939.

Silesia

 
Location of Silesia (orange) in the "Recovered Territories" (green)

Lower Silesia was one of the leading regions of medieval Poland. Wrocław was one of three main cities of the Medieval Polish Kingdom, according to the 12th-century chronicle Gesta principum Polonorum.[36] Henry I the Bearded granted town rights for the first time in the history of Poland in 1211 to the Lower Silesian town of Złotoryja. The Book of Henryków, containing the oldest known written sentence in Polish, was created in Lower Silesia.[37] The first Polish-language printed text was published in Wrocław by Głogów-born Kasper Elyan, who is regarded as the first Polish printer.[38] Burial sites of Polish monarchs are located in Wrocław, Trzebnica and Legnica.

 
Polish city names in Silesia; from a 1750 Prussian official document published in Berlin during the Silesian Wars.[39]

Piast dukes continued to rule Silesia following the 12th-century fragmentation of Poland. The Silesian Piasts retained power in most of the region until the early 16th century, the last (George William, duke of Legnica) dying in 1675. Some Lower Silesian duchies were also under the rule of Polish Jagiellons (Głogów) and Sobieskis (Oława), and part of Upper Silesia, the Duchy of Opole, found itself back under Polish rule in the mid-17th century, when the Habsburgs pawned the duchy to the Polish Vasas. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Wrocław, established in 1000 as one of Poland's oldest dioceses, remained a suffragan of the Archbishopric of Gniezno until 1821.

The first German colonists arrived in the late 12th century, and large-scale German settlement started in the early 13th century during the reign of Henry I[40] (Duke of Silesia from 1201 to 1238). After the era of German colonisation, the Polish language still predominated in Upper Silesia and in parts of Lower and Middle Silesia north of the Odra river. Here the Germans who arrived during the Middle Ages became mostly Polonized; Germans dominated in large cities and Poles mostly in rural areas. The Polish-speaking territories of Lower and Middle Silesia, commonly described until the end of the 19th century as the Polish side, were mostly Germanized in the 18th and 19th centuries, except for some areas along the northeastern frontier.[41][42] The province came under the control of Kingdom of Bohemia in the 14th century and was briefly under Hungarian rule in the 15th century. Silesia passed to the Habsburg monarchy of Austria in 1526, and Prussia's Frederick the Great conquered most of it in 1742. A part of Upper Silesia became part of Poland after World War I and the Silesian Uprisings, but the bulk of Silesia formed part of the post-1945 Recovered Territories.

Warmia and Masuria

 
Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights/Ducal Prussia as a feudal fief of the Polish Crown (1466–1657). Warmia was directly incorporated to the Polish state until the First Partition of Poland (1772)
 
Location of southern East Prussia (orange) and of the other "Recovered Territories" (green)

The territories of Warmia and Masuria were originally inhabited by pagan Old Prussians, until the conquest by the Teutonic Knights in the 13th and 14th centuries. In order to repopulate the conquered areas, Poles from neighboring Masovia, called Masurians (Mazurzy), were allowed to settle here (hence the name Masuria). During an uprising against the Teutonic Order most towns of the region joined or sided with the Prussian Confederation, at the request of which King Casimir IV Jagiellon signed the act of incorporation of the region into the Kingdom of Poland (1454). After the Second Peace of Thorn (1466) Warmia was confirmed to be incorporated to Poland, while Masuria became part of a Polish fief, first as part of the Teutonic state, and from 1525 as part of the secular Ducal Prussia. Then it would become one of the leading centers of Polish Lutheranism, while Warmia, under the administration of prince-bishops remained one of the most overwhelmingly Catholic regions of Poland.

Polish suzerainty over Masuria ended in 1657/1660 as a result of the Deluge and Warmia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the First Partition of Poland (1772). Both regions formed the southern part of the province of East Prussia, established in 1773.

All of Warmia and most of Masuria remained part of Germany after World War I and the re-establishment of independent Poland. During the 1920 East Prussian Plebiscite, the districts east of the Vistula within the region of Marienwerder (Kwidzyn), along with all of the Allenstein Region (Olsztyn) and the district of Oletzko voted to be included within the province of East Prussia and thus became part of Weimar Germany. All of the region as the southern part of the province of East Prussia became part of Poland after World War II, with northern East Prussia going to the Soviet Union to form the Kaliningrad Oblast.

Polish minorities already living in the Recovered Territories

 
Piast Castle in Opole before its destruction by the local German authorities between 1928 and 1930

Since the time of the Piast dynasty, which unified many of the western Slavic tribes and ruled Poland from the 10th to the 14th centuries, ethnic Poles continued to live in these territories under foreign rule, including Bohemian, Hungarian, Austrian, Prussian, and from 1871 German, this despite the Germanization process (Ostsiedlung), which began in the 13th century with the arrival of German, Dutch and Flemish colonists to Silesia and Pomerania at the behest of the feudal Silesian Piasts and the House of Griffins.[43] Likewise, in the 14th, 15th and 16th century many Polish settlers from Mazovia migrated into the southern portions of the Duchy of Prussia.[44]

 
The former headquarters of the pre-war Polish newspaper Gazeta Olsztyńska in Olsztyn, destroyed under Nazi rule in 1939,[45] rebuilt in 1989

Before the outbreak of war, regions of Masuria, Warmia and Upper Silesia still contained significant ethnic Polish populations, and in many areas the Poles constituted a majority of the inhabitants.[46] According to the 1939 Nazi German census, the territories were inhabited by 8,855,000 people, including a Polish minority in the territories' easternmost parts.[47] However these data, concerning ethnic minorities, that came from the census conducted during the reign of the NSDAP (Nazi Party) is usually not considered by historians and demographers as trustworthy but as drastically falsified.[48] Therefore, while this German census placed the number of Polish-speakers and bilinguals below 700,000 people, Polish demographers have estimated that the actual number of Poles in the former German East was between 1.2[47] and 1.3 million.[49] In the 1.2 million figure, approximately 850,000 were estimated for the Upper Silesian regions, 350,000 for southern East Prussia and 50,000 for the rest of the territories.[47]

Under German rule, these communities faced discrimination and oppression.[citation needed] In 1924, an association of national minorities was founded in Germany, also representing the Polish minority. Jan Baczewski from Warmia, member of the Landtag of Prussia, initiated a law allowing the founding of schools for national minorities.[50] In 1938, the Nazi government changed thousands of place-names (especially of cities and villages) of Polish origin to newly invented German place-names; about 50% of the existing names were changed in that year alone.[51] Also, undercover operatives were sent to spy on Polish communities. Information was gathered on who sent their children to Polish schools, or bought Polish books and newspapers. Polish schools, printing presses, headquarters of Polish institutions as well as private homes and shops owned by Poles were routinely attacked by members of the Schutzstaffel (SS).[52] Although, thousands of Poles forcefully or voluntary migrated to this lands during World War II.

Also, small isolated enclaves of ethnic Poles could be found in Pomerania, Lubusz Land and Lower Silesia. These included scattered villages which remained ethnically Polish and large cities such as Wrocław (Breslau), Szczecin (Stettin) and Zielona Góra (Grünberg in Schlesien) which contained small Polish communities.[53][54][55]

Origin of the post-war population according to 1950 census

During the Polish post-war census of December 1950, data about the pre-war places of residence of the inhabitants as of August 1939 was collected. In case of children born between September 1939 and December 1950, their place of residence was reported based on the pre-war places of residence of their mothers. Thanks to this data it is possible to reconstruct the pre-war geographical origin of the post-war population. Many areas located near the pre-war German border were resettled by people from neighbouring borderland areas of pre-war Poland. For example, Kashubians from pre-war Polish Corridor settled in nearby areas of German Pomerania adjacent to Polish Pomerania. People from Poznań region of pre-war Poland settled in East Brandenburg. People from East Upper Silesia moved into the rest of Silesia. And people from Masovia and from Sudovia moved into adjacent Masuria. Poles expelled from former Polish territories in the east (today mainly parts of Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania) settled in large numbers everywhere in the Recovered Territories (but many of them also settled in central Poland).

Origin of settlers and the number of autochthons in the Recovered Territories in 1950 (county data grouped based on pre-1939 administrative borders)[56]
Region (within 1939 borders): West Upper Silesia Lower Silesia East Brandenburg West Pomerania Free City Danzig South East Prussia Total
Autochthons (1939 DE/FCD citizens) 789,716 120,885 14,809 70,209 35,311 134,702 1,165,632
Polish expellees from Kresy (USSR) 232,785 696,739 187,298 250,091 55,599 172,480 1,594,992
Poles from abroad except the USSR 24,772 91,395 10,943 18,607 2,213 5,734 153,664
Resettlers from the City of Warsaw 11,333 61,862 8,600 37,285 19,322 22,418 160,820
From Warsaw region (Masovia) 7,019 69,120 16,926 73,936 22,574 158,953 348,528
From Białystok region and Sudovia 2,229 23,515 3,772 16,081 7,638 102,634 155,869
From pre-war Polish Pomerania 5,444 54,564 19,191 145,854 72,847 83,921 381,821
Resettlers from Poznań region 8,936 172,163 88,427 81,215 10,371 7,371 368,483
Katowice region (East Upper Silesia) 91,011 66,362 4,725 11,869 2,982 2,536 179,485
Resettlers from the City of Łódź 1,250 16,483 2,377 8,344 2,850 1,666 32,970
Resettlers from Łódź region 13,046 96,185 22,954 76,128 7,465 6,919 222,697
Resettlers from Kielce region 16,707 141,748 14,203 78,340 16,252 20,878 288,128
Resettlers from Lublin region 7,600 70,622 19,250 81,167 19,002 60,313 257,954
Resettlers from Kraków region 60,987 156,920 12,587 18,237 5,278 5,515 259,524
Resettlers from Rzeszów region 23,577 110,188 13,147 57,965 6,200 47,626 258,703
place of residence in 1939 unknown 36,834 26,586 5,720 17,891 6,559 13,629 107,219
Total pop. in December 1950 1,333,246 1,975,337 444,929 1,043,219 292,463 847,295 5,936,489

Polonization of the Recovered Territories

 
Polish soldiers marking the new Polish-German border in 1945

The People's Republic had to locate its population inside the new frontiers in order to solidify the hold over the territories.[12] With the Kresy annexed by the Soviet Union, Poland was effectively moved westwards and its area reduced by almost 20% (from 389,000 to 312,000 km2 (150,194 to 120,464 sq mi)).[57] Millions of non-Poles – mainly Germans from the Recovered Territories, as well as some Ukrainians in the east – were to be expelled from the new Poland, while large numbers of Poles needed to be resettled having been expelled from the Kresy. The expellees were termed "repatriates".[12] The result was the largest exchange of population in European history.[12]

The picture of the new western and northern territories being recovered Piast territory was used to forge Polish settlers and "repatriates" arriving there into a coherent community loyal to the new regime,[58] and to justify the removal of the German inhabitants.[12] Largely excepted from the expulsions of Germans were the "autochthons", close to three million ethnically Polish/Slavic inhabitants of Masuria (Masurs), Pomerania (Kashubians, Slovincians) and Upper Silesia (Silesians). The Polish government aimed to retain as many autochthons as possible, as their presence on former German territory was used to indicate the intrinsic "Polishness" of the area and justify its incorporation into the Polish state as "recovered" territories.[59] "Verification" and "national rehabilitation" processes were set up to reveal a "dormant Polishness" and determine who was redeemable as a Polish citizen. Few were actually expelled.[59] The "autochthons" not only disliked the subjective and often arbitrary verification process, but they also faced discrimination even after completing it,[60] such as the Polonization of their names.[61] In the Lubusz region (former East Brandenburg), the local authorities conceded already in 1948 that what the PZZ claimed to be a recovered "autochton" Polish population were in fact Germanized migrant workers, who had settled in the region in the late 19th and early 20th centuries – with the exception of one village, Babimost, just across the pre-war border.[62]

Great efforts were made to propagate the view of the Piast Concept. It was actively supported by the Catholic Church.[63] The sciences were responsible for the development of this perception of history. In 1945 the Western Institute (Polish: Instytut Zachodni) was founded to coordinate the scientific activities. Its director, Zygmunt Wojciechowski, characterized his mission as an effort to present the Polish history of the region, and project current Polish reality of these countries upon a historical background.[64] Historical scientists, archaeologists, linguists, art historians and ethnologists worked in an interdisciplinary effort to legitimize the new borders.[65] Their findings were popularised in monographs, periodicals, schoolbooks, travel guides, broadcasts and exhibitions.[66] Official maps were drawn showing that the Polish frontiers under the first known Piast princes matched the new ones.[12] According to Norman Davies, the young post-war generation received education informing them that the boundaries of the People's Republic were the same as those on which the Polish nation had developed for centuries. Furthermore, they were instructed that the Polish "Motherland" has always been in the same location, even when "occupied" for long periods of time by foreigners or as political boundaries shifted.[23] Because the Recovered Territories had been under German and Prussian rule for many centuries, many events of this history were perceived as part of "foreign" rather than "local" history in post-war Poland.[67] Polish scholars thus concentrated on the Polish aspects of the territories: medieval Piast history of the region, the cultural, political and economic bonds to Poland, the history of the Polish-speaking population in Prussia and the "Drang nach Osten" as a historical constant since the Middle Ages.[65]

Removal of Germans and traces of German habitation

 
The baroque interior of the Lubiąż abbey was removed and transferred to Stężyca, in eastern Poland in order to replace church stalls destroyed by the Germans.

The Communist authorities of the Polish People's Republic and some Polish citizens desired to erase all traces of German rule.[68] The "Recovered Territories" after the transfer still contained a substantial German population. The Polish administration set up a "Ministry for the Recovered Territories", headed by the then deputy prime minister Władysław Gomułka.[69] A "Bureau for Repatriation" was to supervise and organize the expulsions and resettlements. According to the national census of 14 February 1946, the population of Poland still included 2,288,300 Germans, of which 2,036,439—nearly 89 per cent—lived in the Recovered Territories. By this stage Germans still constituted more than 42 per cent of the inhabitants of these regions, since their total population according to the 1946 census was 4,822,075.[70] However, by 1950 there were only 200,000 Germans remaining in Poland, and by 1957 that number fell to 65,000.[71] While the estimates of how many Germans remained vary, a constant German exodus took place even after the expulsions. Between 1956 and 1985, 407,000 people from Silesia and about 100,000 from Warmia-Masuria declared German nationality and left for Germany. In the early 1990s, after the Polish Communist regime had collapsed 300,000-350,000 people declared themselves German.[47]

The flight and expulsion of the remaining Germans in the first post-war years presaged a broader campaign to remove signs of former German rule.[72]

More than 30,000 German placenames were replaced with Polish[73] or Polonized medieval Slavic ones.[74][75] Previous Slavic and Polish names used before German settlements had been established; in the cases when one was absent either the German name was translated or new names were invented.[76] In January 1946, a Committee for Settling of Place Names was set up to assign new official toponyms.[77] The German language was banned from public schools, government media and church services.[73][75] Many German monuments, graveyards, buildings or entire ensembles of buildings were demolished.[78] Objects of art were moved to other parts of the country.[79] German inscriptions were erased, including those on religious objects, in churches and in cemeteries.[72] In Ziemia Lubuska "Socialist competitions" were organized to search and destroy final German traces.[72]

Historian John Kulczycki argues that the Communist authorities discovered that forging an ethnically homogeneous Poland in the Recovered Territories was quite complicated, for it was difficult to differentiate German speakers who were "really" Polish and those who were not. The government used criteria that involved explicit links to Polish ethnicity, as well the person's conduct. Local verification commissions had wide latitude in determining who was or was not Polish and should remain. Their decisions were based on the nationalist assumption that an individual's national identity is a lifetime "ascriptive" characteristic acquired at birth and not easily changed. However people who "betrayed" their Polish heritage by their political words or actions were excluded from the Polish nation. Everyone else was labelled as "Polish" and had to remain in their "native" land – even if they wanted to emigrate to Germany.[80]

Resettlement of the Territories

 
Mămăligă is a dish which was very popular with Poles in East Galicia. People from these areas who resettled in the Recovered Territories brought this and other culinary traditions with them to their new homes.

People from all over Poland quickly moved in to replace the former German population in a process parallel to the expulsions, with the first settlers arriving in March 1945.[81] These settlers took over farms and villages close to the pre-war frontier while the Red Army was still advancing.[81] In addition to the settlers, other Poles went for "szaber" or looting expeditions, soon affecting all former eastern territories of Germany.[81] On 30 March 1945, the Gdańsk Voivodeship was established as the first administrative Polish unit in the "recovered" territories.[82] While the Germans were interned and expelled, close to 5 million settlers[83][84] were either attracted or forced to settle the areas between 1945 and 1950. An additional 1,104,000 people had declared Polish nationality and were allowed to stay (851,000 of those in Upper Silesia), bringing up the number of Poles to 5,894,600 as of 1950.[47] The settlers can be grouped according to their background:

  • settlers from Central Poland moving voluntarily (the majority)[83]
  • Poles that had been freed from forced labor in Nazi Germany (up to two million)[83][85]
  • so-called "repatriants": Poles expelled from the areas east of the new Polish-Soviet border were preferably settled in the new western territories, where they made up 26% of the population (up to two million)[83][85]
  • non-Poles forcibly resettled during the Operation Vistula in 1947. Large numbers of Ukrainians were forced to move from south-eastern Poland under a 1947 Polish government operation aimed at dispersing, and therefore assimilating, those Ukrainians who had not been expelled eastward already, throughout the newly acquired territories. Belarusians living around the area around Białystok were also pressured into relocating to the formerly German areas for the same reasons. This scattering of members of non-Polish ethnic groups throughout the country was an attempt by the Polish authorities to dissolve the unique ethnic identity of groups like the Ukrainians, Belarusians and Lemkos,[86] and broke the proximity and communication necessary for strong communities to form.
  • Tens of thousands of Jewish Holocaust-survivors, most of them "repatriates" from the East, settled mostly in Lower Silesia, creating Jewish cooperatives and institutions – the largest communities were founded in Wrocław (Breslau, Lower Silesia), Szczecin (Stettin, Pomerania) and Wałbrzych (Waldenburg, Lower Silesia).[87] However most of them left Poland in 1968 due to the Polish 1968 political crisis.[88]
  • Greeks and Macedonians, refugees of the Greek Civil War (around 10,000 people)[5]
 
"The 10th stage, Zgorzelec to Wrocław, leads you through primeval Polish lands." Photograph from the June 1955 Peace Race

Polish and Soviet newspapers and officials encouraged Poles to relocate to the west – "the land of opportunity".[83] These new territories were described as a place where opulent villas abandoned by fleeing Germans waited for the brave; fully furnished houses and businesses were available for the taking. In fact, the areas were devastated by the war, the infrastructure largely destroyed, suffering high crime rates and looting by gangs. It took years for civil order to be established.

In 1970, the Polish population of the Northern and Western territories for the first time caught up to the pre-war population level (8,711,900 in 1970 vs 8,855,000 in 1939). In the same year, the population of the other Polish areas also reached its pre-war level (23,930,100 in 1970 vs 23,483,000 in 1939).[47]

Today the population of the territories is predominantly Polish, although a small German minority still exists in a few places, including Olsztyn, Masuria, and Upper Silesia, particularly in Opole Voivodeship (the area of Opole, Strzelce Opolskie, Prudnik, Kędzierzyn-Koźle and Krapkowice).[89]

Role of the Recovered Territories in the Communists' rise to power

 
Władysław Gomułka (center), minister in the Polish People's Republic who oversaw the integration and development of the Recovered Territories between 1945 and 1948

The Communist government, not democratically legitimized, sought to legitimize itself through anti-German propaganda.[69] The German "revanchism" was played up as a permanent German threat, with the Communists being the only guarantors and defenders of Poland's continued possession of the "Recovered Territories". Gomułka asserted that:

The western territories are one of the reasons the government has the support of the people. This neutralizes various elements and brings people together. Westward expansion and agricultural reform will bind the nation with the state. Any retreat would weaken our domestic position.[73][90]

The redistribution of "ownerless property" among the people by the regime brought it broad-based popular sympathy.[73]

After the Second World War, the Soviet Union annexed the Polish territory of the Kresy—located east of the Curzon line—and encouraged or forced ethnic minorities in these parts of Poland, including ethnic Poles, to move west. In the framework of the campaign, Soviets exhibited posters in public places with messages such as,[91]

Western territories. Eldorado. In bloody battles, the Polish soldier has liberated very old Polish territories. Polish territory for Poland. 5,000 lorries are available to bring settlers to the west.

Legal status of the territories

 
Municipal House of Culture in Zgorzelec, place of signing of the Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950

During the Cold War the official position in the First World was that the concluding document of the Potsdam Conference was not an international treaty, but a mere memorandum.[citation needed] It regulated the issue of the German eastern border, which was to be the Oder-Neisse line, but the final article of the memorandum said that the final status of the German state and therefore its territories were subject to a separate peace treaty between Germany and the Allies of World War II. During the period from 1945 to 1990 two treaties between Poland and both East and West Germany were signed concerning the German-Polish border. In 1950 the German Democratic Republic and the People's Republic of Poland signed the Treaty of Zgorzelec, recognizing the Oder-Neisse line, officially designated by the Communists as the "Border of Peace and Friendship".[92] On 7 December 1970 the Treaty of Warsaw between the Federal Republic of Germany and Poland was signed concerning the Polish western border. Both sides committed themselves to nonviolence and accepted the existing de facto border—the Oder-Neisse line. However a final treaty was not signed until 1990 as the "Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany".

 
Boundary stones of Germany and Poland in the Ueckermünde Heath

Until the Treaty on the Final Settlement, the West German government regarded the status of the German territories east of the Oder-Neisse rivers as that of areas "temporarily under Polish or Soviet administration". To facilitate wide international acceptance of German reunification in 1990, the German political establishment recognized the "facts on the ground" and accepted the clauses in the Treaty on the Final Settlement whereby Germany renounced all claims to territory east of the Oder-Neisse line. This allowed the treaty to be negotiated quickly and for unification of democratic West Germany and socialist East Germany to go ahead quickly.

In accordance with a duty imposed on Germany by the Treaty on the Final Settlement, in the same year, 1990, Germany signed a separate treaty with Poland, the German-Polish Border Treaty, confirming the two countries' present borders.

The signature and ratification of the border treaty between Germany and Poland formalized in international law the recognition of the existing border and put an end to all qualified German claims.

See also

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recovered, territories, territories, acquired, prussia, 18th, century, western, borderlands, regained, lands, polish, ziemie, odzyskane, also, known, western, borderlands, polish, kresy, zachodnie, previously, western, northern, territories, polish, ziemie, za. For territories acquired by Prussia in 18th century see Western Borderlands The Recovered Territories or Regained Lands Polish Ziemie Odzyskane also known as the Western Borderlands Polish Kresy Zachodnie and previously as the Western and Northern Territories Polish Ziemie Zachodnie i Polnocne Postulated Territories Polish Ziemie Postulowane and Returning Territories Polish Ziemie Powracajace are the former eastern territories of Germany and the Free City of Danzig that became part of Poland after World War II at which time most of their German inhabitants were forcibly deported 1 2 The rationale for the term Recovered was that these territories formed part of the Polish state and were lost by Poland in different periods over the centuries 3 It also referred to the Piast Concept that these territories were part of the traditional Polish homeland under the Piast dynasty after the establishment of the state in the Middle Ages Over the centuries however they had become predominantly German speaking through the processes of German eastward settlement Ostsiedlung political expansion Drang nach Osten as well as language shift due to Germanisation of the local Polish Slavic and Baltic Prussian population 4 Therefore aside from certain regions such as West Upper Silesia Warmia and Masuria as of 1945 most of these territories did not contain sizeable Polish speaking communities Map showing Poland s borders pre 1938 and post 1945 The Eastern Borderlands is in gray while the Recovered Territories are in pink While most regions had long periods of Polish rule spanning hundreds of years some were controlled by Polish dukes and kings for short periods of up to several decades at a time Various regions when not under Polish rule were in different times under the authority of the Bohemian Czech Kingdom Hungary Austria Sweden Denmark Brandenburg Prussia and Germany Many areas were also part of various Polish ruled duchies created as a result of the fragmentation of Poland which began in the 12th century The great majority of the previous inhabitants either fled from the territories during the later stages of the war or were expelled by the Soviet and Polish communist authorities after the war ended although a small German minority remains in some places The territories were resettled with Poles who moved from central Poland Polish repatriates forced to leave areas of former eastern Poland that had been annexed by the Soviet Union Poles freed from forced labour in Nazi Germany with Ukrainians forcibly resettled under Operation Vistula and other minorities which settled in post war Poland including Greeks and Macedonians 5 However contrary to the official declaration that the former German inhabitants of the Recovered Territories had to be removed quickly to house Poles displaced by the Soviet annexation the Recovered Territories initially faced a severe population shortage 6 The Soviet appointed communist authorities that conducted the resettlement also made efforts to remove many traces of German culture such as place names and historic inscriptions on buildings The post war border between Germany and Poland the Oder Neisse line was recognized by East Germany in 1950 and by West Germany in 1970 and was affirmed by the re united Germany in the German Polish Border Treaty of 1990 Contents 1 Origin and use of the term 2 History before 1945 2 1 Pomerania 2 1 1 Gdansk Lebork and Bytow 2 2 Lubusz Land and parts of Greater Poland 2 3 Silesia 2 4 Warmia and Masuria 3 Polish minorities already living in the Recovered Territories 4 Origin of the post war population according to 1950 census 5 Polonization of the Recovered Territories 5 1 Removal of Germans and traces of German habitation 5 2 Resettlement of the Territories 6 Role of the Recovered Territories in the Communists rise to power 7 Legal status of the territories 8 See also 9 ReferencesOrigin and use of the term Edit History of Brandenburg and PrussiaNorthern March 965 983 Old Prussians pre 13th centuryLutician federation 983 12th centuryMargraviate of Brandenburg 1157 1618 1806 HRE Bohemia 1373 1415 Teutonic Order 1224 1525 Polish fief 1466 1525 Elector of Brandenburg1356 1806 Duchy of Prussia1525 1618 1701 Polish fief 1525 1657 Malbork Voivodeship and Prince Bishopric of Warmia within Royal Polish Prussia Poland 1454 1466 1772 Brandenburg Prussia1618 1701Kingdom of Prussia 1701 1918Free State of Prussia Germany 1918 1947 Klaipeda Region Lithuania 1920 1939 1945 present Dzialdowo area Poland 1918 present Warmia Masuria Powisle within Recovered Territories Poland 1945 present Berlin and Brandenburg Germany 1947 1952 1990 present Kaliningrad Oblast Russia 1945 present Polish nationalist propaganda from the 1930s Nie jestesmy tu od wczoraj Siegalismy daleko na zachod We are not here since yesterday Once we reached far west The term Recovered Territories was officially used for the first time in the Decree of the President of the Republic of 11 October 1938 after the annexation of Zaolzie by the Polish army 7 It became the official term 8 coined in the aftermath of World War II to denote the former eastern territories of Germany that were being handed over to Poland pending a final peace conference with Germany which eventually never took place 9 The term Recovered Territories is a collective term for different areas with different histories which can be grouped into three categories Those that once had been part of the Polish state during the rule of the Piasts many of which later on had been part of various Piast Griffin Jagiellon and Sobieski ruled duchies some up to the 17th and 18th century although often under foreign suzerainty Those that had been part of Poland until the 17th century northernmost part of Greater Poland including Czaplinek or were under Polish suzerainty as fiefs in the 15th 16th and 17th centuries southern Ducal Prussia and the Duchy of Opole which also falls into the category above Territories that had been part of Poland until the Partitions Warmia Malbork Voivodeship parts of Pomerelia northern Greater Poland including Pila Walcz and Zlotow which were annexed by Prussia in the First Partition of 1772 and Gdansk and western parts of Greater Poland including Miedzyrzecz and Wschowa which followed in the Second Partition of 1793 The underlying concept was to define post war Poland as heir to the medieval Piasts realm 10 11 12 which was simplified into a picture of an ethnically homogeneous state that matched post war borders 13 as opposed to the later Jagiellon Poland which was multi ethnic and located further east 14 The argument that this territory in fact constituted old Polish lands 15 16 seized on a pre war concept developed by Polish right wing circles attached to the SN 17 One reason for post war Poland s favoring a Piast rather than a Jagiellon tradition was Joseph Stalin s refusal to withdraw from the Curzon line and the Allies readiness to satisfy Poland with German territory instead 18 The original argument for awarding formerly German territory to Poland compensation was complemented by the argument that this territory in fact constituted former areas of Poland 15 17 19 20 Dmitrow says that in official justifications for the border shift the decisive argument that it presented a compensation for the loss of the eastern half of the pre war Polish territory to the USSR was viewed as obnoxious and concealed Instead a historical argumentation was foregrounded with the dogma Poland had just returned to ancient Piast lands 17 Objections to the Allies decisions and criticism of the Polish politicians role at Potsdam were censored 17 In a commentary for Tribune George Orwell likened the transfer of German population to transferring the whole of the Irish and Scottish population 21 Also the Piasts were perceived to have defended Poland against the Germans while the Jagiellons main rival had been the growing Duchy of Moscow making them a less suitable basis for post war Poland s Soviet dominated situation 18 20 The People s Republic of Poland under the Polish Workers Party thus supported the idea of Poland based on old Piast lands 18 19 The question of the Recovered Territories was one of the few issues that did not divide the Polish Communists and their opposition and there was unanimity regarding the western border Even the underground anti Communist press called for the Piast borders that would end Germanisation and Drang nach Osten 22 The official view was that the Poles had always had the inalienable and inevitable right to inhabit the Recovered Territories even if prevented from doing so by foreign powers 23 Furthermore the Piast concept was used to persuade the Allied Powers who found it difficult to define a Polish ethnographic territory to assume that it would be an intolerable injustice to not give the territories back 12 US Department of State demographics map from 10 January 1945 Germany Poland Proposed Territorial Changes By 1949 the term Recovered Territories had been dropped from Polish communist propaganda but it is still used occasionally in common language 24 On the grounds that those areas should not be regarded as unique territories within the Polish state the authorities began to refer to them instead as the Western and Northern Lands 24 25 Wolff and Cordell say that along with the debunking of communist historiography the recovered territories thesis has been discarded and that it is freely admitted in some circles that on the whole the recovered territories had a wholly German character but that this view has not necessarily been transmitted to the whole of Polish society 26 The term was also used outside Poland In 1962 Pope John XXIII referred to those territories as the western lands after centuries recovered and did not revise his statement even under pressure of the German embassy The term is still sometimes considered useful due to the Polish existence in those lands that was still visible in 1945 by some prominent scholars such as Krzysztof Kwasniewski 27 History before 1945 EditFurther information History of Poland Early Piast Poland at the death of Mieszko I in 992 who is considered as the first historical ruler of Poland and the creator of the Polish state after his realm was recognized by the papacy Several different West Slavic tribes inhabited most of the area of present day Poland from the 6th century Duke Mieszko I of the Polans from his stronghold in the Gniezno area united various neighboring tribes in the second half of the 10th century forming the first Polish state and becoming the first historically recorded Piast duke His realm roughly included all of the area of what would later be named the Recovered Territories except for the Warmian Masurian part of Old Prussia and eastern Lusatia Map published in 1917 in the United States showing Poland at the death of Boleslaw III in 1138 Mieszko s son and successor Duke Boleslaw I Chrobry upon the 1018 Peace of Bautzen expanded the southern part of the realm but lost control over the lands of Western Pomerania on the Baltic coast After fragmentation pagan revolts and a Bohemian invasion in the 1030s Duke Casimir I the Restorer reigned 1040 1058 again united most of the former Piast realm including Silesia and Lubusz Land on both sides of the middle Oder River but without Western Pomerania which became part of the Polish state again under Boleslaw III Wrymouth from 1116 until 1121 when the noble House of Griffins established the Duchy of Pomerania On Boleslaw s death in 1138 Poland for almost 200 years was subjected to fragmentation being ruled by Boleslaw s sons and by their successors who were often in conflict with each other Wladyslaw I the Elbow high crowned King of Poland in 1320 achieved partial reunification although the Silesian and Masovian duchies remained independent Piast holdings In the course of the 12th to 14th centuries Germanic Dutch and Flemish settlers moved into East Central and Eastern Europe in a migration process known as the Ostsiedlung In Pomerania Brandenburg Prussia and Silesia the indigenous West Slav Polabian Slavs and Poles or Balt population became minorities in the course of the following centuries although substantial numbers of the original inhabitants remained in areas such as Upper Silesia In Greater Poland and in Eastern Pomerania Pomerelia German settlers formed a minority Despite the loss of several provinces medieval lawyers of the Kingdom of Poland created a specific claim to all formerly Polish provinces that were not reunited with the rest of the country in 1320 They built on the theory of the Corona Regni Poloniae according to which the state the Crown and its interests were no longer strictly connected with the person of the monarch Because of that no monarch could effectively renounce Crown claims to any of the territories that were historically and or ethnically Polish Those claims were reserved for the state the Crown which in theory still covered all of the territories that were part of or dependent on the Polish Crown upon the death of Boleslaw III in 1138 This concept was also developed to prevent from loss of territory after the death of King Casimir III the Great in 1370 when Louis I of Hungary who ruled Hungary with absolute power was crowned King of Poland In the 14th century Hungary was one of the greatest powers of Central Europe and its influence reached various Balkan principalities and southern Italy Naples Poland in personal union with Hungary was the smaller politically weaker and peripheral country In the Privilege of Koszyce 1374 King Louis I guaranteed that he would not detach any lands from the Polish Kingdom 28 The concept was not new as it was inspired by similar Bohemian Czech laws Corona regni Bohemiae Some of the territories such as Pomerelia and Masovia reunited with Poland during the 15th and 16th centuries However all Polish monarchs until the end of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795 had to promise to do everything possible to reunite the rest of those territories with the Crown 29 Many significant events in Polish history are associated with these territories including the victorious battles of Cedynia 972 Niemcza 1017 Psie Pole and Glogow 1109 Grunwald 1410 Oliwa 1627 the lost battles of Legnica 1241 and Westerplatte 1939 the life and work of astronomers Nicolaus Copernicus 16th century and Johannes Hevelius 17th century the creation of the oldest Polish language texts and printings Middle Ages and the Renaissance era the creation of the standards and patterns of the Polish literary language Renaissance era Polish maritime history the establishment of one of the first Catholic dioceses in Poland in the Middle Ages in Wroclaw and Kolobrzeg as well as the Polish Reformation in the Renaissance era Significant figures were born or lived in these territories Astronomer Jan of Glogow and scholar Laurentius Corvinus who were teachers of Nicolaus Copernicus at the University of Krakow both hailed from Lower Silesia Jan Dantyszek Renaissance poet and diplomat named the Father of Polish Diplomacy and Marcin Kromer Renaissance cartographer diplomat historian music theoretician were bishops of Warmia The leading figures of the Polish Enlightenment are connected with these lands philosopher geologist writer poet translator statesman Stanislaw Staszic and great patron of arts writer linguist statesman and candidate for the Polish crown Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski were both born in these territories Ignacy Krasicki author of the first Polish novel playwright nicknamed the Prince of Polish Poets lived in Warmia in his adulthood and brothers Jozef Andrzej Zaluski and Andrzej Stanislaw Zaluski founders of the Zaluski Library in Warsaw one of the largest 18th century book collections in the world grew up and studied in these territories Also painters Daniel Schultz Tadeusz Kuntze and Antoni Blank as well as composers Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki and Feliks Nowowiejski were born in these lands By the time that Poland regained her independence in 1918 Polish activist Dr Jozef Frejlich was already claiming that the lands situated on the right bank of the Oder river including inner industrial cities such as Wroclaw and Baltic ports such as Szczecin and Gdansk were economic parts of Poland that had to be united with the rest of the economic territory of Poland 30 into a united and independent state as a fundamental condition of the economic revival of Poland after World War I 31 After the successful Greater Poland uprising the cession of Pomerelia to Poland following the Treaty of Versailles and the Silesian Uprisings that allowed Poland to obtain a large portion of Upper Silesia the territorial claims of the Second Polish Republic were directed towards the rest of partially Polish speaking Upper Silesia and Masuria under German control as well as the city of Danzig the Czechoslovakian part of Cieszyn Silesia and other bordering areas with significant Polish population The Polish population of these lands was subject to Germanisation and intensified repressions especially after the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933 Most of long Germanized Lower Silesia Farther Pomerania and Eastern Prussia remained undisputed 32 However in reaction to Hitler s Germany threats to Poland shortly before the outbreak of World War II Polish nationalists displayed maps of Poland including those ancient Polish territories as well claiming their intention to recover them In the interwar period the German administration even before the Nazis took power conducted a massive campaign of renaming of thousands of placenames to remove traces of Slavic origin Pomerania Edit Main article History of Pomerania Location of the annexed part orange of the Province of Pomerania and of the other Recovered Territories green Castle of the Dukes of Pomerania in Szczecin The Pomeranian Western Pomeranian parts of the Recovered Territories came under Polish rule several times from the late 10th century on when Mieszko I acquired at least significant parts of them Mieszko s son Boleslaw I established a bishopric in the Kolobrzeg area in 1000 1005 07 before the area was lost again Despite further attempts by Polish dukes to again control the Pomeranian tribes this was only partly achieved by Boleslaw III in several campaigns lasting from 1116 to 1121 Successful Christian missions ensued in 1124 and 1128 however by the time of Boleslaw s death in 1138 most of West Pomerania the Griffin ruled areas was no longer controlled by Poland Shortly after the Griffin Duke of Pomerania Boguslav I achieved the integration of Pomerania into the Holy Roman Empire The easternmost part of later Western Pomerania including the city of Slupsk in the 13th century was part of Eastern Pomerania which was re integrated with Poland and later on in the 14th and 15th centuries formed a duchy which rulers were vassals of Jagiellon ruled Poland Over the following centuries Western Pomerania was largely Germanized although a small Slavic Polabian minority remained Indigenous Slavs and Poles faced discrimination from the arriving Germans who on a local level since the 16th century imposed discriminatory regulations such as bans on buying goods from Slavs Poles or prohibiting them from becoming members of craft guilds 33 The Duchy of Pomerania under the native Griffin dynasty existed for over 500 years before it was partitioned between Sweden and Brandenburg Prussia in the 17th century At the turn of the 20th century there lived about 14 200 persons of Polish mother tongue in the Province of Pomerania in the east of Farther Pomerania in the vicinity of the border with the province of West Prussia and 300 persons using the Kashubian language at the Leba Lake and the Lake Gardno the total population of the province consisting of almost 1 7 million inhabitants The Polish communities in many cities of the region such as Szczecin and Kolobrzeg faced intensified repressions after the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933 Gdansk Lebork and Bytow Edit Further information History of Gdansk and Lauenburg and Butow Land Gdansk was a principal seaport of Poland since the Middle Ages From the mid 15th to the early 18th century it was the largest city of Poland Lost by Poland in the Second Partition in 1793 Location of the former Free City of Danzig orange and of the other Recovered Territories green The region of Pomerelia at the eastern end of Pomerania including Gdansk Danzig was part of Poland since its first ruler Mieszko I As a result of the fragmentation of Poland it was ruled in the 12th and 13th centuries by the Samborides who were at least initially more closely tied to the Kingdom of Poland than were the Griffins After the Treaty of Kepno in 1282 and the death of the last Samboride in 1294 the region was ruled by kings of Poland for a short period although also claimed by Brandenburg After the Teutonic takeover in 1308 the region was annexed to the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights Most cities of the region joined or sided with the Prussian Confederation which in 1454 started an uprising against Teutonic rule and asked the Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon to incorporate the region to Poland After the King agreed and signed the act of incorporation the Thirteen Years War broke out ending in a Polish victory The Second Peace of Thorn 1466 made Royal Prussia a part of Poland It had a substantial autonomy and a lot of privileges It formed the Pomeranian Voivodeship located within the province of Royal Prussia in the Kingdom of Poland as it remained until being annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the partitions of 1772 and 1793 A small area in the west of Pomerelia the Lauenburg and Butow Land the region of Lebork and Bytow was granted to the rulers of Pomerania as a Polish fief before being reintegrated with Poland in 1637 and later on again transformed into a Polish fief which it remained until the First Partition when three quarters of Royal Prussia s urban population were German speaking Protestants 34 After Poland regained independence in 1918 a large part of Pomerelia was reintegrated with Poland as the so called Polish Corridor and so was not part of the post war so called Recovered Territories Lubusz Land and parts of Greater Poland Edit Main articles Lubusz Land Brandenburg and Province of Posen West Prussia Location of East Brandenburg orange and of the other Recovered Territories green A 19th century map of Piast ruled Greater Poland Lubusz Land stretched on both sides of the Oder marked in yellow northwestern parts of Greater Poland annexed by Brandenburg marked in green The medieval Lubusz Land on both sides of the Oder River up to the Spree in the west including Lubusz Lebus itself also formed part of Mieszko s realm In the period of fragmentation of Poland the Lubusz Land was in different periods part of the Greater Poland and Silesian provinces of Poland Poland lost Lubusz when the Silesian duke Boleslaw II Rogatka sold it to the Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg in 1249 The Bishopric of Lebus established by Polish Duke Boleslaw III Wrymouth remained a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Gniezno until 1424 when it passed under the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Magdeburg The Lubusz Land was part of the Lands of the Bohemian Czech Crown from 1373 to 1415 Brandenburg also acquired the castellany of Santok which formed part of the Duchy of Greater Poland from Duke Przemysl I of Greater Poland and made it the nucleus of their Neumark New March region In the following decades Brandenburg annexed further parts of northwestern Greater Poland Later on Santok was briefly recaptured by the Poles several times Of the other cities King Casimir III the Great recovered Walcz in 1368 The lost parts of Greater Poland were part of the Lands of the Bohemian Czech Crown from 1373 to 1402 when despite an agreement between the Luxembourg dynasty of Bohemia and the Jagiellons of Poland on the sale of the region to Poland it was sold to the Teutonic Order During the Polish Teutonic War 1431 35 several towns of the region rebelled against the Order to join Poland among them Choszczno Drawno and Zlocieniec 35 The present day Polish Lubusz Voivodeship comprises most of the former Brandenburgian Neumark territory east of the Oder Location of Posen West Prussia orange and of the other Recovered Territories green Birthplace of Stanislaw Staszic a leading figure of Polish Enlightenment in Pila nowadays a museum A small part of northern Greater Poland around the town of Czaplinek was lost to Brandenburg Prussia in 1668 Bigger portions of Greater Poland were lost in the Partitions of Poland the northern part with Pila and Walcz in the First Partition and the remainder including the western part with Miedzyrzecz and Wschowa in the Second Partition During Napoleonic times the Greater Poland territories formed part of the Duchy of Warsaw but after the Congress of Vienna Prussia reclaimed them as part of the Grand Duchy of Posen Poznan later Province of Posen After World War I those parts of the former Province of Posen and of West Prussia that were not restored as part of the Second Polish Republic were administered as Grenzmark Posen Westpreussen the German Province of Posen West Prussia until 1939 Silesia Edit Main article History of Silesia Location of Silesia orange in the Recovered Territories green Lower Silesia was one of the leading regions of medieval Poland Wroclaw was one of three main cities of the Medieval Polish Kingdom according to the 12th century chronicle Gesta principum Polonorum 36 Henry I the Bearded granted town rights for the first time in the history of Poland in 1211 to the Lower Silesian town of Zlotoryja The Book of Henrykow containing the oldest known written sentence in Polish was created in Lower Silesia 37 The first Polish language printed text was published in Wroclaw by Glogow born Kasper Elyan who is regarded as the first Polish printer 38 Burial sites of Polish monarchs are located in Wroclaw Trzebnica and Legnica Polish city names in Silesia from a 1750 Prussian official document published in Berlin during the Silesian Wars 39 Piast dukes continued to rule Silesia following the 12th century fragmentation of Poland The Silesian Piasts retained power in most of the region until the early 16th century the last George William duke of Legnica dying in 1675 Some Lower Silesian duchies were also under the rule of Polish Jagiellons Glogow and Sobieskis Olawa and part of Upper Silesia the Duchy of Opole found itself back under Polish rule in the mid 17th century when the Habsburgs pawned the duchy to the Polish Vasas The Roman Catholic Diocese of Wroclaw established in 1000 as one of Poland s oldest dioceses remained a suffragan of the Archbishopric of Gniezno until 1821 The first German colonists arrived in the late 12th century and large scale German settlement started in the early 13th century during the reign of Henry I 40 Duke of Silesia from 1201 to 1238 After the era of German colonisation the Polish language still predominated in Upper Silesia and in parts of Lower and Middle Silesia north of the Odra river Here the Germans who arrived during the Middle Ages became mostly Polonized Germans dominated in large cities and Poles mostly in rural areas The Polish speaking territories of Lower and Middle Silesia commonly described until the end of the 19th century as the Polish side were mostly Germanized in the 18th and 19th centuries except for some areas along the northeastern frontier 41 42 The province came under the control of Kingdom of Bohemia in the 14th century and was briefly under Hungarian rule in the 15th century Silesia passed to the Habsburg monarchy of Austria in 1526 and Prussia s Frederick the Great conquered most of it in 1742 A part of Upper Silesia became part of Poland after World War I and the Silesian Uprisings but the bulk of Silesia formed part of the post 1945 Recovered Territories Warmia and Masuria Edit Further information Prussia region and East Prussia Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights Ducal Prussia as a feudal fief of the Polish Crown 1466 1657 Warmia was directly incorporated to the Polish state until the First Partition of Poland 1772 Location of southern East Prussia orange and of the other Recovered Territories green The territories of Warmia and Masuria were originally inhabited by pagan Old Prussians until the conquest by the Teutonic Knights in the 13th and 14th centuries In order to repopulate the conquered areas Poles from neighboring Masovia called Masurians Mazurzy were allowed to settle here hence the name Masuria During an uprising against the Teutonic Order most towns of the region joined or sided with the Prussian Confederation at the request of which King Casimir IV Jagiellon signed the act of incorporation of the region into the Kingdom of Poland 1454 After the Second Peace of Thorn 1466 Warmia was confirmed to be incorporated to Poland while Masuria became part of a Polish fief first as part of the Teutonic state and from 1525 as part of the secular Ducal Prussia Then it would become one of the leading centers of Polish Lutheranism while Warmia under the administration of prince bishops remained one of the most overwhelmingly Catholic regions of Poland Polish suzerainty over Masuria ended in 1657 1660 as a result of the Deluge and Warmia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the First Partition of Poland 1772 Both regions formed the southern part of the province of East Prussia established in 1773 All of Warmia and most of Masuria remained part of Germany after World War I and the re establishment of independent Poland During the 1920 East Prussian Plebiscite the districts east of the Vistula within the region of Marienwerder Kwidzyn along with all of the Allenstein Region Olsztyn and the district of Oletzko voted to be included within the province of East Prussia and thus became part of Weimar Germany All of the region as the southern part of the province of East Prussia became part of Poland after World War II with northern East Prussia going to the Soviet Union to form the Kaliningrad Oblast Polish minorities already living in the Recovered Territories Edit Piast Castle in Opole before its destruction by the local German authorities between 1928 and 1930 Since the time of the Piast dynasty which unified many of the western Slavic tribes and ruled Poland from the 10th to the 14th centuries ethnic Poles continued to live in these territories under foreign rule including Bohemian Hungarian Austrian Prussian and from 1871 German this despite the Germanization process Ostsiedlung which began in the 13th century with the arrival of German Dutch and Flemish colonists to Silesia and Pomerania at the behest of the feudal Silesian Piasts and the House of Griffins 43 Likewise in the 14th 15th and 16th century many Polish settlers from Mazovia migrated into the southern portions of the Duchy of Prussia 44 The former headquarters of the pre war Polish newspaper Gazeta Olsztynska in Olsztyn destroyed under Nazi rule in 1939 45 rebuilt in 1989 Before the outbreak of war regions of Masuria Warmia and Upper Silesia still contained significant ethnic Polish populations and in many areas the Poles constituted a majority of the inhabitants 46 According to the 1939 Nazi German census the territories were inhabited by 8 855 000 people including a Polish minority in the territories easternmost parts 47 However these data concerning ethnic minorities that came from the census conducted during the reign of the NSDAP Nazi Party is usually not considered by historians and demographers as trustworthy but as drastically falsified 48 Therefore while this German census placed the number of Polish speakers and bilinguals below 700 000 people Polish demographers have estimated that the actual number of Poles in the former German East was between 1 2 47 and 1 3 million 49 In the 1 2 million figure approximately 850 000 were estimated for the Upper Silesian regions 350 000 for southern East Prussia and 50 000 for the rest of the territories 47 Under German rule these communities faced discrimination and oppression citation needed In 1924 an association of national minorities was founded in Germany also representing the Polish minority Jan Baczewski from Warmia member of the Landtag of Prussia initiated a law allowing the founding of schools for national minorities 50 In 1938 the Nazi government changed thousands of place names especially of cities and villages of Polish origin to newly invented German place names about 50 of the existing names were changed in that year alone 51 Also undercover operatives were sent to spy on Polish communities Information was gathered on who sent their children to Polish schools or bought Polish books and newspapers Polish schools printing presses headquarters of Polish institutions as well as private homes and shops owned by Poles were routinely attacked by members of the Schutzstaffel SS 52 Although thousands of Poles forcefully or voluntary migrated to this lands during World War II Also small isolated enclaves of ethnic Poles could be found in Pomerania Lubusz Land and Lower Silesia These included scattered villages which remained ethnically Polish and large cities such as Wroclaw Breslau Szczecin Stettin and Zielona Gora Grunberg in Schlesien which contained small Polish communities 53 54 55 Origin of the post war population according to 1950 census EditDuring the Polish post war census of December 1950 data about the pre war places of residence of the inhabitants as of August 1939 was collected In case of children born between September 1939 and December 1950 their place of residence was reported based on the pre war places of residence of their mothers Thanks to this data it is possible to reconstruct the pre war geographical origin of the post war population Many areas located near the pre war German border were resettled by people from neighbouring borderland areas of pre war Poland For example Kashubians from pre war Polish Corridor settled in nearby areas of German Pomerania adjacent to Polish Pomerania People from Poznan region of pre war Poland settled in East Brandenburg People from East Upper Silesia moved into the rest of Silesia And people from Masovia and from Sudovia moved into adjacent Masuria Poles expelled from former Polish territories in the east today mainly parts of Ukraine Belarus and Lithuania settled in large numbers everywhere in the Recovered Territories but many of them also settled in central Poland Origin of settlers and the number of autochthons in the Recovered Territories in 1950 county data grouped based on pre 1939 administrative borders 56 Region within 1939 borders West Upper Silesia Lower Silesia East Brandenburg West Pomerania Free City Danzig South East Prussia TotalAutochthons 1939 DE FCD citizens 789 716 120 885 14 809 70 209 35 311 134 702 1 165 632Polish expellees from Kresy USSR 232 785 696 739 187 298 250 091 55 599 172 480 1 594 992Poles from abroad except the USSR 24 772 91 395 10 943 18 607 2 213 5 734 153 664Resettlers from the City of Warsaw 11 333 61 862 8 600 37 285 19 322 22 418 160 820From Warsaw region Masovia 7 019 69 120 16 926 73 936 22 574 158 953 348 528From Bialystok region and Sudovia 2 229 23 515 3 772 16 081 7 638 102 634 155 869From pre war Polish Pomerania 5 444 54 564 19 191 145 854 72 847 83 921 381 821Resettlers from Poznan region 8 936 172 163 88 427 81 215 10 371 7 371 368 483Katowice region East Upper Silesia 91 011 66 362 4 725 11 869 2 982 2 536 179 485Resettlers from the City of Lodz 1 250 16 483 2 377 8 344 2 850 1 666 32 970Resettlers from Lodz region 13 046 96 185 22 954 76 128 7 465 6 919 222 697Resettlers from Kielce region 16 707 141 748 14 203 78 340 16 252 20 878 288 128Resettlers from Lublin region 7 600 70 622 19 250 81 167 19 002 60 313 257 954Resettlers from Krakow region 60 987 156 920 12 587 18 237 5 278 5 515 259 524Resettlers from Rzeszow region 23 577 110 188 13 147 57 965 6 200 47 626 258 703place of residence in 1939 unknown 36 834 26 586 5 720 17 891 6 559 13 629 107 219Total pop in December 1950 1 333 246 1 975 337 444 929 1 043 219 292 463 847 295 5 936 489See also Right of returnPolonization of the Recovered Territories Edit Polish soldiers marking the new Polish German border in 1945 The People s Republic had to locate its population inside the new frontiers in order to solidify the hold over the territories 12 With the Kresy annexed by the Soviet Union Poland was effectively moved westwards and its area reduced by almost 20 from 389 000 to 312 000 km2 150 194 to 120 464 sq mi 57 Millions of non Poles mainly Germans from the Recovered Territories as well as some Ukrainians in the east were to be expelled from the new Poland while large numbers of Poles needed to be resettled having been expelled from the Kresy The expellees were termed repatriates 12 The result was the largest exchange of population in European history 12 The picture of the new western and northern territories being recovered Piast territory was used to forge Polish settlers and repatriates arriving there into a coherent community loyal to the new regime 58 and to justify the removal of the German inhabitants 12 Largely excepted from the expulsions of Germans were the autochthons close to three million ethnically Polish Slavic inhabitants of Masuria Masurs Pomerania Kashubians Slovincians and Upper Silesia Silesians The Polish government aimed to retain as many autochthons as possible as their presence on former German territory was used to indicate the intrinsic Polishness of the area and justify its incorporation into the Polish state as recovered territories 59 Verification and national rehabilitation processes were set up to reveal a dormant Polishness and determine who was redeemable as a Polish citizen Few were actually expelled 59 The autochthons not only disliked the subjective and often arbitrary verification process but they also faced discrimination even after completing it 60 such as the Polonization of their names 61 In the Lubusz region former East Brandenburg the local authorities conceded already in 1948 that what the PZZ claimed to be a recovered autochton Polish population were in fact Germanized migrant workers who had settled in the region in the late 19th and early 20th centuries with the exception of one village Babimost just across the pre war border 62 Great efforts were made to propagate the view of the Piast Concept It was actively supported by the Catholic Church 63 The sciences were responsible for the development of this perception of history In 1945 the Western Institute Polish Instytut Zachodni was founded to coordinate the scientific activities Its director Zygmunt Wojciechowski characterized his mission as an effort to present the Polish history of the region and project current Polish reality of these countries upon a historical background 64 Historical scientists archaeologists linguists art historians and ethnologists worked in an interdisciplinary effort to legitimize the new borders 65 Their findings were popularised in monographs periodicals schoolbooks travel guides broadcasts and exhibitions 66 Official maps were drawn showing that the Polish frontiers under the first known Piast princes matched the new ones 12 According to Norman Davies the young post war generation received education informing them that the boundaries of the People s Republic were the same as those on which the Polish nation had developed for centuries Furthermore they were instructed that the Polish Motherland has always been in the same location even when occupied for long periods of time by foreigners or as political boundaries shifted 23 Because the Recovered Territories had been under German and Prussian rule for many centuries many events of this history were perceived as part of foreign rather than local history in post war Poland 67 Polish scholars thus concentrated on the Polish aspects of the territories medieval Piast history of the region the cultural political and economic bonds to Poland the history of the Polish speaking population in Prussia and the Drang nach Osten as a historical constant since the Middle Ages 65 Pre 1945 administrative division yellow Projected Polish administration Okreg I IV in March 1945 Integration into the Voivodeships of Poland as of June 1946 Present day administrative division of Poland Western and Northern Lands in dark greenRemoval of Germans and traces of German habitation Edit Further information Flight and expulsion of Germans from Poland during and after World War II and Committee for Settling of Place Names See also Emigration from Poland to Germany after World War II The baroque interior of the Lubiaz abbey was removed and transferred to Stezyca in eastern Poland in order to replace church stalls destroyed by the Germans The Communist authorities of the Polish People s Republic and some Polish citizens desired to erase all traces of German rule 68 The Recovered Territories after the transfer still contained a substantial German population The Polish administration set up a Ministry for the Recovered Territories headed by the then deputy prime minister Wladyslaw Gomulka 69 A Bureau for Repatriation was to supervise and organize the expulsions and resettlements According to the national census of 14 February 1946 the population of Poland still included 2 288 300 Germans of which 2 036 439 nearly 89 per cent lived in the Recovered Territories By this stage Germans still constituted more than 42 per cent of the inhabitants of these regions since their total population according to the 1946 census was 4 822 075 70 However by 1950 there were only 200 000 Germans remaining in Poland and by 1957 that number fell to 65 000 71 While the estimates of how many Germans remained vary a constant German exodus took place even after the expulsions Between 1956 and 1985 407 000 people from Silesia and about 100 000 from Warmia Masuria declared German nationality and left for Germany In the early 1990s after the Polish Communist regime had collapsed 300 000 350 000 people declared themselves German 47 The flight and expulsion of the remaining Germans in the first post war years presaged a broader campaign to remove signs of former German rule 72 More than 30 000 German placenames were replaced with Polish 73 or Polonized medieval Slavic ones 74 75 Previous Slavic and Polish names used before German settlements had been established in the cases when one was absent either the German name was translated or new names were invented 76 In January 1946 a Committee for Settling of Place Names was set up to assign new official toponyms 77 The German language was banned from public schools government media and church services 73 75 Many German monuments graveyards buildings or entire ensembles of buildings were demolished 78 Objects of art were moved to other parts of the country 79 German inscriptions were erased including those on religious objects in churches and in cemeteries 72 In Ziemia Lubuska Socialist competitions were organized to search and destroy final German traces 72 Historian John Kulczycki argues that the Communist authorities discovered that forging an ethnically homogeneous Poland in the Recovered Territories was quite complicated for it was difficult to differentiate German speakers who were really Polish and those who were not The government used criteria that involved explicit links to Polish ethnicity as well the person s conduct Local verification commissions had wide latitude in determining who was or was not Polish and should remain Their decisions were based on the nationalist assumption that an individual s national identity is a lifetime ascriptive characteristic acquired at birth and not easily changed However people who betrayed their Polish heritage by their political words or actions were excluded from the Polish nation Everyone else was labelled as Polish and had to remain in their native land even if they wanted to emigrate to Germany 80 Resettlement of the Territories Edit Further information Repatriation of Poles 1944 1946 and Repatriation of Poles 1955 1959 Mămăligă is a dish which was very popular with Poles in East Galicia People from these areas who resettled in the Recovered Territories brought this and other culinary traditions with them to their new homes People from all over Poland quickly moved in to replace the former German population in a process parallel to the expulsions with the first settlers arriving in March 1945 81 These settlers took over farms and villages close to the pre war frontier while the Red Army was still advancing 81 In addition to the settlers other Poles went for szaber or looting expeditions soon affecting all former eastern territories of Germany 81 On 30 March 1945 the Gdansk Voivodeship was established as the first administrative Polish unit in the recovered territories 82 While the Germans were interned and expelled close to 5 million settlers 83 84 were either attracted or forced to settle the areas between 1945 and 1950 An additional 1 104 000 people had declared Polish nationality and were allowed to stay 851 000 of those in Upper Silesia bringing up the number of Poles to 5 894 600 as of 1950 47 The settlers can be grouped according to their background settlers from Central Poland moving voluntarily the majority 83 Poles that had been freed from forced labor in Nazi Germany up to two million 83 85 so called repatriants Poles expelled from the areas east of the new Polish Soviet border were preferably settled in the new western territories where they made up 26 of the population up to two million 83 85 non Poles forcibly resettled during the Operation Vistula in 1947 Large numbers of Ukrainians were forced to move from south eastern Poland under a 1947 Polish government operation aimed at dispersing and therefore assimilating those Ukrainians who had not been expelled eastward already throughout the newly acquired territories Belarusians living around the area around Bialystok were also pressured into relocating to the formerly German areas for the same reasons This scattering of members of non Polish ethnic groups throughout the country was an attempt by the Polish authorities to dissolve the unique ethnic identity of groups like the Ukrainians Belarusians and Lemkos 86 and broke the proximity and communication necessary for strong communities to form Tens of thousands of Jewish Holocaust survivors most of them repatriates from the East settled mostly in Lower Silesia creating Jewish cooperatives and institutions the largest communities were founded in Wroclaw Breslau Lower Silesia Szczecin Stettin Pomerania and Walbrzych Waldenburg Lower Silesia 87 However most of them left Poland in 1968 due to the Polish 1968 political crisis 88 Greeks and Macedonians refugees of the Greek Civil War around 10 000 people 5 The 10th stage Zgorzelec to Wroclaw leads you through primeval Polish lands Photograph from the June 1955 Peace Race Polish and Soviet newspapers and officials encouraged Poles to relocate to the west the land of opportunity 83 These new territories were described as a place where opulent villas abandoned by fleeing Germans waited for the brave fully furnished houses and businesses were available for the taking In fact the areas were devastated by the war the infrastructure largely destroyed suffering high crime rates and looting by gangs It took years for civil order to be established In 1970 the Polish population of the Northern and Western territories for the first time caught up to the pre war population level 8 711 900 in 1970 vs 8 855 000 in 1939 In the same year the population of the other Polish areas also reached its pre war level 23 930 100 in 1970 vs 23 483 000 in 1939 47 Today the population of the territories is predominantly Polish although a small German minority still exists in a few places including Olsztyn Masuria and Upper Silesia particularly in Opole Voivodeship the area of Opole Strzelce Opolskie Prudnik Kedzierzyn Kozle and Krapkowice 89 Role of the Recovered Territories in the Communists rise to power Edit Wladyslaw Gomulka center minister in the Polish People s Republic who oversaw the integration and development of the Recovered Territories between 1945 and 1948 The Communist government not democratically legitimized sought to legitimize itself through anti German propaganda 69 The German revanchism was played up as a permanent German threat with the Communists being the only guarantors and defenders of Poland s continued possession of the Recovered Territories Gomulka asserted that The western territories are one of the reasons the government has the support of the people This neutralizes various elements and brings people together Westward expansion and agricultural reform will bind the nation with the state Any retreat would weaken our domestic position 73 90 The redistribution of ownerless property among the people by the regime brought it broad based popular sympathy 73 After the Second World War the Soviet Union annexed the Polish territory of the Kresy located east of the Curzon line and encouraged or forced ethnic minorities in these parts of Poland including ethnic Poles to move west In the framework of the campaign Soviets exhibited posters in public places with messages such as 91 Western territories Eldorado In bloody battles the Polish soldier has liberated very old Polish territories Polish territory for Poland 5 000 lorries are available to bring settlers to the west Legal status of the territories EditMain article Oder Neisse line Municipal House of Culture in Zgorzelec place of signing of the Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950 During the Cold War the official position in the First World was that the concluding document of the Potsdam Conference was not an international treaty but a mere memorandum citation needed It regulated the issue of the German eastern border which was to be the Oder Neisse line but the final article of the memorandum said that the final status of the German state and therefore its territories were subject to a separate peace treaty between Germany and the Allies of World War II During the period from 1945 to 1990 two treaties between Poland and both East and West Germany were signed concerning the German Polish border In 1950 the German Democratic Republic and the People s Republic of Poland signed the Treaty of Zgorzelec recognizing the Oder Neisse line officially designated by the Communists as the Border of Peace and Friendship 92 On 7 December 1970 the Treaty of Warsaw between the Federal Republic of Germany and Poland was signed concerning the Polish western border Both sides committed themselves to nonviolence and accepted the existing de facto border the Oder Neisse line However a final treaty was not signed until 1990 as the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany Boundary stones of Germany and Poland in the Ueckermunde Heath Until the Treaty on the Final Settlement the West German government regarded the status of the German territories east of the Oder Neisse rivers as that of areas temporarily under Polish or Soviet administration To facilitate wide international acceptance of German reunification in 1990 the German political establishment recognized the facts on the ground and accepted the clauses in the Treaty on the Final Settlement whereby Germany renounced all claims to territory east of the Oder Neisse line This allowed the treaty to be negotiated quickly and for unification of democratic West Germany and socialist East Germany to go ahead quickly In accordance with a duty imposed on Germany by the Treaty on the Final Settlement in the same year 1990 Germany signed a separate treaty with Poland the German Polish Border Treaty confirming the two countries present borders The signature and ratification of the border treaty between Germany and Poland formalized in international law the recognition of the existing border and put an end to all qualified German claims See also Edit Poland portalPolish areas annexed by Nazi Germany Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union Kaliningrad question History of German settlement in Central and Eastern Europe Former eastern territories of Germany Territorial changes of Poland after World War II Territorial evolution of Poland Polish nationalism Irredentism Poland A and B Polonization Germanization RussificationReferences Edit Uprooted How Breslau Became Wroclaw During the Century of Expulsions pp 215 Princeton University Press 8 August 2011 ISBN 9781400839964 Archived from the original on 2022 05 18 Retrieved 2020 10 23 David Curp T 2006 A Clean Sweep The Politics of Ethnic Cleansing in Western Poland 1945 1960 ISBN 9781580462389 Archived from the original on 2022 05 18 Retrieved 2020 10 23 Hammer Eric 2013 Ms Livni Remember the Recovered Territories There is an historical precedent for a workable solution Arutz Sheva Archived from the original on 2019 10 23 Retrieved 2019 10 23 Weinhold Karl 1887 Die Verbreitung und die Herkunft der Deutschen in Schlesien in German Stuttgart Verlag von J Engelhorn a b Wojecki Mieczyslaw 1999 Przemiany demograficzne spolecznosci greckiej na Ziemi Lubuskiej w latach 1953 1998 Demographics of the Greek community in Lubusz Land in the years 1953 1998 Zakorzenienie in Polish archived from the original on 2016 06 17 retrieved 2019 06 10 R M Douglas Orderly and Humane The Expulsion of the Germans after the Second World War Yale University Press p 261 Dziennik Ustaw 1938 no 78 item 533 An explanation note in The Neighbors Respond The Controversy Over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine ed by Polonsky and Michlic p 466 Geoffrey K Roberts Patricia Hogwood 2013 The Politics Today Companion to West European Politics Oxford University Press p 50 ISBN 9781847790323 Archived from the original on 2021 03 10 Retrieved 2020 10 03 Piotr Stefan Wandycz 1980 The United States and Poland Harvard University Press p 303 ISBN 9780674926851 Archived from the original on 2021 03 10 Retrieved 2020 10 03 Phillip A Buhler 1990 The Oder Neisse Line a reappraisal under international law East European Monographs p 33 ISBN 9780880331746 Archived from the original on 2021 03 10 Retrieved 2020 10 03 Joanna B Michlic Poland s Threatening Other The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present 2006 pp 207 208 ISBN 0 8032 3240 3 ISBN 978 0 8032 3240 2 Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes 2005 pp 381ff ISBN 0 19 925340 4 ISBN 978 0 19 925340 1 a b c d e f g Geoffrey Hosking George Schopflin Myths and Nationhood 1997 p 153 ISBN 0 415 91974 6 ISBN 978 0 415 91974 6 Jan Kubik The Power of Symbols Against the Symbols of Power The Rise of Solidarity and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland 1994 pp 64 65 ISBN 0 271 01084 3 ISBN 978 0 271 01084 7 Jan Kubik The Power of Symbols Against the Symbols of Power The Rise of Solidarity and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland 1994 pp 65 ISBN 0 271 01084 3 ISBN 978 0 271 01084 7 a b Alfred M De Zayas Nemesis at Potsdam p 168 Zimniak Pawel 2007 Im Schatten des Zweiten Weltkrieges Machtverhaltnisse und Erinnerungsinteressen beim Umgang mit dem Deprivationsphanomen in der deutsch polnischen Offentlichkeit In Glunz Claudia Pelka Artur Schneider Thomas F eds Information Warfare Osnabruck Gottingen University of Osnabruck V amp R unipress pp 547 562 556 ISBN 978 3 89971 391 6 a b c d Dmitrow Edmund 2000 Vergangenheitspolitik in Polen 1945 1989 In Borodziej Wlodzimierz Ziemer Klaus eds Deutsch polnische Beziehungen 1939 1945 1949 Osnabruck pp 235 264 250 As cited by Zimniak Pawel 2007 Im Schatten des Zweiten Weltkrieges Machtverhaltnisse und Erinnerungsinteressen beim Umgang mit dem Deprivationsphanomen in der deutsch polnischen Offentlichkeit In Glunz Claudia Pelka Artur Schneider Thomas F eds Information Warfare Osnabruck Gottingen University of Osnabruck V amp R unipress pp 547 562 556 562 ISBN 978 3 89971 391 6 a b c Rick Fawn Ideology and national identity in post communist foreign policies 2003 p 190 ISBN 0 7146 5517 1 ISBN 978 0 7146 5517 8 a b Joanna B Michlic Poland s Threatening Other The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present 2006 p 208 ISBN 0 8032 3240 3 ISBN 978 0 8032 3240 2 a b Jan Kubik The Power of Symbols Against the Symbols of Power The Rise of Solidarity and the Fall of State Socialism in Poland 1994 p 65 ISBN 0 271 01084 3 ISBN 978 0 271 01084 7 R M Douglas Orderly and Humane The Expulsion of the Germans after the Second World War Yale University Press p 86 Philipp Ther Ana Siljak Redrawing Nations Ethnic Cleansing in East Central Europe 1944 1948 p 81 a b Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes 2005 p 386 ISBN 0 19 925340 4 ISBN 978 0 19 925340 1 a b Gregor Thum Die fremde Stadt Breslau nach 1945 2006 p 298 ISBN 3 570 55017 6 ISBN 978 3 570 55017 5 Martin Aberg Mikael Sandberg Social Capital and Democratisation Roots of Trust in Post Communist Poland and Ukraine Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2003 ISBN 0 7546 1936 2 Google Print p 51 Archived 2014 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Karl Cordell Stefan Wolff 2005 Germany s Foreign Policy Towards Poland and the Czech Republic Ostpolitik Revisited Archived 2014 07 04 at the Wayback Machine p 139 ISBN 0 415 36974 6 ISBN 978 0 415 36974 9 In addition it has been relatively easy for Polish historians and others to attempt to debunk communist historiography and present a more balanced analysis of the past and not only with respect to Germany It has been controversial and often painful but nevertheless it has been done For example Poland s acquisition in 1945 of eastern German territories is increasingly presented as the price Germany paid for launching a total war and then having lost it totally The recovered territories thesis previously applied in almost equal measures by the communists and Catholic Church has been discarded Some circles freely admit that on the whole the recovered territories in fact had a wholly German character The extent to which this fact transmitted to groups other than the socially and politically engaged is a matter of debate Krzysztof Kwasniewski Smutek anegdot 2010 p 93 ISBN 978 83 86944 75 0 also his previous work Adaptacja i integracja kulturowa ludnosci Slaska po drugiej wojnie swiatowej 1969 Kodeks dyplomatyczny Wielkopolski t III nr 1709 p 425 426 Juliusz Bardach Boguslaw Lesnodorski Michal Pietrzak 2001 Lexis Nexis ed Historia Ustroju i Prawa Polskiego in Polish Warszawa pp 85 86 ISBN 83 88296 02 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Freilich Joseph 1918 Fundamental Conditions of the Economic Independence of Poland Chicago Polish National Defense Committee p 88 Freilich Joseph 1918 Fundamental Conditions of the Economic Independence of Poland Chicago Polish National Defense Committee p 93 Fuchs Werner 1932 Poland s policy of expansion as revealed by Polish testimonies Deutscher Ostmarken Verein p 12 Tadeusz Gasztold Hieronim Kroczynski Hieronim Rybicki Kolobrzeg zarys dziejow Wydaw Poznanskie 1979 p 27 in Polish Christopher M Clark University Christopher Clark MD 2006 Iron Kingdom The Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600 1947 Harvard University Press p 233 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Strzelce Krajenskie Studia i szkice historyczne Strzelce Krajenskie 2016 p 73 Kronika polska Gall Anonim series Kroniki polskie Zakl Nard Ossolinskich Wroclaw p 72 Bogdan Walczak Zarys dziejow jezyka polskiego Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego Wroclaw 1999 p 64 Jan Los Poczatki pismiennictwa polskiego przeglad zabytkow jezykowych Wydawnictwo Zakladu Narodowego im Ossolinskich Lwow 1922 p 212 213 Slaska Biblioteka Cyfrowa biblioteka cyfrowa regionu slaskiego Wznowione powszechne taxae stolae sporzadzenie Dla samowladnego Xiestwa Slaska Podlug ktorego tak Auszpurskiey Konfessyi iak Katoliccy Fararze Kaznodzieie i Kuratusowie Zachowywac sie powinni Sub Dato z Berlina d 8 Augusti 1750 Sbc org pl Archived from the original on 2012 06 06 Retrieved 2013 11 20 Hugo Weczerka Handbuch der historischen Statten Schlesien 2003 p XXXVI ISBN 3 520 31602 1 M Czaplinski in M Czaplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 s 290 Ernst Badstubner Dehio Handbuch der Kunstdenkmaler in Polen Schlesien 2003 p 4 ISBN 3 422 03109 X Klaus Herbers Nikolas Jaspert 2007 Grenzraume und Grenzuberschreitungen im Vergleich Der Osten und der Westen des mittelalterlichen Lateineuropa pp 76ff ISBN 3 05 004155 2 ISBN 978 3 05 004155 1 Kossert Andreas 2006 Masuren Ostpreussens vergessener Suden in German Pantheon pp 210 211 ISBN 3 570 55006 0 Leon Sobocinski Na gruzach Smetka wyd B Kadziela Warszawa 1947 p 61 in Polish Blanke Richard 2001 Polish speaking Germans Language and national identity among the Masurians since 1871 Bohlau pp 253 254 ISBN 3 412 12000 6 a b c d e f Piotr Eberhardt Jan Owsinski Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth century Central Eastern Europe History Data Analysis 2003 pp 142ff ISBN 0 7656 0665 8 ISBN 978 0 7656 0665 5 Witold Sienkiewicz Grzegorz Hryciuk et al 2008 Demart ed Wysiedlenia wypedzenia i ucieczki 1939 1959 Atlas ziem polski in Polish Warszawa p 15 ISBN 978 83 7427 391 6 Wojciech Roszkowski Historia Polski 1918 1997 page 157 Aleksandra Wagrodzka 2018 Teschen oder das vergessene Dreilandereck In Dagmara Jajesniak Quast Uwe Rada ed Die vergessene Grenze in German be bra Verlag Bernd Martin p 55 Maria Wardzynska Intelligenzaktion na Warmii Mazurach oraz Polnocnym Mazowszu Glowna Komisja Scigania Zbrodni Przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej nr 12 1 2003 2004 pp 38 42 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original on 2016 03 07 Retrieved 2016 02 27 Thum p 129 Selwyn Ilan Troen Benjamin Pinkus Merkaz le moreshet Ben Guryon Organizing Rescue National Jewish Solidarity in the Modern Period pp 283 284 1992 ISBN 0 7146 3413 1 ISBN 978 0 7146 3413 5 Thum p 127 p 128 Wyniki Narodowego Spisu Powszechnego Ludnosci i Mieszkan 2002 w zakresie deklarowanej narodowosci oraz jezyka uzywanego w domu Archived from the original on 2022 02 15 Retrieved 2022 02 15 Aleksander Kochanski Protokol obrad KC PPR w maju 1945 roku The Minutes of the Session of the Central Committee of the Polish Workers Party in May 1945 Dokumenty do dziejow PRL 1 Warsaw Instytut Studiow Politycznych PAN 1992 Norman Davies and Roger Moorhouse Die Blume Europas Breslau Wroclaw Vratislava Die Geschichte einer mitteleuropaischen Stadt Droemer Munich 2002 ISBN 3 426 27259 8 pp 533 534 in German The Flower of Europe Breslau Wroclaw Vratislava The History of a Town in Central Europe Why is the Oder Neisse Line a Peace Border 1950 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