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Silesia

Silesia (/sˈlʒə, sˈlʃiə/, also UK: /-ziə/, US: /-ʒiə, -ʃə, sɪˈ-/;[1] see below) is a historical region of Central Europe that lies mostly within Poland, with small parts in the Czech Republic and Germany. Its area is approximately 40,000 km2 (15,400 sq mi), and the population is estimated at around 8,000,000. Silesia is split into two main subregions, Lower Silesia in the west and Upper Silesia in the east. Silesia has a diverse culture, including architecture, costumes, cuisine, traditions, and the Silesian language (minority in Upper Silesia).

Silesia
Ślōnsk (Silesian)
Śląsk (Polish)
Schlesien (German)
Slezsko (Czech)
Schläsing (Lower Silesian)
  Austrian Silesia,
before 1740 Prussian annexation
  Oder River
Basemap shows modern national borders.
Silesia on a map of Poland
Coordinates: 51°36′N 17°12′E / 51.6°N 17.2°E / 51.6; 17.2Coordinates: 51°36′N 17°12′E / 51.6°N 17.2°E / 51.6; 17.2
Country
Largest cityWrocław
Former seatWrocław (Lower Silesia)
Opole (Upper Silesia)
Area
 • Total40,000 km2 (20,000 sq mi)
Population
 • Totalc. 8,000,000
DemonymSilesian
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)

Silesia is along the Oder River, with the Sudeten Mountains extending across the southern border. The region contains many historical landmarks and UNESCO World Heritage Sites. It is also rich in mineral and natural resources, and includes several important industrial areas. The largest city and Lower Silesia's capital is Wrocław; the historic capital of Upper Silesia is Opole. The biggest metropolitan area is the Upper Silesian metropolitan area, the centre of which is Katowice. Parts of the Czech city of Ostrava and the German city of Görlitz are within Silesia's borders.

Silesia's borders and national affiliation have changed over time, both when it was a hereditary possession of noble houses and after the rise of modern nation-states, resulting in an abundance of castles, especially in the Jelenia Góra valley. The first known states to hold power in Silesia were probably those of Greater Moravia at the end of the 9th century and Bohemia early in the 10th century. In the 10th century, Silesia was incorporated into the early Polish state, and after its fragmentation in the 12th century it formed the Duchy of Silesia, a provincial duchy of Poland. As a result of further fragmentation, Silesia was divided into many duchies, ruled by various lines of the Polish Piast dynasty. In the 14th century, it became a constituent part of the Bohemian Crown Lands under the Holy Roman Empire, which passed to the Austrian Habsburg monarchy in 1526; however, a number of duchies remained under the rule of Polish dukes from the houses of Piast, Jagiellon and Sobieski as formal Bohemian fiefdoms, some until the 17th–18th centuries. As a result of the Silesian Wars, the region was annexed by the German state of Prussia from Austria in 1742.

After World War I, when the Poles and Czechs regained their independence, the easternmost part of Upper Silesia became again part of Poland by the decision of the Entente Powers after insurrections by Poles and the Upper Silesian plebiscite, while the remaining former Austrian parts of Silesia were divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland. During World War II, as a result of German occupation the entire region was under control of Nazi Germany. In 1945, after World War II, most of the German-held Silesia was transferred to Polish jurisdiction by the Potsdam Agreement between the victorious Allies and became again part of Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime. The small Lusatian strip west of the Oder–Neisse line, which had belonged to Silesia since 1815, became part of East Germany.

As the result of the forced population shifts of 1945–48, today's inhabitants of Silesia speak the national languages of their respective countries. Previously German-speaking Lower Silesia had developed a new mixed Polish dialect and novel costumes. There is ongoing debate about whether the Silesian language should be considered a dialect of Polish or a separate language. The Lower Silesian German dialect is nearing extinction due to its speakers' expulsion.

Etymology

The names of Silesia in different languages most likely share their etymology—Polish: Śląsk [ɕlɔ̃sk] ( listen); German: Schlesien [ˈʃleːzi̯ən] ( listen); Czech: Slezsko [ˈslɛsko]; Lower Silesian: Schläsing; Silesian: Ślōnsk [ɕlonsk]; Lower Sorbian: Šlazyńska; Upper Sorbian: Šleska; Latin, Spanish and English: Silesia; French: Silésie; Dutch: Silezië; Italian: Slesia; Slovak: Sliezsko; Kashubian: Sląsk. The names all relate to the name of a river (now Ślęza) and mountain (Mount Ślęża) in mid-southern Silesia, which served as a place of cult for pagans before Christianization.

Ślęża is listed as one of the numerous Pre-Indo-European topographic names in the region (see old European hydronymy).[2] According to some Polonists, the name Ślęża [ˈɕlɛ̃ʐa] or Ślęż [ɕlɛ̃ʂ] is directly related to the Old Polish words ślęg [ɕlɛŋk] or śląg [ɕlɔŋk], which means dampness, moisture, or humidity.[3] They disagree with the hypothesis of an origin for the name Śląsk [ɕlɔ̃sk] from the name of the Silings tribe, an etymology preferred by some German authors.[4]

In Polish common usage, "Śląsk" refers to traditionally Polish Upper Silesia and today's Silesian Voivodeship, but less to Lower Silesia, which is different from Upper Silesia in many respects as its population was predominantly German-speaking until 1945–48.[5]

History

 
Silesia in the early period of Poland's fragmentation, 1172–1177, Lower Silesia with Lubusz Land in orange, Upper Silesia in green and yellow

In the fourth century BC from the south, through the Kłodzko Valley, the Celts entered Silesia, and settled around Mount Ślęża near modern Wrocław, Oława and Strzelin.[6]

Germanic Lugii tribes were first recorded within Silesia in the 1st century. West Slavs and Lechites arrived in the region around the 7th century,[7] and by the early ninth century, their settlements had stabilized. Local West Slavs started to erect boundary structures like the Silesian Przesieka and the Silesia Walls. The eastern border of Silesian settlement was situated to the west of the Bytom, and east from Racibórz and Cieszyn. East of this line dwelt a closely related Lechitic tribe, the Vistulans. Their northern border was in the valley of the Barycz River, north of which lived the Western Polans tribe who gave Poland its name.[8]

The first known states in Silesia were Greater Moravia and Bohemia. In the 10th century, the Polish ruler Mieszko I of the Piast dynasty incorporated Silesia into the newly established Polish state. In 1000, the Diocese of Wrocław was established as the oldest Catholic diocese in the region, and one of the oldest dioceses in Poland, subjugated to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Gniezno. Poland repulsed German invasions of Silesia in 1017 at Niemcza and in 1109 at Głogów. During the Fragmentation of Poland, Silesia and the rest of the country were divided into many smaller duchies ruled by various Silesian dukes. During this time, German cultural and ethnic influence increased as a result of immigration from German-speaking states of the Holy Roman Empire. In 1178, parts of the Duchy of Kraków around Bytom, Oświęcim, Chrzanów, and Siewierz were transferred to the Silesian Piasts, although their population was primarily Vistulan and not of Silesian descent.[8]

In 1241, the Mongols conducted their first invasion of Poland, causing widespread panic and mass flight. They looted much of the region and defeated the combined Polish, Moravian and German forces led by Duke Henry II the Pious at the Battle of Legnica, which took place at Legnickie Pole near the Silesian city of Legnica. Upon the death of Orda Khan, the Mongols chose not to press forward further into Europe, but returned east to participate in the election of a new Grand Khan (leader).

Between 1289 and 1292, Bohemian king Wenceslaus II became suzerain of some of the Upper Silesian duchies. Polish monarchs had not renounced their hereditary rights to Silesia until 1335.[9] The province became part of the Bohemian Crown which was part of the Holy Roman Empire; however, a number of duchies remained under the rule of the Polish dukes from the houses of Piast, Jagiellon and Sobieski as formal Bohemian fiefdoms, some until the 17th–18th centuries. In 1469 sovereignty over the region passed to Hungary, and in 1490 it returned to Bohemia. In 1526 Silesia passed with the Bohemian Crown to the Habsburg monarchy.

In the 15th century, several changes were made to Silesia's borders. Parts of the territories which had been transferred to the Silesian Piasts in 1178 were bought by the Polish kings in the second half of the 15th century (the Duchy of Oświęcim in 1457; the Duchy of Zator in 1494). The Bytom area remained in the possession of the Silesian Piasts, though it was a part of the Diocese of Kraków.[8] The Duchy of Krosno Odrzańskie (Crossen) was inherited by the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1476, and with the renunciation of King Ferdinand I and the estates of Bohemia in 1538, became an integral part of Brandenburg. From 1645 until 1666, the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz was held in pawn by the Polish House of Vasa as dowry of the Polish queen Cecylia Renata.

 
Lands of the Bohemian Crown between 1635 and 1742, before most of Silesia was ceded to Prussia

In 1742, most of Silesia was seized by King Frederick II of Prussia in the War of the Austrian Succession, eventually becoming the Prussian Province of Silesia in 1815; consequently, Silesia became part of the German Empire when it was proclaimed in 1871.

After World War I, a part of Silesia, Upper Silesia, was contested by Germany and the newly independent Second Polish Republic. The League of Nations organized a plebiscite to decide the issue in 1921. It resulted in 60% of votes being cast for Germany and 40% for Poland.[10] Following the third Silesian uprising (1921), however, the easternmost portion of Upper Silesia (including Katowice), with a majority ethnic Polish population, was awarded to Poland, becoming the Silesian Voivodeship. The Prussian Province of Silesia within Germany was then divided into the provinces of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia. Meanwhile, Austrian Silesia, the small portion of Silesia retained by Austria after the Silesian Wars, was mostly awarded to the new Czechoslovakia (becoming known as Czech Silesia and Trans-Olza), although most of Cieszyn and territory to the east of it went to Poland.

 
Typical Silesian baroque architecture in Wrocław

Polish Silesia was among the first regions invaded during Germany's 1939 attack on Poland, which started World War II. One of the claimed goals of Nazi German occupation, particularly in Upper Silesia, was the extermination of those whom Nazis viewed as "subhuman", namely Jews and ethnic Poles. The Polish and Jewish population of the then Polish part of Silesia was subjected to genocide involving expulsions, mass murder and deportation to Nazi concentration camps and forced labour camps, while Germans were settled in pursuit of Lebensraum.[11] Two thousand Polish intellectuals, politicians, and businessmen were murdered in the Intelligenzaktion Schlesien[12] in 1940 as part of a Poland-wide Germanization program. Silesia also housed one of the two main wartime centers where medical experiments were conducted on kidnapped Polish children by Nazis.[13] Czech Silesia was occupied by Germany as part of so-called Sudetenland. In Silesia, Nazi Germany operated the Gross-Rosen concentration camp, several prisoner-of-war camps for Allied POWs (incl. the major Stalag VIII-A, Stalag VIII-B, Stalag VIII-C camps), numerous Nazi prisons and thousands of forced labour camps, including a network of forced labour camps solely for Poles (Polenlager), subcamps of prisons, POW camps and of the Gross-Rosen and Auschwitz concentration camps.

The Potsdam Conference of 1945 defined the Oder-Neisse line as the border between Germany and Poland, pending a final peace conference with Germany which eventually never took place.[14] At the end of WWII, Germans in Silesia fled from the battle ground, assuming they would be able to return when the war was over. However, they could not return, and those who had stayed were expelled and a new Polish population, including people displaced from former Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and from Central Poland, joined the surviving native Polish inhabitants of the region. After 1945 and in 1946, nearly all of the 4.5 million Silesians of German descent fled, or were interned in camps and expelled, including some thousand German Jews who survived the Holocaust and had returned to Silesia. The newly formed Polish United Workers' Party created a Ministry of the Recovered Territories that claimed half of the available arable land for state-run collectivized farms. Many of the new Polish Silesians who resented the Germans for their invasion in 1939 and brutality in occupation now resented the newly formed Polish communist government for their population shifting and interference in agricultural and industrial affairs.[15]

The administrative division of Silesia within Poland has changed several times since 1945. Since 1999, it has been divided between Lubusz Voivodeship, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Opole Voivodeship, and Silesian Voivodeship. Czech Silesia is now part of the Czech Republic, forming part of the Moravian-Silesian Region and the northern part of the Olomouc Region. Germany retains the Silesia-Lusatia region (Niederschlesien-Oberlausitz or Schlesische Oberlausitz) west of the Neisse, which is part of the federal state of Saxony.

The region was affected by the 1997 Central European flood.

Geography

 
First map of Silesia by Martin Helwig, 1561; north at the bottom

Most of Silesia is relatively flat, although its southern border is generally mountainous. It is primarily located in a swath running along both banks of the upper and middle Oder (Odra) River, but it extends eastwards to the upper Vistula River. The region also includes many tributaries of the Oder, including the Bóbr (and its tributary the Kwisa), the Barycz and the Nysa Kłodzka. The Sudeten Mountains run along most of the southern edge of the region, though at its south-eastern extreme it reaches the Silesian Beskids and Moravian-Silesian Beskids, which belong to the Carpathian Mountains range.

Historically, Silesia was bounded to the west by the Kwisa and Bóbr Rivers, while the territory west of the Kwisa was in Upper Lusatia (earlier Milsko). However, because part of Upper Lusatia was included in the Province of Silesia in 1815, in Germany Görlitz, Niederschlesischer Oberlausitzkreis and neighbouring areas are considered parts of historical Silesia. Those districts, along with Poland's Lower Silesian Voivodeship and parts of Lubusz Voivodeship, make up the geographic region of Lower Silesia.

Silesia has undergone a similar notional extension at its eastern extreme. Historically, it extended only as far as the Brynica River, which separates it from Zagłębie Dąbrowskie in the Lesser Poland region. However, to many Poles today, Silesia (Śląsk) is understood to cover all of the area around Katowice, including Zagłębie. This interpretation is given official sanction in the use of the name Silesian Voivodeship (województwo śląskie) for the province covering this area. In fact, the word Śląsk in Polish (when used without qualification) now commonly refers exclusively to this area (also called Górny Śląsk or Upper Silesia).

As well as the Katowice area, historical Upper Silesia also includes the Opole region (Poland's Opole Voivodeship) and Czech Silesia. Czech Silesia consists of a part of the Moravian-Silesian Region and the Jeseník District in the Olomouc Region.

Natural resources

Silesia is a resource-rich and populous region. Since the middle of the 18th century, coal has been mined. The industry had grown while Silesia was part of Germany, and peaked in the 1970s under the People's Republic of Poland. During this period, Silesia became one of the world's largest producers of coal, with a record tonnage in 1979.[16] Coal mining declined during the next two decades, but has increased again following the end of Communist rule.

The 41 coal mines in Silesia are mostly part of the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, which lies in the Silesian Upland. The coalfield has an area of about 4,500 km2 (1,700 sq mi).[16] Deposits in Lower Silesia have proven to be difficult to exploit and the area's unprofitable mines were closed in 2000.[16] In 2008, an estimated 35 billion tonnes of lignite reserves were found near Legnica, making them some of the largest in the world.[17]

From the fourth century BC, iron ore has been mined in the upland areas of Silesia.[16] The same period had lead, copper, silver, and gold mining. Zinc, cadmium, arsenic,[18] and uranium[19] have also been mined in the region. Lower Silesia features large copper mining and processing between the cities of Legnica, Głogów, Lubin, and Polkowice.

The region is known for stone quarrying to produce limestone, marl, marble, and basalt.[16]

Annual production of minerals in Silesia
Mineral Name Production (tonnes) Reference
Bituminous coal 95,000,000
Copper 571,000 [20]
Zinc 160,000 [21]
Silver 1,200 [22]
Cadmium 500 [23]
Lead 70,000 [24]

The region also has a thriving agricultural sector, which produces cereals (wheat, rye, barley, oats, corn), potatoes, rapeseed, sugar beets and others. Milk production is well developed. The Opole Silesia has for decades occupied the top spot in Poland for their indices of effectiveness of agricultural land use.[25]

Mountainous parts of southern Silesia feature many significant and attractive tourism destinations (e.g., Karpacz, Szczyrk, Wisła). Silesia is generally well forested. This is because greenness is generally highly desirable by the local population, particularly in the highly industrialized parts of Silesia.

Demographics

Silesia has been historically diverse in every aspect. Nowadays, the largest part of Silesia is located in Poland; it is often cited as one of the most diverse regions in that country.

The United States Immigration Commission, in its Dictionary of Races or Peoples (published in 1911, during a period of intense immigration from Silesia to the United States), considered Silesian as a geographical (not ethnic) term, denoting the inhabitants of Silesia. It is also mentioned the existence of both Polish Silesian and German Silesian dialects in that region.[26][27]

 
Polish names of Silesian cities, from a 1750 Prussian official document published in Berlin during the Silesian Wars[28]

Ethnicity

Modern Silesia is inhabited by Poles, Silesians, Germans, and Czechs. Germans first came to Silesia during the Late Medieval Ostsiedlung.[29] The last Polish census of 2011 showed that the Silesians are the largest ethnic or national minority in Poland, Germans being the second; both groups are located mostly in Upper Silesia. The Czech part of Silesia is inhabited by Czechs, Moravians, Silesians, and Poles.

In the early 19th century the population of the Prussian part of Silesia was between 2/3 and 3/4 German-speaking, between 1/5 and 1/3 Polish-speaking, with Sorbs, Czechs, Moravians and Jews forming other smaller minorities (see Table 1. below).

Before the Second World War, Silesia was inhabited mostly by Germans, with Poles a large minority, forming a majority in Upper Silesia.[30] Silesia was also the home of Czech and Jewish minorities. The German population tended to be based in the urban centres and in the rural areas to the north and west, whilst the Polish population was mostly rural and could be found in the east and in the south.[31]

Table 1. Ethno-linguistic structure of Prussian Silesia in the early 19th century (1800–1825)
Ethnic group acc. G. Hassel[32] % acc. S. Plater[33] % acc. T. Ładogórski[34] %
Germans 1,561,570 75.6 1,550,000 70.5 1,303,300 74.6
Poles 444,000 21.5 600,000 27.3 401,900 23.0
Sorbs 24,500 1.2 30,000 1.4 900 0.1
Czechs 5,500 0.3 32,600 1.9
Moravians 12,000 0.6
Jews 16,916 0.8 20,000 0.9 8,900 0.5
Population c. 2.1 million 100 c. 2.2 million 100 c. 1.8 million 100

Ethnic structure of Prussian Upper Silesia (Opole regency) during the 19th century and the early 20th century can be found in Table 2.:

The Austrian part of Silesia had a mixed German, Polish and Czech population, with Polish-speakers forming a majority in Cieszyn Silesia.[38]

Religion

 
Confessions in the German Empire (Protestant/Catholic; c. 1890). Lower Silesia was mostly Protestant, while Glatz (Kłodzko) and Upper Silesia were mostly Catholic.

Historically, Silesia was about equally split between Protestants (overwhelmingly Lutherans) and Roman Catholics. In an 1890 census taken in the German part, Roman Catholics made up a slight majority of 53%, while the remaining 47% were almost entirely Lutheran.[39] Geographically speaking, Lower Silesia was mostly Lutheran except for the Glatzer Land (now Kłodzko County). Upper Silesia was mostly Roman Catholic except for some of its northwestern parts, which were predominantly Lutheran. Generally speaking, the population was mostly Protestant in the western parts, and it tended to be more Roman Catholic the further east one went. In Upper Silesia, Protestants were concentrated in larger cities and often identified as German. After World War II, the religious demographics changed drastically as Germans, who constituted the bulk of the Protestant population, were forcibly expelled. Poles, who were mostly Roman Catholic, were resettled in their place. Today, Silesia remains predominantly Roman Catholic.

Existing since the 12th century,[40] Silesia's Jewish community was concentrated around Wrocław and Upper Silesia, and numbered 48,003 (1.1% of the population) in 1890, decreasing to 44,985 persons (0.9%) by 1910.[41] In Polish East Upper Silesia, the number of Jews was around 90,000–100,000.[42] Historically the community had suffered a number of localised expulsions such as their 1453 expulsion from Wrocław.[43] From 1712 to 1820 a succession of men held the title Chief Rabbi of Silesia ("Landesrabbiner"): Naphtali ha-Kohen (1712–16); Samuel ben Naphtali (1716–22); Ḥayyim Jonah Te'omim (1722–1727); Baruch b. Reuben Gomperz (1733–54); Joseph Jonas Fränkel (1754–93); Jeremiah Löw Berliner (1793–99); Lewin Saul Fränkel (1800–7); Aaron Karfunkel (1807–16); and Abraham ben Gedaliah Tiktin (1816–20).[44]

Consequences of World War II

After the German invasion of Poland in 1939, following Nazi racial policy, the Jewish population of Silesia was subjected to Nazi genocide with executions performed by Einsatzgruppe z. B.V. led by Udo von Woyrsch and Einsatzgruppe I led by Bruno Streckenbach,[45][46] imprisonment in ghettos and ethnic cleansing to the General Government. In their efforts to exterminate the Jews through murder and ethnic cleansing Nazi established in Silesia province the Auschwitz and Gross-Rosen camps. Expulsions were carried out openly and reported in the local press.[47] Those sent to ghettos would from 1942 be expelled to concentration and work camps.[48] Between 5 May and 17 June, 20,000 Silesian Jews were sent to Birkenau to gas chambers[49] and during August 1942, 10,000 to 13,000 Silesian Jews were murdered by gassing at Auschwitz.[50] Most Jews in Silesia were exterminated by the Nazis. After the war Silesia became a major centre for repatriation of the Jewish population in Poland which survived Nazi German extermination[51] and in autumn 1945, 15,000 Jews were in Lower Silesia, mostly Polish Jews returned from territories now belonging to Soviet Union,[52] rising in 1946 to seventy thousand[53] as Jewish survivors from other regions in Poland were relocated.[54]

The majority of Germans fled or were expelled from the present-day Polish and Czech parts of Silesia during and after World War II. From June 1945 to January 1947, 1.77 million Germans were expelled from Lower Silesia, and 310,000 from Upper Silesia.[55] Today, most German Silesians and their descendants live in the territory of the Federal Republic of Germany, many of them in the Ruhr area working as miners, like their ancestors in Silesia. To smooth their integration into West German society after 1945, they were placed into officially recognized organizations, like the Landsmannschaft Schlesien, with financing from the federal West German budget.[citation needed] One of its most notable but controversial spokesmen was the Christian Democratic Union politician Herbert Hupka.

The expulsion of Germans led to widespread underpopulation. The population of the town of Głogów fell from 33,500 to 5,000, and from 1939 to 1966 the population of Wrocław fell by 25%.[56] Attempts to repopulate Silesia proved unsuccessful in the 1940s and 1950s,[57] and Silesia's population did not reach pre-war levels until the late 1970s. The Polish settlers who repopulated Silesia were partly from the former Polish Eastern Borderlands, which was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939. Wrocław was partly repopulated with refugees from the formerly Polish city of Lwów.

Cities

The following gallery includes the cities in Silesia with a population greater than 20,000 (2015).

Name Population Area Country Administrative Historic subregion
1
 
Wrocław 632,067 293 km2 (113 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
2
 
Katowice 304,362 165 km2 (64 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
3
 
Ostrava* 287,968 214 km2 (83 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia/Moravia
4
 
Gliwice 185,450 134 km2 (52 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
5
 
Zabrze 178,357 80 km2 (31 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
6
 
Bielsko-Biała* 173,699 125 km2 (48 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia/Lesser Poland
7
 
Bytom 173,439 69 km2 (27 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
8
 
Ruda Śląska 141,521 78 km2 (30 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
9
 
Rybnik 140,173 148 km2 (57 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
10
 
Tychy 128,799 82 km2 (32 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
11
 
Opole 120,146 97 km2 (37 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia
12
 
Zielona Góra 118,405 58 km2 (22 sq mi)     Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia
13
 
Wałbrzych 117,926 85 km2 (33 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
14
 
Chorzów 110,761 33 km2 (13 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
15
 
Legnica 101,992 56 km2 (22 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
16
 
Jastrzębie-Zdrój 91,235 85 km2 (33 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
17
 
Jelenia Góra 81,985 109 km2 (42 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
18
 
Mysłowice 75,129 66 km2 (25 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
19
 
Lubin 74,053 41 km2 (16 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
20
 
Havířov 71,200 32 km2 (12 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia
21
 
Głogów 68,997 35 km2 (14 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
22
 
Siemianowice Śląskie 68,844 25 km2 (10 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
23
 
Kędzierzyn-Koźle 63,194 124 km2 (48 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia
24
 
Żory 62,038 65 km2 (25 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
25
 
Tarnowskie Góry 60,957 84 km2 (32 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
26
 
Świdnica 59,182 22 km2 (8 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
27
 
Opava 57,676 91 km2 (35 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia
28
 
Piekary Śląskie 57,148 40 km2 (15 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
29
 
Frýdek-Místek* 56,450 52 km2 (20 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia/Moravia
30
 
Racibórz 55,930 75 km2 (29 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
31
 
Görlitz** 55,255 68 km2 (26 sq mi)     Saxony Historically part of Lusatia, Görlitz was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1319–1329 and 1815–1945
32
 
Karviná 52,128 57 km2 (22 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia
33
 
Świętochłowice 51,824 13 km2 (5 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
34
 
Wodzisław Śląski 48,731 50 km2 (19 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
35
 
Nysa 44,899 27 km2 (10 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia
36
 
Mikołów 39,776 79 km2 (31 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
37
 
Nowa Sól 39,721 22 km2 (8 sq mi)     Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia
38
 
Bolesławiec 39,603 24 km2 (9 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
39
 
Knurów 39,090 34 km2 (13 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
40
 
Oleśnica 37,303 21 km2 (8 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
41
 
Brzeg 36,980 15 km2 (6 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia
42
 
Cieszyn 35,918 29 km2 (11 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
43
 
Czechowice-Dziedzice 35,684 33 km2 (13 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
44
 
Třinec 35,002 85 km2 (33 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia
45
 
Dzierżoniów 34,428 20 km2 (8 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
46
 
Hoyerswerda/Wojerecy** 33,843 96 km2 (37 sq mi)     Saxony Historically part of Lusatia, Hoyerswerda was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1825–1945
47
 
Oława 32,240 27 km2 (10 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
48
 
Zgorzelec** 31,890 16 km2 (6 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Historically part of Lusatia, Zgorzelec was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1319–1329 and 1815–1945
49
 
Bielawa 31,186 36 km2 (14 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
50
 
Kluczbork 24,207 12 km2 (5 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia
51
 
Lubliniec 24,105 89 km2 (34 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
52
 
Krnov 24,079 44 km2 (17 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia
53
 
Jawor 23,650 19 km2 (7 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
54
 
Żagań 23,235 40 km2 (15 sq mi)     Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia
55
 
Świebodzice 23,197 30 km2 (12 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
56
 
Nowa Ruda 22,823 37 km2 (14 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
57
 
Polkowice 22,535 24 km2 (9 sq mi)     Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia
58
 
Łaziska Górne 22,413 21 km2 (8 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
59
 
Świebodzin 21,963 11 km2 (4 sq mi)     Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia
60
 
Rydułtowy 21,741 15 km2 (6 sq mi)     Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia
61
 
Prudnik 21,472 21 km2 (8 sq mi)     Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia
62
 
Bohumín 21,340 31 km2 (12 sq mi)     Moravian-Silesian Region Czech Silesia

* Only part in Silesia

Flags and coats of arms

The emblems of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia originate from the emblems of the Piasts of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia. The coat of arms of Upper Silesia depicts the golden eagle on the blue shield. The coat of arms of Lower Silesia depicts a black eagle on a golden (yellow) shield.

Flags with their colors refer to the coat of arms of Silesia.

World Heritage sites

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Silesia". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 23 July 2019.; "Silesia". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 23 July 2019.; . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 23 July 2019.; "Silesia". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  2. ^ Zbigniew Babik, "Najstarsza warstwa nazewnicza na ziemiach polskich w granicach średniowiecznej Słowiańszczyzny", Uniwersitas, Kraków, 2001.
  3. ^ Rudolf Fischer. Onomastica slavogermanica. Uniwersytet Wrocławski. 2007. t. XXVI. 2007. str. 83
  4. ^ Jankuhn, Herbert; Beck, Heinrich; et al., eds. (2006). "Wandalen". Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (in German). Vol. 33 (2nd ed.). Berlin, Germany; New York City: de Gruyter. Da die Silingen offensichtlich ihren Namen im mittelalterlichen pagus silensis und dem mons slenz – möglicherweise mit dem Zobten gleichzusetzen [...] – hinterließen und damit einer ganzen Landschaft – Schlesien – den Namen gaben [...]
  5. ^ Andreas Lawaty, Hubert Orłowski (2003). Deutsche und Polen: Geschichte, Kultur, Politik (in German). C.H.Beck. p. 183.
  6. ^ R. Żerelik(in:) M. Czpliński (red.) Historia Śląska, Wrocław 2007, pp. 34–35
  7. ^ R. Żerelik(in:) M. Czpliński (red.) Historia Śląska, Wrocław 2007, pp. 37–38
  8. ^ a b c R. Żerelik(in:) M. Czpliński (red.) Historia Śląska, Wrocław 2007, pp. 21–22
  9. ^ R. Żerelik(in:) M. Czpliński (red.) Historia Śląska, Wrocław 2007, p. 81
  10. ^ gonschior.de (in German)
  11. ^ Piotr Eberhardt, Political Migrations in Poland, 1939–1948, Warsaw 2006, p.25
  12. ^ Wardzyńska, Maria (2009). Był rok 1939. Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczeństwa w Polsce. Intelligenzaktion (in Polish). Warszawa: IPN.
  13. ^ Kamila Uzarczyk: Podstawy ideologiczne higieny ras. Toruń: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek, 2002, pp. 285, 286, 289. ISBN 83-7322-287-1.
  14. ^ Geoffrey K. Roberts, Patricia Hogwood (2013). The Politics Today Companion to West European Politics. Oxford University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9781847790323.; Piotr Stefan Wandycz (1980). The United States and Poland. Harvard University Press. p. 303. ISBN 9780674926851.; Phillip A. Bühler (1990). The Oder-Neisse Line: a reappraisal under internaromtional law. East European Monographs. p. 33. ISBN 9780880331746.
  15. ^ Lukowski, Zawadski, Jerzy, Hubert (2006). A Concise History of Poland. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 278–280. ISBN 978-0-521-61857-1.
  16. ^ a b c d e "Natural Resources | poland.gov.pl". En.poland.gov.pl. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  17. ^ "Mamy największe złoża węgla brunatnego na świecie" (in Polish). Gazetawyborcza.pl. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  18. ^ S.Z. Mikulski, "Late-Hercynian gold-bearing arsenic-polymetallic mineralization within Saxothuringian zone in the Polish Sudetes, Northeast Bohemian Massif". In: "Mineral Deposit at the Beginning of the 21st Century", A. Piestrzyński et al. (eds). Swets & Zeitinger Publishers (Google books)
  19. ^ "Wise International | World Information Service on Energy". 0.antenna.nl. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  20. ^ "Copper: World Smelter Production, By Country". Indexmundi.com. 28 July 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  21. ^ "Zinc: World Smelter Production, By Country". Indexmundi.com. 1 July 2004. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  22. ^ "Silver: World Mine Production, By Country". Indexmundi.com. 13 August 2004. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  23. ^ "Cadmium: World Refinery Production, By Country". Indexmundi.com. 18 May 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  24. ^ "Lead: World Refinery Production, By Country". Indexmundi.com. 24 June 2005. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  25. ^ "Samorząd Województwa Opolskiego". Umwo.opole.pl. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  26. ^ Dillingham, William Paul; Folkmar, Daniel; Folkmar, Elnora (1911). Dictionary of Races or Peoples. Washington, D.C.: Washington, Government Printing Office. p. 128.
  27. ^ Dillingham, William Paul; Folkmar, Daniel; Folkmar, Elnora (1911). Dictionary of Races or Peoples. United States. Immigration Commission (1907–1910). Washington, D.C.: Washington, Government Printing Office. pp. 105, 128.
  28. ^ "Śląska Biblioteka Cyfrowa – biblioteka cyfrowa regionu śląskiego – Wznowione powszechne taxae-stolae sporządzenie, Dla samowładnego Xięstwa Sląska, Podług ktorego tak Auszpurskiey Konfessyi iak Katoliccy Fararze, Kaznodzieie i Kuratusowie Zachowywać się powinni. Sub Dato z Berlina, d. 8. Augusti 1750". Sbc.org.pl. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  29. ^ Weinhold, Karl (1887). Die Verbreitung und die Herkunft der Deutschen in Schlesien [The Spread and the Origin of Germans in Silesia] (in German). Stuttgart: J. Engelhorn.
  30. ^ Jobst Gumpert (1966). Polen, Deutschland (in German). Callwey. p. 138.
  31. ^ Hunt Tooley, T (1997). National Identity and Weimar Germany: Upper Silesia and the Eastern Border, 1918–1922, University of Nebraska Press, p.17.
  32. ^ a b Georg Hassel (1823). Statistischer Umriß der sämmtlichen europäischen und der vornehmsten außereuropäischen Staaten, in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung, Größe, Volksmenge, Finanz- und Militärverfassung, tabellarisch dargestellt; Erster Heft: Welcher die beiden großen Mächte Österreich und Preußen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt (in German). Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar. pp. 33–34. Nationalverschiedenheit 1819: Polen – 377,100; Deutsche – 162,600; Mährer – 12,000; Juden – 8,000; Tschechen – 1,600; Gesamtbevölkerung: 561,203
  33. ^ Plater, Stanisław (1825). Jeografia wschodniey części Europy czyli opis krajów przez wielorakie narody sławiańskie zamieszkanych obeymujący Prussy, Xięztwo Poznańskie, Szląsk Pruski, Gallicyą, Rzeczpospolitę Krakowską, Królestwo Polskie i Litwę (in Polish). Wrocław: Wilhelm Bogumił Korn. p. 60.
  34. ^ Ładogórski, Tadeusz (1966). Ludność, in: Historia Śląska, vol. II: 1763–1850, part 1: 1763–1806 (in Polish). Wrocław: edited by W. Długoborski. p. 150.
  35. ^ Paul Weber (1913). Die Polen in Oberschlesien: eine statistische Untersuchung (in German). Berlin: Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer.
  36. ^ Kalisch, Johannes; Bochinski, Hans (1958). (PDF). Śląski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobótka. Leipzig. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 February 2020.
  37. ^ Paul Weber (1913). Die Polen in Oberschlesien: eine statistische Untersuchung (in German). Berlin: Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer. p. 27.
  38. ^ Chromik, Grzegorz. Geschichte des deutsch-slawischen Sprachkontaktes im Teschener Schlesien (in German). pp. 258–322. ISBN 978-3-88246-398-9.
  39. ^ Meyers Konversationslexikon 5. Auflage
  40. ^ Demshuk, A (2012) The Lost German East: Forced Migration and the Politics of Memory, 1945–1970, Cambridge University Press P40
  41. ^ Kamusella, T (2007). Silesia and Central European nationalisms: the emergence of national and ethnic groups in Prussian Silesia and Austrian Silesia, 1848–1918, Purdue University Press, p.173.
  42. ^ Christopher R. Browning (2000). Nazi Policy, Jewish Workers, German Killers, Cambridge University Press, 2000, p.147.
  43. ^ van Straten, J (2011) The Origin of Ashkenazi Jewry: The Controversy Unravelled, Walter de Gruyter P58
  44. ^ "Silesia". 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia. JewishEncyclopedia.com. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  45. ^ Popularna encyklopedia powszechna – Volume 10 – Page 660 Magdalena Olkuśnik, Elżbieta Wójcik – 2001 Streckenbach Bruno (1902–1977), funkcjonariusz niem. państwa nazistowskiego, Gruppenfuhrer SS. Od 1933 szef policji po- lit w Hamburgu. 1939 dow. Einsatzgruppe I (odpowiedzialny za eksterminacje ludności pol. i żydowskiej na Śląsku).
  46. ^ Zagłada Żydów na polskich terenach wcielonych do Rzeszy Page 53 Aleksandra Namysło, Instytut Pamięci Narodowej—Komisja Ścigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu – 2008 W rzeczywistości ludzie Udona von Woyr- scha podczas marszu przez województwo śląskie na wschód dopuszczali się prawdziwych masakr ludności żydowskiej.
  47. ^ Steinbacher, S. "In the Shadow of Auschwitz, The murder of the Jews of East Upper Silesia", in Cesarani, D. (2004) Holocaust: From the persecution of the Jews to mass murder, Routledge, P126
  48. ^ Steinbacher, S. "In the Shadow of Auschwitz, The murder of the Jews of East Upper Silesia", in Cesarani, D. (2004) Holocaust: From the persecution of the Jews to mass murder, Routledge, pp.110–138.
  49. ^ The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 – March 1942 – Page 544 Christopher R. Browning – 2007 Between 5 May and 17 June, 20,000 Silesian Jews were deported to Birkenau to be gassed.
  50. ^ Christopher R. Browning (2007). The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 – March 1942, University of Nebraska Press, p.544.
  51. ^ The International Jewish Labor Bund After 1945: Toward a Global History David Slucki, page 63
  52. ^ A narrow bridge to life: Jewish forced labor and survival in the Gross-Rosen camp system, 1940–1945, page 229 Belah Guṭerman
  53. ^ Kochavi, AJ (2001)Post-Holocaust politics: Britain, the United States & Jewish refugees, 1945–1948, University of North Carolina Press P 176
  54. ^ Kochavi, AJ (2001). Post-Holocaust politics: Britain, the United States & Jewish refugees, 1945–1948, University of North Carolina Press, p.176.
  55. ^ DB Klusmeyer & DG Papademetriou (2009). Immigration policy in the Federal Republic of Germany: negotiating membership and remaking the nation, Berghahn, p.70.
  56. ^ Scholz, A (1964). Silesia: yesterday and today, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, p.69.
  57. ^ Mazower, M (1999). Dark Continent: Europe's 20th Century, Penguin, p.223.
  58. ^ Łęknica and Bad Muskau were considered part of Silesia in years 1815–1945.

References

  • Długajczyk, Edward (1993). Tajny front na granicy cieszyńskiej. Wywiad i dywersja w latach 1919–1939. Katowice: Śląsk. ISBN 83-85831-03-7.
  • Zahradnik, Stanisław; Marek Ryczkowski (1992). Korzenie Zaolzia. Warszawa - Praga - Trzyniec: PAI-press. OCLC 177389723.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Silesia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 90–92.
  • Przemysław, Wiszewski, ed. (2013). "Cuius regio? Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia" (PDF). The Long Formation of the Region (c. 1000–1526). Vol. 1. Wrocław, Poland: EBooki.com.pl. ISBN 978-83-927132-1-0. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Harc, Lucyna; Wąs, Gabriela, eds. (2014). "Cuius regio? Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia" (PDF). The Strengthening of Silesian Regionalism (1526-1740). Vol. 2. Wrocław, Poland: EBooki.com.pl. ISBN 978-83-927132-6-5. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Harc, Lucyna; Kulak, Teresa, eds. (2015). "Cuius regio? Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia" (PDF). Silesia under the Authority of the Hohenzollerns (1741-1918). Vol. 3. Wrocław, Poland: EBooki.com.pl. ISBN 978-83-942651-3-7. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Czapliński, Marek; Wiszewski, Przemysław, eds. (2014). "Cuius regio? Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia" (PDF). Region Divided - Times of Nation-States (1918-1945). Vol. 4. Wrocław, Poland: EBooki.com.pl. ISBN 978-83-927132-8-9. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Wiszewski, Przemysław, ed. (2015). "Cuius regio? Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia" (PDF). Permanent Change - The New Region(s) of Silesia (1945-2015). Vol. 5. Wrocław, Poland: EBooki.com.pl. ISBN 978-83-942651-2-0. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Procházka, Jiří: 1683, Vienna obsessa. Via Silesiaca.(ISBN 978-80-903476-3-2) Brno, Wien 2012, ITEM

External links

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 27 July 2007)
  • Map of Silesia in 1763
  • Old postcards from Silesian towns
  • Photos from Silesian towns, villages and communities before 1946
  • What is Silesia?

silesia, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, cilicia, schlesien, Śląsk, redirect, here, other, uses, schlesien, disambiguation, Śląsk, disambiguation, also, below, historical, region, central, europe, that, lies, mostly, within, poland, with, small, p. For other uses see Silesia disambiguation Not to be confused with Cilicia Schlesien and Slask redirect here For other uses see Schlesien disambiguation and Slask disambiguation Silesia s aɪ ˈ l iː ʒ e s aɪ ˈ l iː ʃ i e also UK iː z i e US iː ʒ i e iː ʃ e s ɪ ˈ 1 see below is a historical region of Central Europe that lies mostly within Poland with small parts in the Czech Republic and Germany Its area is approximately 40 000 km2 15 400 sq mi and the population is estimated at around 8 000 000 Silesia is split into two main subregions Lower Silesia in the west and Upper Silesia in the east Silesia has a diverse culture including architecture costumes cuisine traditions and the Silesian language minority in Upper Silesia Silesia Slōnsk Silesian Slask Polish Schlesien German Slezsko Czech Schlasing Lower Silesian Historical regionFlagCoat of arms Austrian Silesia before 1740 Prussian annexation Prussian Silesia 1871 Oder RiverBasemap shows modern national borders Silesia on a map of PolandCoordinates 51 36 N 17 12 E 51 6 N 17 2 E 51 6 17 2 Coordinates 51 36 N 17 12 E 51 6 N 17 2 E 51 6 17 2CountryPoland Czech Republic GermanyLargest cityWroclawFormer seatWroclaw Lower Silesia Opole Upper Silesia Area Total40 000 km2 20 000 sq mi Population Totalc 8 000 000DemonymSilesianTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Silesia is along the Oder River with the Sudeten Mountains extending across the southern border The region contains many historical landmarks and UNESCO World Heritage Sites It is also rich in mineral and natural resources and includes several important industrial areas The largest city and Lower Silesia s capital is Wroclaw the historic capital of Upper Silesia is Opole The biggest metropolitan area is the Upper Silesian metropolitan area the centre of which is Katowice Parts of the Czech city of Ostrava and the German city of Gorlitz are within Silesia s borders Silesia s borders and national affiliation have changed over time both when it was a hereditary possession of noble houses and after the rise of modern nation states resulting in an abundance of castles especially in the Jelenia Gora valley The first known states to hold power in Silesia were probably those of Greater Moravia at the end of the 9th century and Bohemia early in the 10th century In the 10th century Silesia was incorporated into the early Polish state and after its fragmentation in the 12th century it formed the Duchy of Silesia a provincial duchy of Poland As a result of further fragmentation Silesia was divided into many duchies ruled by various lines of the Polish Piast dynasty In the 14th century it became a constituent part of the Bohemian Crown Lands under the Holy Roman Empire which passed to the Austrian Habsburg monarchy in 1526 however a number of duchies remained under the rule of Polish dukes from the houses of Piast Jagiellon and Sobieski as formal Bohemian fiefdoms some until the 17th 18th centuries As a result of the Silesian Wars the region was annexed by the German state of Prussia from Austria in 1742 After World War I when the Poles and Czechs regained their independence the easternmost part of Upper Silesia became again part of Poland by the decision of the Entente Powers after insurrections by Poles and the Upper Silesian plebiscite while the remaining former Austrian parts of Silesia were divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland During World War II as a result of German occupation the entire region was under control of Nazi Germany In 1945 after World War II most of the German held Silesia was transferred to Polish jurisdiction by the Potsdam Agreement between the victorious Allies and became again part of Poland although with a Soviet installed communist regime The small Lusatian strip west of the Oder Neisse line which had belonged to Silesia since 1815 became part of East Germany As the result of the forced population shifts of 1945 48 today s inhabitants of Silesia speak the national languages of their respective countries Previously German speaking Lower Silesia had developed a new mixed Polish dialect and novel costumes There is ongoing debate about whether the Silesian language should be considered a dialect of Polish or a separate language The Lower Silesian German dialect is nearing extinction due to its speakers expulsion Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Natural resources 3 2 Demographics 3 2 1 Ethnicity 3 2 2 Religion 3 2 3 Consequences of World War II 3 3 Cities 4 Flags and coats of arms 5 World Heritage sites 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksEtymology EditThe names of Silesia in different languages most likely share their etymology Polish Slask ɕlɔ sk listen German Schlesien ˈʃleːzi en listen Czech Slezsko ˈslɛsko Lower Silesian Schlasing Silesian Slōnsk ɕlonsk Lower Sorbian Slazynska Upper Sorbian Sleska Latin Spanish and English Silesia French Silesie Dutch Silezie Italian Slesia Slovak Sliezsko Kashubian Slask The names all relate to the name of a river now Sleza and mountain Mount Sleza in mid southern Silesia which served as a place of cult for pagans before Christianization Sleza is listed as one of the numerous Pre Indo European topographic names in the region see old European hydronymy 2 According to some Polonists the name Sleza ˈɕlɛ ʐa or Slez ɕlɛ ʂ is directly related to the Old Polish words sleg ɕlɛŋk or slag ɕlɔŋk which means dampness moisture or humidity 3 They disagree with the hypothesis of an origin for the name Slask ɕlɔ sk from the name of the Silings tribe an etymology preferred by some German authors 4 In Polish common usage Slask refers to traditionally Polish Upper Silesia and today s Silesian Voivodeship but less to Lower Silesia which is different from Upper Silesia in many respects as its population was predominantly German speaking until 1945 48 5 History EditMain article History of Silesia Silesia in the early period of Poland s fragmentation 1172 1177 Lower Silesia with Lubusz Land in orange Upper Silesia in green and yellow In the fourth century BC from the south through the Klodzko Valley the Celts entered Silesia and settled around Mount Sleza near modern Wroclaw Olawa and Strzelin 6 Germanic Lugii tribes were first recorded within Silesia in the 1st century West Slavs and Lechites arrived in the region around the 7th century 7 and by the early ninth century their settlements had stabilized Local West Slavs started to erect boundary structures like the Silesian Przesieka and the Silesia Walls The eastern border of Silesian settlement was situated to the west of the Bytom and east from Raciborz and Cieszyn East of this line dwelt a closely related Lechitic tribe the Vistulans Their northern border was in the valley of the Barycz River north of which lived the Western Polans tribe who gave Poland its name 8 The first known states in Silesia were Greater Moravia and Bohemia In the 10th century the Polish ruler Mieszko I of the Piast dynasty incorporated Silesia into the newly established Polish state In 1000 the Diocese of Wroclaw was established as the oldest Catholic diocese in the region and one of the oldest dioceses in Poland subjugated to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Gniezno Poland repulsed German invasions of Silesia in 1017 at Niemcza and in 1109 at Glogow During the Fragmentation of Poland Silesia and the rest of the country were divided into many smaller duchies ruled by various Silesian dukes During this time German cultural and ethnic influence increased as a result of immigration from German speaking states of the Holy Roman Empire In 1178 parts of the Duchy of Krakow around Bytom Oswiecim Chrzanow and Siewierz were transferred to the Silesian Piasts although their population was primarily Vistulan and not of Silesian descent 8 In 1241 the Mongols conducted their first invasion of Poland causing widespread panic and mass flight They looted much of the region and defeated the combined Polish Moravian and German forces led by Duke Henry II the Pious at the Battle of Legnica which took place at Legnickie Pole near the Silesian city of Legnica Upon the death of Orda Khan the Mongols chose not to press forward further into Europe but returned east to participate in the election of a new Grand Khan leader Between 1289 and 1292 Bohemian king Wenceslaus II became suzerain of some of the Upper Silesian duchies Polish monarchs had not renounced their hereditary rights to Silesia until 1335 9 The province became part of the Bohemian Crown which was part of the Holy Roman Empire however a number of duchies remained under the rule of the Polish dukes from the houses of Piast Jagiellon and Sobieski as formal Bohemian fiefdoms some until the 17th 18th centuries In 1469 sovereignty over the region passed to Hungary and in 1490 it returned to Bohemia In 1526 Silesia passed with the Bohemian Crown to the Habsburg monarchy In the 15th century several changes were made to Silesia s borders Parts of the territories which had been transferred to the Silesian Piasts in 1178 were bought by the Polish kings in the second half of the 15th century the Duchy of Oswiecim in 1457 the Duchy of Zator in 1494 The Bytom area remained in the possession of the Silesian Piasts though it was a part of the Diocese of Krakow 8 The Duchy of Krosno Odrzanskie Crossen was inherited by the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1476 and with the renunciation of King Ferdinand I and the estates of Bohemia in 1538 became an integral part of Brandenburg From 1645 until 1666 the Duchy of Opole and Raciborz was held in pawn by the Polish House of Vasa as dowry of the Polish queen Cecylia Renata Lands of the Bohemian Crown between 1635 and 1742 before most of Silesia was ceded to Prussia In 1742 most of Silesia was seized by King Frederick II of Prussia in the War of the Austrian Succession eventually becoming the Prussian Province of Silesia in 1815 consequently Silesia became part of the German Empire when it was proclaimed in 1871 After World War I a part of Silesia Upper Silesia was contested by Germany and the newly independent Second Polish Republic The League of Nations organized a plebiscite to decide the issue in 1921 It resulted in 60 of votes being cast for Germany and 40 for Poland 10 Following the third Silesian uprising 1921 however the easternmost portion of Upper Silesia including Katowice with a majority ethnic Polish population was awarded to Poland becoming the Silesian Voivodeship The Prussian Province of Silesia within Germany was then divided into the provinces of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia Meanwhile Austrian Silesia the small portion of Silesia retained by Austria after the Silesian Wars was mostly awarded to the new Czechoslovakia becoming known as Czech Silesia and Trans Olza although most of Cieszyn and territory to the east of it went to Poland Typical Silesian baroque architecture in Wroclaw Polish Silesia was among the first regions invaded during Germany s 1939 attack on Poland which started World War II One of the claimed goals of Nazi German occupation particularly in Upper Silesia was the extermination of those whom Nazis viewed as subhuman namely Jews and ethnic Poles The Polish and Jewish population of the then Polish part of Silesia was subjected to genocide involving expulsions mass murder and deportation to Nazi concentration camps and forced labour camps while Germans were settled in pursuit of Lebensraum 11 Two thousand Polish intellectuals politicians and businessmen were murdered in the Intelligenzaktion Schlesien 12 in 1940 as part of a Poland wide Germanization program Silesia also housed one of the two main wartime centers where medical experiments were conducted on kidnapped Polish children by Nazis 13 Czech Silesia was occupied by Germany as part of so called Sudetenland In Silesia Nazi Germany operated the Gross Rosen concentration camp several prisoner of war camps for Allied POWs incl the major Stalag VIII A Stalag VIII B Stalag VIII C camps numerous Nazi prisons and thousands of forced labour camps including a network of forced labour camps solely for Poles Polenlager subcamps of prisons POW camps and of the Gross Rosen and Auschwitz concentration camps The Potsdam Conference of 1945 defined the Oder Neisse line as the border between Germany and Poland pending a final peace conference with Germany which eventually never took place 14 At the end of WWII Germans in Silesia fled from the battle ground assuming they would be able to return when the war was over However they could not return and those who had stayed were expelled and a new Polish population including people displaced from former Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and from Central Poland joined the surviving native Polish inhabitants of the region After 1945 and in 1946 nearly all of the 4 5 million Silesians of German descent fled or were interned in camps and expelled including some thousand German Jews who survived the Holocaust and had returned to Silesia The newly formed Polish United Workers Party created a Ministry of the Recovered Territories that claimed half of the available arable land for state run collectivized farms Many of the new Polish Silesians who resented the Germans for their invasion in 1939 and brutality in occupation now resented the newly formed Polish communist government for their population shifting and interference in agricultural and industrial affairs 15 The administrative division of Silesia within Poland has changed several times since 1945 Since 1999 it has been divided between Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesian Voivodeship Opole Voivodeship and Silesian Voivodeship Czech Silesia is now part of the Czech Republic forming part of the Moravian Silesian Region and the northern part of the Olomouc Region Germany retains the Silesia Lusatia region Niederschlesien Oberlausitz or Schlesische Oberlausitz west of the Neisse which is part of the federal state of Saxony The region was affected by the 1997 Central European flood Geography Edit First map of Silesia by Martin Helwig 1561 north at the bottom Most of Silesia is relatively flat although its southern border is generally mountainous It is primarily located in a swath running along both banks of the upper and middle Oder Odra River but it extends eastwards to the upper Vistula River The region also includes many tributaries of the Oder including the Bobr and its tributary the Kwisa the Barycz and the Nysa Klodzka The Sudeten Mountains run along most of the southern edge of the region though at its south eastern extreme it reaches the Silesian Beskids and Moravian Silesian Beskids which belong to the Carpathian Mountains range Historically Silesia was bounded to the west by the Kwisa and Bobr Rivers while the territory west of the Kwisa was in Upper Lusatia earlier Milsko However because part of Upper Lusatia was included in the Province of Silesia in 1815 in Germany Gorlitz Niederschlesischer Oberlausitzkreis and neighbouring areas are considered parts of historical Silesia Those districts along with Poland s Lower Silesian Voivodeship and parts of Lubusz Voivodeship make up the geographic region of Lower Silesia Silesia has undergone a similar notional extension at its eastern extreme Historically it extended only as far as the Brynica River which separates it from Zaglebie Dabrowskie in the Lesser Poland region However to many Poles today Silesia Slask is understood to cover all of the area around Katowice including Zaglebie This interpretation is given official sanction in the use of the name Silesian Voivodeship wojewodztwo slaskie for the province covering this area In fact the word Slask in Polish when used without qualification now commonly refers exclusively to this area also called Gorny Slask or Upper Silesia As well as the Katowice area historical Upper Silesia also includes the Opole region Poland s Opole Voivodeship and Czech Silesia Czech Silesia consists of a part of the Moravian Silesian Region and the Jesenik District in the Olomouc Region Natural resources Edit Silesia is a resource rich and populous region Since the middle of the 18th century coal has been mined The industry had grown while Silesia was part of Germany and peaked in the 1970s under the People s Republic of Poland During this period Silesia became one of the world s largest producers of coal with a record tonnage in 1979 16 Coal mining declined during the next two decades but has increased again following the end of Communist rule Boleslaw Smialy Coal Mine Laziska Gorne The 41 coal mines in Silesia are mostly part of the Upper Silesian Coal Basin which lies in the Silesian Upland The coalfield has an area of about 4 500 km2 1 700 sq mi 16 Deposits in Lower Silesia have proven to be difficult to exploit and the area s unprofitable mines were closed in 2000 16 In 2008 an estimated 35 billion tonnes of lignite reserves were found near Legnica making them some of the largest in the world 17 From the fourth century BC iron ore has been mined in the upland areas of Silesia 16 The same period had lead copper silver and gold mining Zinc cadmium arsenic 18 and uranium 19 have also been mined in the region Lower Silesia features large copper mining and processing between the cities of Legnica Glogow Lubin and Polkowice The region is known for stone quarrying to produce limestone marl marble and basalt 16 Annual production of minerals in Silesia Mineral Name Production tonnes ReferenceBituminous coal 95 000 000Copper 571 000 20 Zinc 160 000 21 Silver 1 200 22 Cadmium 500 23 Lead 70 000 24 The region also has a thriving agricultural sector which produces cereals wheat rye barley oats corn potatoes rapeseed sugar beets and others Milk production is well developed The Opole Silesia has for decades occupied the top spot in Poland for their indices of effectiveness of agricultural land use 25 Mountainous parts of southern Silesia feature many significant and attractive tourism destinations e g Karpacz Szczyrk Wisla Silesia is generally well forested This is because greenness is generally highly desirable by the local population particularly in the highly industrialized parts of Silesia Demographics Edit Silesia has been historically diverse in every aspect Nowadays the largest part of Silesia is located in Poland it is often cited as one of the most diverse regions in that country The United States Immigration Commission in its Dictionary of Races or Peoples published in 1911 during a period of intense immigration from Silesia to the United States considered Silesian as a geographical not ethnic term denoting the inhabitants of Silesia It is also mentioned the existence of both Polish Silesian and German Silesian dialects in that region 26 27 Polish names of Silesian cities from a 1750 Prussian official document published in Berlin during the Silesian Wars 28 Ethnicity Edit Modern Silesia is inhabited by Poles Silesians Germans and Czechs Germans first came to Silesia during the Late Medieval Ostsiedlung 29 The last Polish census of 2011 showed that the Silesians are the largest ethnic or national minority in Poland Germans being the second both groups are located mostly in Upper Silesia The Czech part of Silesia is inhabited by Czechs Moravians Silesians and Poles In the early 19th century the population of the Prussian part of Silesia was between 2 3 and 3 4 German speaking between 1 5 and 1 3 Polish speaking with Sorbs Czechs Moravians and Jews forming other smaller minorities see Table 1 below Before the Second World War Silesia was inhabited mostly by Germans with Poles a large minority forming a majority in Upper Silesia 30 Silesia was also the home of Czech and Jewish minorities The German population tended to be based in the urban centres and in the rural areas to the north and west whilst the Polish population was mostly rural and could be found in the east and in the south 31 Table 1 Ethno linguistic structure of Prussian Silesia in the early 19th century 1800 1825 Ethnic group acc G Hassel 32 acc S Plater 33 acc T Ladogorski 34 Germans 1 561 570 75 6 1 550 000 70 5 1 303 300 74 6Poles 444 000 21 5 600 000 27 3 401 900 23 0Sorbs 24 500 1 2 30 000 1 4 900 0 1Czechs 5 500 0 3 32 600 1 9Moravians 12 000 0 6Jews 16 916 0 8 20 000 0 9 8 900 0 5Population c 2 1 million 100 c 2 2 million 100 c 1 8 million 100Ethnic structure of Prussian Upper Silesia Opole regency during the 19th century and the early 20th century can be found in Table 2 Table 2 Numbers of Polish German and other inhabitants Regierungsbezirk Oppeln 32 35 36 Year 1819 1831 1834 1837 1840 1843 1846 1852 1855 1858 1861 1867 1890 1900 1905 1910Polish 377 100 67 2 418 837 62 0 468 691 62 6 495 362 62 1 525 395 58 6 540 402 58 1 568 582 58 1 584 293 58 6 590 248 58 7 612 849 57 3 665 865 59 1 742 153 59 8 918 728 58 2 1 048 230 56 1 1 158 805 57 0 Census monolingual Polish 1 169 340 53 0 37 or up to 1 560 000 together with bilingualsGerman 162 600 29 0 257 852 36 1 266 399 35 6 290 168 36 3 330 099 36 8 348 094 37 4 364 175 37 2 363 990 36 5 366 562 36 5 406 950 38 1 409 218 36 3 457 545 36 8 566 523 35 9 684 397 36 6 757 200 37 2 884 045 40 0 Other 21 503 3 8 13 254 1 9 13 120 1 8 12 679 1 6 41 570 4 6 42 292 4 5 45 736 4 7 49 445 4 9 48 270 4 8 49 037 4 6 51 187 4 6 41 611 3 4 92 480 5 9 135 519 7 3 117 651 5 8 Total population 2 207 981The Austrian part of Silesia had a mixed German Polish and Czech population with Polish speakers forming a majority in Cieszyn Silesia 38 Religion Edit Confessions in the German Empire Protestant Catholic c 1890 Lower Silesia was mostly Protestant while Glatz Klodzko and Upper Silesia were mostly Catholic Historically Silesia was about equally split between Protestants overwhelmingly Lutherans and Roman Catholics In an 1890 census taken in the German part Roman Catholics made up a slight majority of 53 while the remaining 47 were almost entirely Lutheran 39 Geographically speaking Lower Silesia was mostly Lutheran except for the Glatzer Land now Klodzko County Upper Silesia was mostly Roman Catholic except for some of its northwestern parts which were predominantly Lutheran Generally speaking the population was mostly Protestant in the western parts and it tended to be more Roman Catholic the further east one went In Upper Silesia Protestants were concentrated in larger cities and often identified as German After World War II the religious demographics changed drastically as Germans who constituted the bulk of the Protestant population were forcibly expelled Poles who were mostly Roman Catholic were resettled in their place Today Silesia remains predominantly Roman Catholic Existing since the 12th century 40 Silesia s Jewish community was concentrated around Wroclaw and Upper Silesia and numbered 48 003 1 1 of the population in 1890 decreasing to 44 985 persons 0 9 by 1910 41 In Polish East Upper Silesia the number of Jews was around 90 000 100 000 42 Historically the community had suffered a number of localised expulsions such as their 1453 expulsion from Wroclaw 43 From 1712 to 1820 a succession of men held the title Chief Rabbi of Silesia Landesrabbiner Naphtali ha Kohen 1712 16 Samuel ben Naphtali 1716 22 Ḥayyim Jonah Te omim 1722 1727 Baruch b Reuben Gomperz 1733 54 Joseph Jonas Frankel 1754 93 Jeremiah Low Berliner 1793 99 Lewin Saul Frankel 1800 7 Aaron Karfunkel 1807 16 and Abraham ben Gedaliah Tiktin 1816 20 44 Consequences of World War II Edit After the German invasion of Poland in 1939 following Nazi racial policy the Jewish population of Silesia was subjected to Nazi genocide with executions performed by Einsatzgruppe z B V led by Udo von Woyrsch and Einsatzgruppe I led by Bruno Streckenbach 45 46 imprisonment in ghettos and ethnic cleansing to the General Government In their efforts to exterminate the Jews through murder and ethnic cleansing Nazi established in Silesia province the Auschwitz and Gross Rosen camps Expulsions were carried out openly and reported in the local press 47 Those sent to ghettos would from 1942 be expelled to concentration and work camps 48 Between 5 May and 17 June 20 000 Silesian Jews were sent to Birkenau to gas chambers 49 and during August 1942 10 000 to 13 000 Silesian Jews were murdered by gassing at Auschwitz 50 Most Jews in Silesia were exterminated by the Nazis After the war Silesia became a major centre for repatriation of the Jewish population in Poland which survived Nazi German extermination 51 and in autumn 1945 15 000 Jews were in Lower Silesia mostly Polish Jews returned from territories now belonging to Soviet Union 52 rising in 1946 to seventy thousand 53 as Jewish survivors from other regions in Poland were relocated 54 The majority of Germans fled or were expelled from the present day Polish and Czech parts of Silesia during and after World War II From June 1945 to January 1947 1 77 million Germans were expelled from Lower Silesia and 310 000 from Upper Silesia 55 Today most German Silesians and their descendants live in the territory of the Federal Republic of Germany many of them in the Ruhr area working as miners like their ancestors in Silesia To smooth their integration into West German society after 1945 they were placed into officially recognized organizations like the Landsmannschaft Schlesien with financing from the federal West German budget citation needed One of its most notable but controversial spokesmen was the Christian Democratic Union politician Herbert Hupka The expulsion of Germans led to widespread underpopulation The population of the town of Glogow fell from 33 500 to 5 000 and from 1939 to 1966 the population of Wroclaw fell by 25 56 Attempts to repopulate Silesia proved unsuccessful in the 1940s and 1950s 57 and Silesia s population did not reach pre war levels until the late 1970s The Polish settlers who repopulated Silesia were partly from the former Polish Eastern Borderlands which was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939 Wroclaw was partly repopulated with refugees from the formerly Polish city of Lwow Cities Edit The following gallery includes the cities in Silesia with a population greater than 20 000 2015 Wroclaw Katowice Ostrava Gliwice Zabrze Bielsko Biala Bytom Ruda Slaska Rybnik Tychy Opole Zielona Gora Walbrzych Chorzow Legnica Jastrzebie Zdroj Opava Brzeg Nowa Ruda Prudnik BohuminName Population Area Country Administrative Historic subregion1 Wroclaw 632 067 293 km2 113 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia2 Katowice 304 362 165 km2 64 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia3 Ostrava 287 968 214 km2 83 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia Moravia4 Gliwice 185 450 134 km2 52 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia5 Zabrze 178 357 80 km2 31 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia6 Bielsko Biala 173 699 125 km2 48 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia Lesser Poland7 Bytom 173 439 69 km2 27 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia8 Ruda Slaska 141 521 78 km2 30 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia9 Rybnik 140 173 148 km2 57 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia10 Tychy 128 799 82 km2 32 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia11 Opole 120 146 97 km2 37 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia12 Zielona Gora 118 405 58 km2 22 sq mi Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia13 Walbrzych 117 926 85 km2 33 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia14 Chorzow 110 761 33 km2 13 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia15 Legnica 101 992 56 km2 22 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia16 Jastrzebie Zdroj 91 235 85 km2 33 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia17 Jelenia Gora 81 985 109 km2 42 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia18 Myslowice 75 129 66 km2 25 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia19 Lubin 74 053 41 km2 16 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia20 Havirov 71 200 32 km2 12 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia21 Glogow 68 997 35 km2 14 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia22 Siemianowice Slaskie 68 844 25 km2 10 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia23 Kedzierzyn Kozle 63 194 124 km2 48 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia24 Zory 62 038 65 km2 25 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia25 Tarnowskie Gory 60 957 84 km2 32 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia26 Swidnica 59 182 22 km2 8 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia27 Opava 57 676 91 km2 35 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia28 Piekary Slaskie 57 148 40 km2 15 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia29 Frydek Mistek 56 450 52 km2 20 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia Moravia30 Raciborz 55 930 75 km2 29 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia31 Gorlitz 55 255 68 km2 26 sq mi Saxony Historically part of Lusatia Gorlitz was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1319 1329 and 1815 194532 Karvina 52 128 57 km2 22 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia33 Swietochlowice 51 824 13 km2 5 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia34 Wodzislaw Slaski 48 731 50 km2 19 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia35 Nysa 44 899 27 km2 10 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia36 Mikolow 39 776 79 km2 31 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia37 Nowa Sol 39 721 22 km2 8 sq mi Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia38 Boleslawiec 39 603 24 km2 9 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia39 Knurow 39 090 34 km2 13 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia40 Olesnica 37 303 21 km2 8 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia41 Brzeg 36 980 15 km2 6 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia42 Cieszyn 35 918 29 km2 11 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia43 Czechowice Dziedzice 35 684 33 km2 13 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia44 Trinec 35 002 85 km2 33 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia45 Dzierzoniow 34 428 20 km2 8 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia46 Hoyerswerda Wojerecy 33 843 96 km2 37 sq mi Saxony Historically part of Lusatia Hoyerswerda was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1825 194547 Olawa 32 240 27 km2 10 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia48 Zgorzelec 31 890 16 km2 6 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Historically part of Lusatia Zgorzelec was considered part of Lower Silesia in years 1319 1329 and 1815 194549 Bielawa 31 186 36 km2 14 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia50 Kluczbork 24 207 12 km2 5 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Lower Silesia51 Lubliniec 24 105 89 km2 34 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia52 Krnov 24 079 44 km2 17 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia53 Jawor 23 650 19 km2 7 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia54 Zagan 23 235 40 km2 15 sq mi Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia55 Swiebodzice 23 197 30 km2 12 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia56 Nowa Ruda 22 823 37 km2 14 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia57 Polkowice 22 535 24 km2 9 sq mi Lower Silesian Voivodeship Lower Silesia58 Laziska Gorne 22 413 21 km2 8 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia59 Swiebodzin 21 963 11 km2 4 sq mi Lubusz Voivodeship Lower Silesia60 Rydultowy 21 741 15 km2 6 sq mi Silesian Voivodeship Upper Silesia61 Prudnik 21 472 21 km2 8 sq mi Opole Voivodeship Upper Silesia62 Bohumin 21 340 31 km2 12 sq mi Moravian Silesian Region Czech Silesia Only part in SilesiaFlags and coats of arms EditThe emblems of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia originate from the emblems of the Piasts of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia The coat of arms of Upper Silesia depicts the golden eagle on the blue shield The coat of arms of Lower Silesia depicts a black eagle on a golden yellow shield Main article Coat of arms of Silesia Coat of arms of the Prussian province of Upper Silesia 1919 1938 and 1941 1945 Coat of arms of the Silesian Voivodeship The coat of arms of the Opolskie Voivodeship Henryk IV s Probus coat of arms Coat of arms of Austrian Silesia 1742 1918 Prussian province of Lower Silesia 1919 1938 and 1941 1945 Coat of arms of the Lower Silesia Voivodeship Coat of arms of Czech SilesiaFlags with their colors refer to the coat of arms of Silesia Flag of Prussian Upper Silesia province 1919 1938 and 1941 1945 Flag of Silesia Voivodeship Flag of the Austrian Silesia 1742 1918 and Czech Silesia Flag of Prussian Lower Silesia province 1919 1938 and 1941 1945 Flag of Lower Silesia VoivodeshipWorld Heritage sites Edit Churches of Peace Swidnica and Jawor Centennial Hall Wroclaw Historic Silver Mine Tarnowskie Gory Muskau Park Leknica and Bad Muskau 58 See also Edit Poland portal Czech Republic portal Germany portal European Union portal257 Silesia Expulsion of Poles by Germany Flight and expulsion of Germans 1944 1950 List of people from Silesia Silesian German Silesian Interurbans Slezak Upper Silesian Industrial Region Upper Silesian Metropolitan AreaFootnotes Edit Silesia The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 23 July 2019 Silesia Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 23 July 2019 Silesia Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 23 July 2019 Silesia Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 23 July 2019 Zbigniew Babik Najstarsza warstwa nazewnicza na ziemiach polskich w granicach sredniowiecznej Slowianszczyzny Uniwersitas Krakow 2001 Rudolf Fischer Onomastica slavogermanica Uniwersytet Wroclawski 2007 t XXVI 2007 str 83 Jankuhn Herbert Beck Heinrich et al eds 2006 Wandalen Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 33 2nd ed Berlin Germany New York City de Gruyter Da die Silingen offensichtlich ihren Namen im mittelalterlichen pagus silensis und dem mons slenz moglicherweise mit dem Zobten gleichzusetzen hinterliessen und damit einer ganzen Landschaft Schlesien den Namen gaben Andreas Lawaty Hubert Orlowski 2003 Deutsche und Polen Geschichte Kultur Politik in German C H Beck p 183 R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 pp 34 35 R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 pp 37 38 a b c R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 pp 21 22 R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 81 gonschior de in German Piotr Eberhardt Political Migrations in Poland 1939 1948 Warsaw 2006 p 25 Wardzynska Maria 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion in Polish Warszawa IPN Kamila Uzarczyk Podstawy ideologiczne higieny ras Torun Wydawnictwo Adam Marszalek 2002 pp 285 286 289 ISBN 83 7322 287 1 Geoffrey K Roberts Patricia Hogwood 2013 The Politics Today Companion to West European Politics Oxford University Press p 50 ISBN 9781847790323 Piotr Stefan Wandycz 1980 The United States and Poland Harvard University Press p 303 ISBN 9780674926851 Phillip A Buhler 1990 The Oder Neisse Line a reappraisal under internaromtional law East European Monographs p 33 ISBN 9780880331746 Lukowski Zawadski Jerzy Hubert 2006 A Concise History of Poland Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 278 280 ISBN 978 0 521 61857 1 a b c d e Natural Resources poland gov pl En poland gov pl Retrieved 19 November 2013 Mamy najwieksze zloza wegla brunatnego na swiecie in Polish Gazetawyborcza pl Retrieved 20 November 2013 S Z Mikulski Late Hercynian gold bearing arsenic polymetallic mineralization within Saxothuringian zone in the Polish Sudetes Northeast Bohemian Massif In Mineral Deposit at the Beginning of the 21st Century A Piestrzynski et al eds Swets amp Zeitinger Publishers Google books Wise International World Information Service on Energy 0 antenna nl Retrieved 20 November 2013 Copper World Smelter Production By Country Indexmundi com 28 July 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Zinc World Smelter Production By Country Indexmundi com 1 July 2004 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Silver World Mine Production By Country Indexmundi com 13 August 2004 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Cadmium World Refinery Production By Country Indexmundi com 18 May 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Lead World Refinery Production By Country Indexmundi com 24 June 2005 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Samorzad Wojewodztwa Opolskiego Umwo opole pl Retrieved 20 November 2013 Dillingham William Paul Folkmar Daniel Folkmar Elnora 1911 Dictionary of Races or Peoples Washington D C Washington Government Printing Office p 128 Dillingham William Paul Folkmar Daniel Folkmar Elnora 1911 Dictionary of Races or Peoples United States Immigration Commission 1907 1910 Washington D C Washington Government Printing Office pp 105 128 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 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Weinhold Karl 1887 Die Verbreitung und die Herkunft der Deutschen in Schlesien The Spread and the Origin of Germans in Silesia in German Stuttgart J Engelhorn Jobst Gumpert 1966 Polen Deutschland in German Callwey p 138 Hunt Tooley T 1997 National Identity and Weimar Germany Upper Silesia and the Eastern Border 1918 1922 University of Nebraska Press p 17 a b Georg Hassel 1823 Statistischer Umriss der sammtlichen europaischen und der vornehmsten aussereuropaischen Staaten in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung Grosse Volksmenge Finanz und Militarverfassung tabellarisch dargestellt Erster Heft Welcher die beiden grossen Machte Osterreich und Preussen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt in German Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar pp 33 34 Nationalverschiedenheit 1819 Polen 377 100 Deutsche 162 600 Mahrer 12 000 Juden 8 000 Tschechen 1 600 Gesamtbevolkerung 561 203 Plater Stanislaw 1825 Jeografia wschodniey czesci Europy czyli opis krajow przez wielorakie narody slawianskie zamieszkanych obeymujacy Prussy Xieztwo Poznanskie Szlask Pruski Gallicya Rzeczpospolite Krakowska Krolestwo Polskie i Litwe in Polish Wroclaw Wilhelm Bogumil Korn p 60 Ladogorski Tadeusz 1966 Ludnosc in Historia Slaska vol II 1763 1850 part 1 1763 1806 in Polish Wroclaw edited by W Dlugoborski p 150 Paul Weber 1913 Die Polen in Oberschlesien eine statistische Untersuchung in German Berlin Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer Kalisch Johannes Bochinski Hans 1958 Stosunki narodowosciowe na Slasku w swietle relacji pruskich urzednikow z roku 1882 PDF Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka Leipzig 13 Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2020 Paul Weber 1913 Die Polen in Oberschlesien eine statistische Untersuchung in German Berlin Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer p 27 Chromik Grzegorz Geschichte des deutsch slawischen Sprachkontaktes im Teschener Schlesien in German pp 258 322 ISBN 978 3 88246 398 9 Meyers Konversationslexikon 5 Auflage Demshuk A 2012 The Lost German East Forced Migration and the Politics of Memory 1945 1970 Cambridge University Press P40 Kamusella T 2007 Silesia and Central European nationalisms the emergence of national and ethnic groups in Prussian Silesia and Austrian Silesia 1848 1918 Purdue University Press p 173 Christopher R Browning 2000 Nazi Policy Jewish Workers German Killers Cambridge University Press 2000 p 147 van Straten J 2011 The Origin of Ashkenazi Jewry The Controversy Unravelled Walter de Gruyter P58 Silesia 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 6 December 2017 Popularna encyklopedia powszechna Volume 10 Page 660 Magdalena Olkusnik Elzbieta Wojcik 2001 Streckenbach Bruno 1902 1977 funkcjonariusz niem panstwa nazistowskiego Gruppenfuhrer SS Od 1933 szef policji po lit w Hamburgu 1939 dow Einsatzgruppe I odpowiedzialny za eksterminacje ludnosci pol i zydowskiej na Slasku Zaglada Zydow na polskich terenach wcielonych do Rzeszy Page 53 Aleksandra Namyslo Instytut Pamieci Narodowej Komisja Scigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu 2008 W rzeczywistosci ludzie Udona von Woyr scha podczas marszu przez wojewodztwo slaskie na wschod dopuszczali sie prawdziwych masakr ludnosci zydowskiej Steinbacher S In the Shadow of Auschwitz The murder of the Jews of East Upper Silesia in Cesarani D 2004 Holocaust From the persecution of the Jews to mass murder Routledge P126 Steinbacher S In the Shadow of Auschwitz The murder of the Jews of East Upper Silesia in Cesarani D 2004 Holocaust From the persecution of the Jews to mass murder Routledge pp 110 138 The Origins of the Final Solution The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy September 1939 March 1942 Page 544 Christopher R Browning 2007 Between 5 May and 17 June 20 000 Silesian Jews were deported to Birkenau to be gassed Christopher R Browning 2007 The Origins of the Final Solution The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy September 1939 March 1942 University of Nebraska Press p 544 The International Jewish Labor Bund After 1945 Toward a Global History David Slucki page 63 A narrow bridge to life Jewish forced labor and survival in the Gross Rosen camp system 1940 1945 page 229 Belah Guṭerman Kochavi AJ 2001 Post Holocaust politics Britain the United States amp Jewish refugees 1945 1948 University of North Carolina Press P 176 Kochavi AJ 2001 Post Holocaust politics Britain the United States amp Jewish refugees 1945 1948 University of North Carolina Press p 176 DB Klusmeyer amp DG Papademetriou 2009 Immigration policy in the Federal Republic of Germany negotiating membership and remaking the nation Berghahn p 70 Scholz A 1964 Silesia yesterday and today Martinus Nijhoff The Hague p 69 Mazower M 1999 Dark Continent Europe s 20th Century Penguin p 223 Leknica and Bad Muskau were considered part of Silesia in years 1815 1945 References EditDlugajczyk Edward 1993 Tajny front na granicy cieszynskiej Wywiad i dywersja w latach 1919 1939 Katowice Slask ISBN 83 85831 03 7 Zahradnik Stanislaw Marek Ryczkowski 1992 Korzenie Zaolzia Warszawa Praga Trzyniec PAI press OCLC 177389723 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Silesia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 90 92 Przemyslaw Wiszewski ed 2013 Cuius regio Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia PDF The Long Formation of the Region c 1000 1526 Vol 1 Wroclaw Poland EBooki com pl ISBN 978 83 927132 1 0 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Harc Lucyna Was Gabriela eds 2014 Cuius regio Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia PDF The Strengthening of Silesian Regionalism 1526 1740 Vol 2 Wroclaw Poland EBooki com pl ISBN 978 83 927132 6 5 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Harc Lucyna Kulak Teresa eds 2015 Cuius regio Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia PDF Silesia under the Authority of the Hohenzollerns 1741 1918 Vol 3 Wroclaw Poland EBooki com pl ISBN 978 83 942651 3 7 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Czaplinski Marek Wiszewski Przemyslaw eds 2014 Cuius regio Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia PDF Region Divided Times of Nation States 1918 1945 Vol 4 Wroclaw Poland EBooki com pl ISBN 978 83 927132 8 9 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Wiszewski Przemyslaw ed 2015 Cuius regio Ideological and Territorial Cohesion of the Historical Region of Silesia PDF Permanent Change The New Region s of Silesia 1945 2015 Vol 5 Wroclaw Poland EBooki com pl ISBN 978 83 942651 2 0 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Prochazka Jiri 1683 Vienna obsessa Via Silesiaca ISBN 978 80 903476 3 2 Brno Wien 2012 ITEMExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silesia Silesia in Europe page at the Wayback Machine archived 27 July 2007 Map of Silesia in 1763 Old postcards from Silesian towns Photos from Silesian towns villages and communities before 1946 What is Silesia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Silesia amp oldid 1152685766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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