Kresy

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Polish voivodeships 1922-1939. The eastern voivodships can be considered as roughly equivalent with 'Kresy'.
Polish voivodeships 1922-1939. The eastern voivodships can be considered as roughly equivalent with 'Kresy'.

The term Kresy, meaning Outskirts or Borderlands, was first used to define the Polish eastern frontier. The Borderlands referred to the eastern frontiers of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. During the period of the Second Polish Republic, The Borderlands were equated with the lands to the east of Curzon line. In September 1939 the Borderlands were occupied by the Soviet Union and after World War II they were incorporated as a part of the Soviet republics of Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania. When the Soviet Union dissolved the Borderlands were included in the territories of countries which gained independence.

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According to the “Dictionary of the Polish Language” by Samuel Bogumil Linde from 1807, Kresy referred to the Polish eastern frontier. The Tatar Horde settled on the Lower Dnieper River in the Borderlands. For the first time in literature, this term was probably used by Wincenty Pol in his poems entitled “Mohort” from 1854 and in “Pieśń o ziemi naszej”. Pol claimed that it was the line from Dniester to Dnieper River so the land of Tatar borderland. At the beginning of the 20th century the meaning of the term Borderlands expanded to include the lands of the former eastern provinces of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, to the east of Lvov-Vilnius line, and in the period of the Second Polish Republic the Borderlands were equated with the land to the east of Curzon line. Currently the term Eastern Borderlands describes former, eastern lands of the Second Polish Republic.

Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the Eastern Borderlands was the area situated on the lower Dnieper River under so-called ‘porohy’ in the then Kijov province. After the union of Lublin of 1569 the Wild Fields were incorporated into the boundaries of the Republic of the Two Nations. At the beginning those areas were uninhabited.

The year 1772 is the beginning of the Russian and the Austrian territorial trophies at the cost of areas of the Republic of the Two Nations which today are named Eastern Borderlands (areas situated to the east of today’s Polish border). This process was held in three stages (annexations). In the first partition (1772) Russia occupied Polish Inflanty, the northern part of Plock province, Vitebsk province, Mscislaw province and the southeast part of Minsk province (about 92 thousand km², 1,3 million people). Austria occupied Rus Halicka, regions near Zamosc and northern Lesser Poland (about 83 thousand km² and 2,65 million people). During the second partition in 1793 Russia took Belarusian and Ukrainian lands to the east of Druja-Pinsk-Zbrucz line, i.e.: Kiev, Bratslav, part of Podolia, east part of Volhynia and Brest, Minsk and part of Vilnius (about 250 thousand km²) provinces. The third partition took place in 1795 and Lithuanian, Belarusian and Ukrainian areas to the east of the Bug River and Niemirow-Grodno line (about 120 thousand km²) were occupied. This period in the history of Poland, especially in its eastern part, was a time of national rebellions (November Uprising, January Uprising), persecutions, deportations to Siberia and denationalization of Poles. The partition, especially that of the Russian were a catastrophe not only for Polish statehood but also for social development. The eastern borderlands belonged to the last regions in Europe where serfdom was abolished: In 1848 it was eliminated in the Austrian partition and in 1864 in the Russian partition.

March 1919 was especially turbulent for the Eastern Borderlands of Poland, as it was the time of the rebirth of the Polish state and the formation of the border. At that time, Poland was involved in three wars for its Eastern borders: with Ukraine, the Bolsheviks and Lithuania. As a result Poland incorporated a great part of the land that was under Russian rule situated to the east of the Curzon line. This terrain formed the Eastern provinces of the Second Republic of Poland: part of Lviv, Novogrod, Polesie, Stanislawów, Tarnopol, Vilnius, Volyn and part of Białystok.

While the majority of the population of Western Ukraine was Ukrainian and the majority of the population Western Belarus in the north was Belarusian, ethnic Poles were the largest ethnic group in the combined region, and were the largest ethnic group in the region's cities. Other groups included Lithuanians and Jews. The Polish inhabitants of this region, known in Polish as Kresowiacy, constituted approximately 40% of the population and had a distinct culture, with accents and customs influenced by the presence of ethnic minorities. Among, these about 150,000 constituted osadnicy, or veterans of the Polish army given free land during 1921-1939.

In 1931, according to the National Census, the biggest cities in Polish Eastern Borderlands Voivodeships were:

As a consequence of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, on September 17, 1939 the territory was annexed by Soviet Union, and a significant part of the Polish population was deported to other areas of the Soviet Union including Kazakhstan. [1]

In late September 1939 the Eastern borderlands unlike the rest of Poland were under Russian rule and not German. This was due to a secret protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed on the 23rd of August 1939 in Moscow, regulating the course of the demarcation line between Germany and the Soviet Union. The Russians invaded Poland on the 17th of September moving fast to the Western border. Already on the 22nd of September both aggressors celebrated the success of their armies in a joint parade of victory in Brest-Litovsk (today's Brest). The Russian army committed many crimes against Polish civilians and prisoners of war at the beginning of occupying the Borderlands. In the end the course of the border was designated by the agreement on borders and friendship between the Third Reich and the Soviet Union signed on the 28th of September. Polish command and government were completely surprised by the Russian attack and for three months, until the 18th of December, they could not announce that Poland was in a state of war with Russia or even give clear orders to their soldiers.

After the beginning of the Soviet-German war which took place the 22nd of June 1941, the Germans moved approximately thousand kilometers eastwards in the first weeks, breaking apart or taking Soviet troops into capture. Due to these events, the Polish eastern frontiers changed from being under Soviet occupation to German for almost a three year period.

In January 1944, Soviet troops reached the former Polish-Soviet border (by September the 17th 1939), whereas till the end of July they again brought under control the whole territory that was granted to the USSR with the German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty of 28 September 1939, which are currently the terrains eastward from the Eastern Polish border.

Already during the Teheran Conference in 1943, a new Eastern Polish border was established, in effect sanctioning the Soviet territorial acquisitions from September 1939 and ignoring protests from the Polish emigrant government in London.

The Potsdam conference gave consent to the deportation of the Polish people from the former eastern Polish border, but the issue with the Polish western border was still unsolved, in effect surrendering the territories of the third Reich situated east of the Oder and the Lusatian Neisse River (excl. the eastern Prus region) during the period of the temporary Polish jurisdiction and up to the moment, where territorial borders were finally acknowledged by the peace treaty.

After the Second World War, the Polish eastern boundaries were incorporated into Soviet Union as part of the republics of Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania. The annexation of the territories in eastern Poland was celebrated in the Soviet Union and is also currently considered in independent Belarus as the “unification of Western Belarus with the SSR part of Belarus”. The official name of the attack on Poland was “the Red Army freedom campaign”. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Polish eastern boundaries, found themselves at the borders of the newly formed and now independent eastern republics of the former USSR.

  1. ^ Michael Hope, 'Polish Deportees in the Soviet Union', Veritas Foundation, London, 2000, ISBN 0 948202769
  • Mały rocznik statystyczny 1939, Główny Urząd Statystyczny, Warszawa 1939 (Concise Statistical Yearbook 1939, Central Statistical Office, Warsaw 1939).

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