Historical demography of Poland

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Historical demography of Poland shows that in the past, Poland's demography was much more diverse than at present. For many centuries, until the end of Second World War, the Polish population was composed of many significant ethnic minorities.

Unia Lubelska (Union of Lublin) by Jan Matejko (1869)
Unia Lubelska ("Union of Lublin")
by Jan Matejko, 1869.
History of Poland
 
Chronology
Until 966
966–1385
1385–1569
1569–1795
1795–1918
1918–1939
1939–1945
1945–1989
1989–present
Topics
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(Jewish)
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Polish people were formed from the slow mergers and assimilations of various tribes living on what became Poland's territories in the early Middle Ages.

Around the year 1000, the population of Polish lands is estimated at about 1,000,000[1] to 1,250,000.[2]

Although the Kingdom of Poland in late Middle Ages consisted mostly of Poles, influx of other cultures was significant: particularly notable were Jewish and German settlers, who often formed significant minorities of even majorities in urban centers, but sporadically people from other places (Scotland, Netherlands) settled in Poland as well. At that time notable minorities would include various not-completely assimilated people from Slavic tribes, some of whom would eventually assimilate totally into Polish people, others into neighbouring nations, once Polish influence in some regions ebbed.

Around 1490, combined population of Poland and Lithuania, in a persona union since the Union of Krewo a century before, is estimated at about 8 million.[3]

The population of the Commonwealth of both nations was never overwhelmingly either Roman Catholic or Polish. This resulted from Poland's possession of Ukraine and confederation with Lithuania; in both these countries ethnic Poles were a distinct minority. The Commonwealth comprised primarily four nations: Lithuanians, Poles, Ukrainians and Belarusians (the latter referred usually as the Ruthenians). Shortly after the Union of Lublin (1569), at the turn of the century, the Commonwealth population was around 7 million, with a rough breakdown of 4,5 Poles, 0,75 Lithuanians, 0,7 Jews and 2m Ruthenians.[4] In 1618, after the Truce of Deulino the Commonwealth population increased together with its territory, reaching 11,5 millions that could be roughly divided into: Poles - 4,5m, Ukrainians - 3,5m, Belarusians - 1,5m, Lithuanians - 0,75m, Prussians - 0,75m, Jews - 0,5m, Livionians - 0,5m; at that time nobility formed 10% and burghers, 15%.[5] Population losses of 1648-1657 are estimated at 4m.[5] Coupled with further population and territorial losses, in 1717 Commonwealth population had fallen to 9m, roughly 4,5m Poles, 1,5m Ukrainians, 1,2m Belarusians, 0,8m Lithuanians, 0,5m Jews, 0,5m others[5]

To be Polish, in the non-Polish lands of the Commonwealth, was then much less an index of ethnicity than of religion and rank; it was a designation largely reserved for the landed noble class (szlachta), which included Poles but also many members of non-Polish origin who converted to Catholicism in increasing numbers with each following generation. For the non-Polish noble such conversion meant a final step of Polonization that followed the adoption of the Polish language and culture.[6] Poland, as the culturally most advanced part of the Commonwealth, with the royal court, the capital, the largest cities, the second-oldest university in Central Europe (after Prague), and the more liberal and democratic social institutions has proven an irresistible magnet for the non-Polish nobility in the Commonwealth.[7]

As a result, in the eastern territories a Polish (or Polonized) aristocracy dominated a peasantry whose great majority was neither Polish nor Roman Catholic. Moreover, the decades of peace brought huge colonization efforts to Ukraine, heightening the tensions among nobles, Jews, Cossacks (traditionally Orthodox), Polish and Ruthenian peasants. The latter, deprived of their native protectors among the Ruthenian nobility, turned for protection to cossacks that facilitated violence that in the end broke the Commonwealth. The tensions were aggravated by conflicts between Eastern Orthodoxy and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church following the Union of Brest, overall discrimination of Orthodox religions by dominant Catholicism[8], and several Cossack uprisings. In the west and north, many cities had sizable German minorities, often belonging to Reformed churches. The Commonwealth had also one of the largest Jewish diasporas in the world.

Until the Reformation, the szlachta were mostly Catholic or Eastern Orthodox. However, many families quickly adopted the Reformed religion. After the Counter-Reformation, when the Roman Catholic Church regained power in Poland, the szlachta became almost exclusively Roman Catholic, despite the fact that Roman Catholicism was not a majority religion (the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches counted approximately 40% of the population each, while the remaining 20% were Jews and members of various Protestant churches). It should be noted that the Counter-Reformation in Poland, influenced by the Commonwealth tradition of religious tolerance, was based mostly on Jesuit propaganda, and was very peaceful when compared to excesses such as the Thirty Years' War elsewhere in Europe.

By the First Partition in 1772, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth lost about 211 000 km² (30% of its territory, amounting at that time to about 733 000 km²), with a population of over four to five million people (about a third of its population of 14 million before the partitions).[9] [10] After the Second Partition, Commonwealth losted about 308 000 km², being reduced to 223 000 km². It has lost about 2 million people; only about 3.4 millions people remained in Poland, an estimated 1/3 of the pre-First Partition (1772), estimated as over 10 millions. After the Third Partition, overall, Austria had gained about 18 percent of the former Commonwealth territory (130,000 km²) and about 32 percent of the population (3.85 million people).[11] Prussia had gained about 20 percent of the former Commonwealth territory 149 000km²) and about 23 percent of the population (2.6 million people).[11] Russia had gained about 62 percent of the former Commonwealth territory (462,000 km²) and about 45 percent of the population (3.5 million people).[11]

Congress Poland had a population of about 4.25 million around 1830.[10]

In Russian partition, the Pale of Settlement resulted in resettlement of many Russian Jews to the western fringes of Russian Empire, which now included part of Poland. This further increased the sizable community of Polish Jews.

Dominant nationalities in Poland and surrounding regions, 1931. Source: H. Zieliński
Mother tongue in Poland, based on 1931 census

Before World War II the Polish lands were noted for the richness and variety of their ethnic communities. After Poland gained its independence in 1921, a large part of its population was some type of minority or another. The census of that year allocates 30.8% of the population in the minority.[12]

In 1931 Poland had the second largest Jewish population in the world, and one-fifth of all Jews resided within Poland's borders (approx. 3,136,000, roughly 10% of the entire Polish population).[12]










Norman Davies gives the results of Polish census of 1931 "according to linguistic criteria" as follows[13]

  • Poles, 68.9% of the population
  • Ukrainians, 13.9%
  • Jews, 8.7%
  • Belarusians, 3.1%
  • Germans, 2.3%
  • Other, 3.1%

The results of Polish census of 1931 according to religion are as follows.[14]

  • Roman Catholics, 64.8% of the population
  • Greek Cathoilc, 10.5%
  • Russian Orthodox, 11.8%
  • Jewish, 9.8%
  • Potestant and other, 3.1%


In the southeast, Ukrainian settlements were present in the regions east of Chełm and in the Carpathians east of Nowy Sącz. The three main native higlander populations were Łemkowie, Bojkowie and Huculi.

In all the towns and cities there were large concentrations of Yiddish-speaking Jews. The Polish ethnographic area stretched eastward: in eastern Lithuania, Belarus, and western Ukraine, all of which had a mixed population, Poles predominated not only in the cities but also in numerous rural districts. There were significant Polish minorities in Daugavpils (in Latvia), Minsk (in Belarus), Bucovina (in Romania), and Kiev (in Ukraine) (see Polish minority in the Soviet Union, Polish Autonomous District).

See supplements: Occupation of Poland, World War II crimes in Poland, Holocaust in Poland

In the beginning of the war (September, 1939) the territory of Poland was divided between the Nazi Germany and the USSR. By the late-1941 the Soviets were overrun by Nazi Germany over entire territory of the former Second Polish Republic but the 1944-1945 the Red Army's offensive drove the Nazi forces out.

After both occupiers divided the territory of Poland between themselves, they conducted a series of actions aimed at suppression of Polish culture and repression of much of the Polish people. Tadeusz Piotrowski's revised 2005 estimate of Poland's war losses is 5.6 million persons - 16% of the population.[15] About 90% of Polish Jews were murdered by the Nazis during the Holocaust; many others emigrated in the succeeding years.

Poland's Population Balance-(1939-1950)

Description Total Poles Jews Germans Others(Ukrainians/Belarusians)
1- Population Dec. 1931 Per Census 32,108,000 21,835,000 3,114,000 741,000 6,418,000
2- Population Sept.1, 1939- 35,100,000 23,900,000 3,300,000 800,000 7,100,000
3- Natural Increase Oct. 1939-Dec. 1945 1,330,000 1,000,000 50,000 30,000 250,000
4- Natural Increase 1946-1950 2,160,000 2,160,000 0 0 0
5- Population gain Recovered Territories 1,100,000 1,100,000 0 0 0
6- Immigration 1946-50 150,000 150,000 0 0 0
7- Emigration to the West (1,340,000) (420,000) (140,000) (660,000) (120,000)
8- Population Remaining in the USSR (7,900,000) (1,250,000) (50,000) 0 (6,600,000)
9- War losses (5,600,000) (2,000,000) (3,100,000) (100,000) (400,000)
10- Population Dec. 1950 Per Census 25,000,000 24,640,000 60,000 70,000 230,000

1- Population Dec. 1931 Per Census -The allocation of the Polish, German and other population is by the primary language spoken. Jews are given by religion. Most Jews spoke Yiddish, however included with the Jews are 372,000 Polish speakers who are sometimes classified with the Polish group. Included with the Poles are 984,000 Eastern Orthodox & Greek Catholic adherents who are sometimes classified with the Ukrainian and Belarusian groups.[14]This census data includes 192,000 military personnel who were allocated.

2- Population Sept. 1, 1939- The estimate was made by the Polish government in exile in 1941.[16] To derive the statistics they added the official Polish vital statistics data from 1932-39, births, deaths and net migration, to the 1931 census figures.[14]

3- Natural Increase Oct. 1939-Dec. 1945 -After the war Polish demographers calculated the estimated births that occurred during the war. In 1938 the birth rate was 2.45%, natural deaths 1.4%. The birth rate (1938 =100)in 1939=98,1940=93, 1941=88,1942=84,1943=78,1944=80 1945=90. [14] If we take these birth rates and the 1.4% natural death rate of 1938 as being constant, we will derive an increase of 1.330 million from 1939-45. The Jewish estimated increase is only for 1939-40 because of the Holocaust.

4- Natural Increase 1946-1950 All were Poles because ethnic groups or religion were not listed in post war Poland. This figue is official Polish government data for births and natural deaths from Jan 1946 until the census of Dec 1950. [17]

5- Population gain Recovered Territories Former German citizens reclassified as Poles after the war in the Recovered Territories. This group was mostly bi-lingual Polish-German who declared their allegiance to Poland after the war. [17][18]

6- Immigration 1946-50 Poles resident in western Europe before the war, primarily in Germany and France, who re-immigrated after the war. [17]

7- Emigration to the West UN refugee data listed Poles(419,000) and Jews (140,000) who remained in non communist countries.[14] The number of Ukrainians and Belarusians from Poland remaining in non communist countries is also per UN data [19] The number of ethnic Germans who were deported or fled from pre-war Poland is from German official sources. [20]

8-Population Remaining in the USSR The 1959 Soviet census data for the former Polish regions listed 8.6 million inhabitants, in addition there were 230,000 Poles who were allowed to leave the USSR in 1955-58. If we take this total of about 8.8 million and subtract the estimated natural increase from 1946-58 of 1.4 million we arrive at a total population of 7.4 million surviving the war in the former Polish territories.[21][22] To this we must add the 500,000 ethnic Ukrainians and Belrussians who were deported from Poland into the interior of the USSR during 1945-46. The number of Poles and Jews who remained in the USSR after the war was estimated at 1.4 million by Polish scholar and historian Krystyna Kersten[23] Included with the Poles remaining in the USSR are about 600,000 Eastern Orthodox & Greek Catholic adherents who are sometimes classified with the Ukrainian and Belarusian groups.

9- War losses The estimate for war losses was made by Tadeusz Piotrowski of the University of New Hampshire.[15] Polish war losses include 5,150,000 victims of the German occupation and the Holocaust, 350,000deaths of Polish citizens during the Soviet occupation in 1940-41 and 100,000 Poles killed in 1943-44 during the massacres of Poles in Volhynia
The official Polish government report prepared in 1947 claimed 6,028,000 war victims from the Polish and Jewish ethnic groups, excluding ethnic Germans and others. But today scholars of independent Poland believe that 3.0 million Jews and 1.8 to 1.9 million Poles were victims of German occupation policies and the war. This revision of estimated war losses was the topic of an article in the Polish academic journal The Polish Quarterly of International Affairs[24] Ethnic German deaths were primarily of men in German military service, conscripted in violation of international law.[20][18] Included in the total of 5.6 million war dead are 2.0 million Poles and Jews and about 400,000 ethnicUkrainians/Belarusians in the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union[23] Contemporary Russian sources also include these losses with Soviet war deaths.[25]

10- Population December 1950 Per Census The total population per the December 1950 census was 25 million. A breakdown by ethnic group was not given. However, we can estimate the Jewish population based on the postwar census taken by the Jewish community.[17] Data for the Germans and others who remained in Poland after the war can be estimated using the 1946 Polish census[14]

Before World War II, a third of Poland's population was composed of ethnic minorities. After the war, however, Poland's minorities were all but gone, due to the 1945 revision of borders, and the Holocaust that resulted in the extermination of the vast majority of Poland's Jews. Under the National Repatriation Office (Państwowy Urząd Repatriacyjny), millions of Poles were forced to leave their homes in the eastern Kresy region and settle in the western former German territories. At the same time approximately 5 million remaining Germans (about 8 million had already fled or had been expelled and about 1 million had been killed in 1944-46) were similarly expelled from those territories into the Allied occupation zones. Ukrainian and Belarusian minorities found themselves now mostly within the borders of the Soviet Union; those who opposed this new policy (like the Ukrainian Insurgent Army in the Bieszczady Mountains region) were suppressed by the end of 1947 in the "Wisła" Action.

The population of Jews in Poland, which formed the largest Jewish community in pre-war Europe at about 3.3 million people, was all but destroyed by 1945. Approximately 3 million Jews (all but about 300,000 to 500,000 of the Jewish population) died of starvation in ghettos and labor camps, were slaughtered at the German Nazi extermination camps or by the Einsatzgruppen death squads. Between 40,000 and 100,000 Polish Jews survived the Holocaust in Poland, and another 50,000 to 170,000 were repatriated from the Soviet Union, and 20,000 to 40,000 from Germany and other countries. At its postwar peak, there were 180,000 to 240,000 Jews in Poland, settled mostly in Warsaw, Łódź, Kraków and Wrocław.[26]

The position of Jews in postwar Poland was precarious. Many of the Holocaust survivors shared the common fate of other people in post-war Communist Poland, and were not able to reclaim their property upon return. There were incidents of Jews who were returning to their old homes being attacked by people who had moved into their homes during the war. Jews were also sometimes associated with the Communists, as some Jews who returned from the Soviet Union, including Hilary Minc and Party security and ideological chief Jakub Berman, assumed prominent positions in Communist leadership and were as a result held responsible for the regime's repressions by many Poles. These issues fed into existing anti-Semitism, culminating in the Kielce pogrom of July 1946. Sparked by falsified rumors of Jewish blood libel, a crowd attacked a building housing Jews preparing to emigrate to Palestine while the police stood by and watched—even assisting in some cases—killing over 40 and wounding approximately 50. Afterwards, the Communists, anti-Communists and Catholic Church all blamed each other for this outbreak of violence. Kielce became a turning point for the Jews in post-war Poland. Until the pogrom, large numbers of Polish Jews had intended to stay in the country, despite the general Zionist feeling after the war. After the pogrom, the majority of Jews wanted to leave. The number of Jews crossing the border illegally skyrocketed — going from an average of 1,000 per month before July 1946 to over 20,000 per month for the three months afterwards.[27] In total, 100,000 to 120,000 Jews left Poland between 1945 and 1948. Their departure was largely organized by the Zionist activists in Poland, such as Adolf Berman and Yitzhak Zuckerman, under the umbrella of a semi-clandestine organization, Berihah ("Flight"). A second wave of Jewish emigration (50,000) took place during the liberalization of the Communist regime between 1957 and 1959.

For more details on this topic, see Demographics of Poland.

Most Germans were expelled from Poland and the annexed east German territories at the end of the war, while many Ukrainians, Rusyns and Belarusians lived in territories incorporated into the USSR. Small Ukrainian, Belarusian, Slovak, and Lithuanian minorities reside along the borders, and a German minority is concentrated near the southwestern city of Opole and in Masuria. Groups of Ukrainians and Polish Ruthenians also live in western Poland, where they were forcefully resettled by communists.

As a result of the migrations and the Soviet Unions radically altered borders under the rule of Joseph Stalin, the population of Poland became one of the most ethnically homogeneous in the world. Virtually all people in Poland claim Polish nationality, with Polish as their native tongue. Ukrainians resp. Rusyns, the largest minority group, are scattered in various northern districts. Lesser numbers of Belarusians and Lithuanians live in areas adjoining Belarus and Lithuania. The Jewish community, almost entirely Polonized, has been greatly reduced. In Silesia a significant segment of the population, of mixed Polish and German ancestry, tends to declare itself as Polish or German according to political circumstances.

Minorities of Germans remain in Pomerania, Silesia, East Prussia, and Lubus.

Small populations of Polish Tatars still exist. Some Polish towns, mainly in northeastern Poland have mosques. Tatars arrived as mercenary soldiers beginning in the late 1300s. The Tatar population reached approximately 100,000 in 1630 but is less than 500 in 2000. See also Islam in Poland.[28]

Year/City Warsaw Kraków Poznań[29] Wrocław Gdańsk Toruń Szczecin Vilnius Trakai Lwów Kiev
1150 7000
1200 30000
1242 12000
1300 14000 14000 6000 20000
1325 15000
1329 16000
1348 22000 10000
1367 7700
1378 8500 12000
1387 13000 30000
1400 18000 21000 10000 20000 50000
1430 20000 10000
1470 21000
1500 22000 20000 21000 30000 10000 25000
1525 22000
1549 22000
1550 9000 35000 30000
1564 10000
1579 34200
1595 20000
1600 35000 26000 20000 33000 49000 15000 12000 40000 10000
1609 37000
1622 70000 18000 10500
1624 48000
1650 45000
1653 21000
1655 14000
1669 14500 12000
1700 21000 30000 40000 50000 40000 20000
1709 12000 11000
1711 41000
1727 41000 11000
1742 41000 20000
1747 50000
1750 28000 51000 48000 13000 21000 25000 22000
1756 55000
1760 30000
1766 29000
1772 15000 21000 30000
1775 10000 39000
1792 120000 15000
1796 16000 6200 19000
1798 24500
1800 75000 25000 19000 65000 41000 18500 6900 25500 42000 19000
1802 27000
1803 16000 44500
1803 18000 7000
1811 23000
1824 22000 8500
1829 140000
1831 31000 8600
1845 11000 50000
1848 42000
1849 111000 64000 10500 47000 4500 75000
1850 163000 42000 43000 115000 64000 48000 56000 71000
1851 164000 121000 80000
1852 67000 52000
1852 56000
1860 43000
1870 54400
1890 69900 27000
1895 73200
1900 110000
1905 136800
1910 156700 46200
1917 156400
1921 169400 37400
1931 246700
1939 275000 80000
1946 268000 68000
1950 32700 80600
1960 408100 104900
1970 471900 129900
1975 516000 149200
1980 552900 174400
1990 590000 202200
1995 578900 204700
2000 571600 204300
2004[citation needed] 1692854 757430 570778 636268 459072 208278 411900
Table based on Tertius Chandler, 1987, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical Census,[30] except of data for Poznań.[31][32]
Note that this table contains information on some cities that are not currently within the borders of Poland, and others that have not been in Poland's borders for many centuries. See Territorial changes of Poland after World War II for more details on that issue.

  1. ^ Jerzy Lukowski, Hubert Zawadzki, A Concise History of Poland, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0521559170, Google Print, p.6
  2. ^ Henryk Łowmiański, Economic problems of the early feudal Polish State, Acta Poloniae Historica, III (1960), p.7-32.
  3. ^ Jerzy Lukowski, Hubert Zawadzki, A Concise History of Poland, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0521559170, Google Print, p.6
  4. ^ Total and Jewish population based of Frazee; others are estimations from Pogonowski (see following reference). Charles A. Frazee, World History the Easy Way, Barron's Educational Series, ISBN 0812097661, Google Print, 50
  5. ^ a b c Based on 1618 population map (p.115), 1618 languages map (p.119), 1657-1667 losses map (p.128) and 1717 map (p.141) from Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski, Poland a Historical Atlas, Hippocrene Books, 1987, ISBN 0880293942
  6. ^ Linda Gordon, Cossack Rebellions: Social Turmoil in the Sixteenth Century Ukraine, SUNY Press, 1983, ISBN 0-87395-654-0, Google Print, p.51
  7. ^ Aleksander Gella, Development of Class Structure in Eastern Europe: Poland and Her Southern Neighbors, SUNY Press, 1998, ISBN 0-88706-833-2, Google Print, p.13
  8. ^ "Poland, history of" Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. [1] [Accessed February 10, 2006]. and "Ukraine" Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. [2] [Accessed February 14, 2006].
  9. ^ Poland, Partitions of. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved April 28, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9060581
  10. ^ a b Jerzy Lukowski, Hubert Zawadzki, A Concise History of Poland, Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0521559170, Google Print, p.97
  11. ^ a b c Piotr Stefan Wandycz, The Price of Freedom: A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present, Routledge (UK), 2001, ISBN 0-415-25491-4, Google Print, p.133
  12. ^ a b Joseph Marcus, Social and Political History of the Jews in Poland, 1919-1939, Mouton Publishing, 1983, ISBN 90-279-3239-5, Google Books, p. 17
  13. ^ Norman Davies, God's Playground, Columbia University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-231-12819-3, Google Print, p.299
  14. ^ a b c d e f U.S. Bureau of the Census The Population of Poland Ed. W. Parker Mauldin, Washington- 1954
  15. ^ a b poland World War II casualties (in thousands), Project in posterum.
  16. ^ London Nakl. Stowarzyszenia Prawników Polskich w Zjednoczonym Królestwie [1941] ,Polska w liczbach. Poland in numbers. Zebrali i opracowali Jan Jankowski i Antoni Serafinski. Przedmowa zaopatrzyl Stainslaw Szurlej. The Polish government in exile also included the 240,000 inhabitants of Cieszyn with the Polish population. They are not included in these figures.
  17. ^ a b c d Ludnosc Polski w XX wieku / Andrzej Gawryszewski. Warsaw 2005.
  18. ^ a b Schimitzek, Stanislaw, Truth or Conjecture? Warsaw 1966.
  19. ^ European Refugees by Michael Proudfoot.
  20. ^ a b Steinberg, Heinz Günter. Die Bevölkerungsentwicklung in Deutschland im Zweiten Weltkrieg : mit einem Überblick über die Entwicklung von 1945 bis 1990. Bonn 1991. ISBN 3885570890
  21. ^ Soviet Union. TSentralnoe statisticheskoe upravlenie. Itogi Vsesoiuznoi perepisi naseleniia 1959 goda. Moskva, Gosstatizdat, 1963,
  22. ^ Data from the Soviet 1959 census for the former Polish regions can be accessed online at Population Statistics[3] The 1959 statistics for the individual regions are as follows: Ukraine: Liviv: 2,108,000; Rivne:926,000; Ternopil:1,086,00; Ivano-Frankovisk 1,095,000; Luck 890,000; Belarus: Hordna: 1,077,000; Brest: 1,205,000. Lithuania: Vilnius 235,000. Total for all regions 8,622,000
  23. ^ a b Szacunek strat osobowych w Polsce Wschodniej. Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI- 1994.
  24. ^ Gniazdowski, Mateusz. Losses Inflicted on Poland by Germany during World War II. Assessments and Estimates—an Outline The Polish Quarterly of International Affairs, 2007, no. 1.This article is available for purchase from the Central and Eastern European Online Library at http://www.ceeol.com
  25. ^ Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995 ISBN 5-86789-023-6.
  26. ^ "Jews in Poland Since 1939" (PDF), YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe, Yale University Press, 2005
  27. ^ "The Jewish Pogrom in Kielce, July 1946 - New Evidence," Bozena Szaynok, Intermarium, Volume 1, Number 3
  28. ^ (Polish) Mniejszości narodowe i etniczne w Polsce on the pages of Polish Ministry of Internal Affairs and Administration. Retrieved on 9 September 2007.
  29. ^ See deatils: Historical population of Poznań
  30. ^ Tertius Chandler, 1987, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical Census. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellon Press
  31. ^ Jerzy Topolski (ed.) Dzieje Poznania, Warszawa-Poznań 1988-, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe ISBN 83-01-08194-5
  32. ^ Maria Trzeciakowska, Lech Trzeciakowski, W dziewiętnastowiecznym Poznaniu. Życie codzienne miasta 1815-1914, Poznań 1982, Wydawnictwo Poznańskie ISBN 83-210-0316-8

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