Ukraińcy w ruchu rewolucyjnym w II Rzeczypospolitej

Autor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1506-6541.17.07

Abstrakt

Following the end of the Polish-Soviet war and the conclusion of the Riga Treaty as of March 18 in 1921, Galicja (Małopolska) Wschodnia [Eastern Galicia (Little Poland)] was placed within the boundaries of the Polish state. The province’s national composition was mixed, whereby the Rusyn population (Ukrainian) prevailed over the Polish one. In about 90% it was a rural region, with a very high share of illiterate people which reached almost 80% in the case of Ukrainians. The Ukrainians constituted 14,3% of Poland’s population according to the national census of 1921 and 13,9% according to the census of 1931. Initially, those where the areas where Komunistyczna Partia Galicji Wschodniej [Communist Party of Eastern Galicia] was active (since February 1919), and then Komunistyczna Partia Zachodniej Ukrainy [Communist Party of Western Ukraine] (since October 1923) which was an autonomous district organization of Komunistyczna Partia Polski [Communist Party of Poland]. There were also legal Ukrainian revolutionary organizations, inter alia, Sel-Rob Jedność [Sel-Rob Unity]. The relations between Polish and Ukrainian communists were not very good, especially at the beginning, which is particularly focused upon in the present paper.

Pobrania

Brak dostępnych danych do wyświetlenia.

Pobrania

Opublikowane

2012-06-30

Jak cytować

Cimek, H. (2012). Ukraińcy w ruchu rewolucyjnym w II Rzeczypospolitej. Zeszyty Wiejskie, 17, 95–106. https://doi.org/10.18778/1506-6541.17.07

Numer

Dział

Articles