-
government of the
Second Polish Republic renamed the city as Brześć nad
Bugiem ("Brest on the Bug") on 20
March 1923.
After World War II, the city became...
- Publications, 1981. Page 194. (in Polish) Steczkowski, Jan Zagroba. "Rok 1944 - między
Bugiem a Wisłą",
retrieved on
August 9, 2008. (in Polish) v t e v t e...
- nowogródzkie Nowogródek 23.0 1,057.2 55–59
poleskie (Polesia) Brześć nad
Bugiem 36.7 1,132.2 60–64
pomorskie (Pomeranian) Toruń 25.7 1,884.4 65–69 poznańskie...
- the
invasion of
Poland in the city of Brest-Litovsk (Polish: Brześć nad
Bugiem or Brześć Litewski, then in the
Second Polish Republic, now
Brest in Belarus)...
- in
Szychowice and the USN-UPA base in Łasków-village. Łuny nad Buczwą i
Bugiem -
Walki oddziałów AK i Bch w
Obwodzie Hrubiszowskim w
latach 1939-1944 -...
- Nowogródek (Navahrudak) 23,000 1,057,200 55–59
Polesie poleskie Brześć nad
Bugiem (Brest) 36,700 1,132,200 60–64
Pomeranian pomorskie Toruń 25,700 1,884,400...
- Government. 4 Sobibor *
Generalgouvernement 85 km
south of Brześć nad
Bugiem 200,000 (140,000 from
Lublin and 25,000 from Lwów). 5 Chełmno Reichsgau...
- Polish-Lithuanian
border - 40 km
Grodno -
Brzesc nad
Bugiem -
Krasnystaw - 300 km
Warsaw –
Brzesc nad
Bugiem - 170 km In 1934, ****
Germany started the construction...
- in
Brest on the Bug, also: Brześć nad
Bugiem Ghetto, and Brest-Litovsk
Ghetto (Polish:
getto w Brześciu nad
Bugiem, Yiddish: בריסק or בריסק-ד׳ליטע) was...
-
initial capital of the
Polesie Voivodeship, but it
moved to Brześć-nad-
Bugiem (now Brest, Belarus)
after a
citywide fire on 7
September 1921. The po****tion...