- Minsk, and
between Warsaw and
Saint Petersburg. Daugavpils, then
called Dyneburg, was the
capital of
Polish Livonia while in Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth...
-
during the Polish–Swedish War of 1621–1625. The seat of the
voivode was
Dyneburg (Daugavpils). The name
Inflanty is
derived through Polonization of Livland...
- The
Battle of Daugavpils, or
Battle of
Dyneburg, or
Operation Winter was the
final battle during the Polish-Soviet War of 1919. A
joint Polish and Latvian...
- The
siege of
Dyneburg by the
Russian Army
under Tsar
Alexei Mikhailovich was one of the
first events of the Russo-Swedish War (1656–1658), a
theater of...
- Voivodeship,
renamed to
Inflanty Voivodeship with the
capital in
Daugavpils (
Dyneburg),
until the
first Partition of
Poland in 1772, when it was
annexed by Catherine...
- 1920.
Among them was the
operation of
liberation of
Wilno and
Battle of
Dyneburg in Daugavpils,
Latvia (as part of Rydz-Śmigły's
Third Army and
under his...
- left:
Polish FT-17
tanks of the 1st Tank
Regiment during the
Battle of
Dyneburg,
January 1920
Below left:
Polish troops enter Kiev, May 1920 Top right:...
- from 1598
until the 1620s
Inflanty Voivodeship (województwo
inflanckie Dyneburg [Daugavpils, Latvia]) from the 1620s
Duchy of
Courland and
Semigalia (księstwo...
- S.)
granted Sweden the
control of Livonia,
though Prussia,
Latgale and
Dyneburg remained under Polish governance. An
unsuccessful attempt on the life of...
- Wenden), Riga,
Koknese (Kokenhausen),
Salaspils (Kircholm),
Daugavpils (
Dyneburg), Rēzekne (Rzezyca, Rositten), Viļaka (Marienhausen),
Gulbene (Schwanenburg)...