-
Magdeburg law was
adopted in 1498.
Polotsk functioned as a
capital of the
Połock Voivodship of the Polish–Lithuanian
Commonwealth until 1772.
Captured by...
- The Prin****lity of
Polotsk (obsolete spelling:
Polock; Belarusian: По́лацкае кня́ства, romanized: ****kaje kniastva; Latin:
Polocensis Ducatus), also...
-
Polotsk or
Połock Voivodeship (Latin:
Palatinatus Polocensis; Lithuanian:
Polocko vaivadija; Polish: Województwo połockie, Belarusian: Полацкае ваяводства)...
-
Moses Polock (May 14, 1817 –
August 16, 1903) was a Jewish-American
publisher and the
first bookseller in the
United States who
dealt exclusively in rare...
- The
Jesuit College in
Polotsk (Latin:
Collegium Polocense) was a
college established by the
Jesuit Order in Polotsk, then part of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania...
- (województwo witebskie,
Witebsk [Vitebsk, Belarus])
Polock Voivodship (województwo połockie,
Połock [Polotsk, Belarus])
Duchy of
Samogita (księstwo żmudzkie...
-
times referred to as "****k joke" Look up ****k, Pollack, Pollock, or
Polock in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Stevenson, Angus, ed. (2010). Oxford...
-
English colonist and
converted to Christianity. ****k, ****ke, ****,
Polock Polish or
Slavic people From the
Polish endonym, **** (see Name of Poland)...
-
towns of
Połock in 1579 and Wieliż, Uświat and
Newel in 1580,
previously annexed by
Russia from
Lithuania in 1562–1566. The
restoration of
Połock and Wieliż...
- Kosów
county of the Stanisławów Voivodeship);
Spasibiorki near
railway to
Połock to the east (located in the
Dzisna county of the
Wilno Voivodeship); and...