- in the 16th century, most
Warmiaks, po****ting the
areas around Olsztyn,
remained Catholics.
During World War II, the
Warmiaks were ****cuted by the ****...
-
football club
based in Olsztyn. It was
founded on 15 July 1945 as OKS
Warmiak. They
compete in
group I of the III liga,
following relegation from the...
-
Warmiak [ˈvarmjak] is a
village in the
administrative district of
Gmina Łyse,
within Ostrołęka County,
Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It...
- the
Russian Empire. Only in
Southern Warmia Catholic Poles – so
called Warmiaks (not to be
confused with
predominantly Protestant Masurians) – comprised...
- the
Russian Empire. Only in
southern Warmia Catholic Poles – so
called Warmiaks (not to be
confused with
predominantly Protestant Masurians) – comprised...
- Albert, Duke of
Prussia secularized the
duchy and converted.
Roman Catholic Warmiaks and
Masovians were not affected, as they
inhabited parts that formally...
-
Prussian German;
southern Warmia was po****ted by both
Germans and
Polish Warmiaks. The
Polish po****tion was
subjected to
intense Germanisation policies...
- in what was then East Prussia. Its
first editor in
chief was an
ethnic Warmiak Jan Liszewski,
after him the
paper was
taken over by the
Pieniezny family...
- okręgowa:
Rominta Gołdap and
Victoria Bartoszyce ("Warmia-Masuria I" group),
Warmiak Łukta and
Zamek Kurzętnik ("Warmia-Masuria II" group).
Final table: Polonia-Olimpia...
- 1998 Łukta was in
Olsztyn Voivodeship. The
village has a
football club
Warmiak Łukta, a
regional development foundation Fundacja Rozwoju Regionu Łukta...