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nr 6
165-177
EN
The aim of this work is not be exhaustive, but merely a subjective show the history of military formations existing in the years 1915-1917 he was the Third Brigade of the Polish Legions. On the basis of archival materials and scientific literature the author presents the constitution of the unit, which played an important role in the struggle for Polish independence in the First World War. The work is presented in both aspects of the purely military and political background related to the struggle for Polish Legions character. Initially, the author puts forward for consideration a preliminary reflection. Then present the formation of Polish organization of shooting in Galicia. In the next part discusses the circumstances surrounding the creation and the beginnings of the Polish Legions and the genesis of the Third Brigade of the Polish Legions. At the end of the focuses its attention on uniforms and equipment Legions.
2
Content available remote Pomoc materialna społeczności Galicji Zachodniej Legionom w 1914 roku
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Sowiniec
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2014
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nr 45
51-91
EN
Based on the source query conducted by thee team of the Supreme National Committee at the National Archives in Kraków, this paper discusses the organization and fi nancing aid for shooting troops and Polish Legions from the society of Western Galicia in 1914. Particular attention was paid to the organization of the aid and the sources of fundraising for the Legions in Kraków and counties and municipalities in Western Galicia.
3
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tom 24
69-91
EN
The future commander of the 4th Legions’ Infantry Regiment was born on the 4th of April 1876 in the village of Bryńce Zagórne, Autrian Galicia. He grew up in a family of the forester. He completed the Imperial and Royal St Ann’s Gymnasium and in 1898 graduated from the Austro-Hungarian Army Cadet School (Kadettenschule) in Wiener Neustadt near Vienna.  In 1899 Bolesław Roja was promoted to second lieutenant. He served in the 36th Land Defence Regiment (k.k. 36 Landwehrinfanterieregiment) in Kolomyia.  In 1905 he was transferred to army reserve. Before World War I he cooperated with the Austro-Hungarian intelligence. In 1914 B. Roja joined the Polish Legions, at first in the 2nd Legions’ Infantry Regiment (the 2nd Brigade of the Polish Legions). In March 1915 r. he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and appointed the commander of the 4th Legions’ Infantry Regiment which joined the 3rd Brigade. The regiment was formed in Rozprza near Piotrków Trybunalski. In July 1915 B. Roja moved to the front to fight against the Imperial Russian Army. His regiment took a part in the battle of Jastków near Lublin (July 31-August 3, 1915) and later fought in the Volyn region. In September 1915 B. Roja got promoted to the rank of colonel. In December his regiment was moved to Optowa by the Styr River were the camp of the Polish Legions was set up. It was called the ”Roja’s Camp”. In the beginning of 1916 B. Roja organised the Colonel Council (Rada Pułkowników), a collective body of the Polish legionary officers. In July 1916 he took a part in the Battle of Kostyukhnivka (Kostiuchnówka) in the Volyn region. After the Oath Crisis (Kryzys Przysięgowy) in July 1917 B. Roja left the Polish Legions and rejoined the Austro-Hungarian Army. In 1918 he returned to Kraków where he took over former Austrian Military Command (late October). In November 1918 he was promoted to brigade general and named the commander of Kraków garrison. He served in the Polish Army untill 1922 when he was transferred to reserve. In 1928 B. Roja was elected to the parliament as a member of Stronnictwo Chłopskie peasant party. He frequently criticized Józef Piłsudski and sanacja government. In 1937 he was interned at the psychiatric ward of the Kraków military hospital. In March 1940 the general was arrested by the Germans and placed in Pawiak prison in Warsaw. In May he was transferred to Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where he was murdered in a beastly way on the 27th May 1940.
PL
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tom 23
203-210
EN
The purpose of this dissertation is to present the significant achievements and activities of this chaplain in many areas of his life. He is not a person well known and has not gained a rightful place in the Polish historiography. The author of this dissertation attempted to analyze the role of chaplain in the functioning of the Polish Legions, the battle for Przemyśl and pastoral work in the Polish Army. Also considered the impact of the priest chaplain on the activities of the peasant movement, attempted to determine the degree of the impact of journalism Socio-political face of ideological and programmatic opposition government. The author did not omit the question of the position of chaplain in the structures of conspiracy Lvov under Soviet occupation.
PL
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EN
This article’s aim is an analysis of the status of Polish veterans of the Great War in interwar period. Their position is discussed in a European context. The author underlines dichotomy between ex-servicemen from former Austro-Hungarian, German or Russian armies (constituting vast majority of the veterans in the Second Republic of Poland) and the ‘independence fighters’ (i.e. soldiers from the voluntary Polish formations like Legiony Polskie) in terms of their legal status and symbolic position. State privileged the group of former Piłsudski’s Legionnaires and other ‘independence fighters’. At the same time the majority of ‘ordinary’ veterans was offered little more than ‘compassion’. Unlike in Germany or France, First World War veterans did not form any important mass movement. The dominant position of the relatively small group of ‘Polish soldiers’ over masses of ‘soldiers-Poles’, similar to the position of former Czechoslovak legionaries, can be therefore treated as specific to the new states of East Central and Southeast Europe.
PL
Pochodzący z Głogowa Małopolskiego k/Rzeszowa Mieczysław Głogowiecki w 1914 r. wstąpił do Legionów Polskich, walcząc najpierw w II Brygadzie, a od 1916 r. w 6 pułku piechoty III Brygady, uczestnicząc m.in. w bitwie pod Kostiuchnówką. Od 1918 r. służył dalej w 6 pułku piechoty Legionów, m.in. jako dowódca batalionu zapasowego w Płocku. 18 sierpnia 1920 r. zginął pod Trzepowem w czasie ataku rosyjskiego III Korpusu Konnego na Płock. Pochowany został na cmentarzu garnizonowym w Płocku.
EN
Coming from Głogów Małopolski near Rzeszów, Mieczysław Głogowiecki in 1914 joined the Polish Legions, fighting first in the 2nd Brigade, and from 1916 in the 6th Infantry Regiment of the 3rd Brigade, participating, among others in the battle of Kostiuchnówka. From 1918, he served in the 6th Infantry Regiment of the Legions, including as commander of the spare battalion in Płock. On August 18, 1920, he died near Trzepów during the Russian attack of the Third Horse Corps on Płock. He was buried in the garrison cemetery in Płock.
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Content available Józef Piłsudski o „Legionach” i legionistach
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nr 2(20)2019
95-108
PL
W artykule autorka prezentuje sylwetkę Józefa Piłsudskiego i jego wypowiedzi o powstawaniu i walkach ,,Legionów.” Piłsudski był sprawnym narratorem, który w swoich ,,Pismach” wykorzystywał różne konwencje gatunkowe (np. baśń, reportaż, wspomnienie) i stylistyczne, z dużą emocjonalnością i bardzo częstym wartościowaniem osób i otaczającej go rzeczywistości.
EN
The paper presents the person of Joseph Pilsudski and his comments on the formation of “Legions” and the battles they fought. Pilsudski was a skilled narrator and resorted to a variety of genre conventions (such as fairy tale, reportage, memoir) and stylistic devices which were loaded emotionally and frequently evaluative with respect to people and the surrounding reality.
EN
Kazimierz Konarski (1886–1972) was a preeminent Polish archivist in the interwar period and in afterwar years, with rich archival and academic legacy. In 1965, his memoirs were published, providing a valuable source of knowledge to researchers of Polish intelligentsia. However, from these memoirs one chapter was removed, depicting the future archivist’s service in the 5th Infantry Regiment of the Polish Legions in 1917. Communist censors prohibited its publication, as stated by Konarski’s handwritten annotation on the typescript of the chapter gifted to his colleague, Piotr Bańkowski. The excised part of the memoirs was found by the author of this article in Konarski’s legacy, preserved in Warsaw archive of the Polish Academy of Sciences. The part of the memoirs which pertains to the archivist’s-to-be time in the Legions are an interesting historical source. It contains a number of valuable details regarding Konarski’s service in the regiment named above. After the losses suffered in July 1916 in the famous battle of Kostiukhnivka, the unit was sent to Ostrów Mazowiecka near Warsaw to regroup and replenish the ranks. At the beginning of his service, Konarski had problems with getting accepted by his colleagues, as he was several years older than them, was better educated and had more life experience. However, he was not haughty and tried his best to serve as a private, which earned him respect of the legionnaires. In the removed chapter, the author vividly described the commanding officers, who subsequently became military leaders and politicians, including Felicjan Sławoj-Składkowski, Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski, Stefan Grot-Rowecki, Tytus Filipowicz and others. There is also a lot of valuable information about daily life of the soldiers in the regiment.
PL
Kazimierz Konarski (1886–1972) to najwybitniejszy polski archiwista okresu międzywojennego i pierwszych lat powojennych, legitymujący się bogatym dorobkiem archiwalnym oraz naukowym. Pozostawił po sobie wspomnienia opublikowane w roku 1965, stanowiące cenne źródło dla badaczy dziejów polskiej inteligencji. Jednak pominięto w nich jeden rozdział poświęcony służbie przyszłego archiwisty w 5. pułku piechoty Legionów Polskich w 1917 r. Na jego publikację nie zgodziła się komunistyczna cenzura, o czym świadczy adnotacja dokonana przez Konarskiego na maszynopisie rozdziału, który ofiarował swojemu koledze Piotrowi Bańkowskiemu. Usunięty fragment wspomnień został odnaleziony przez autora tego tekstu w spuściźnie archiwisty przechowywanej w warszawskim archiwum Polskiej Akademii Nauk. Wspomnienia dotyczące legionowego epizodu biografii późniejszego archiwisty stanowią interesujące źródło historyczne. Zawierają wiele wartościowych szczegółów służby koszarowej Konarskiego w pułku. Ta jednostka legionowa została skierowana dla reorganizacji i uzupełnienia do Ostrowi Mazowieckiej, niedaleko od Warszawy, po stratach poniesionych w lipcu 1916 r. w słynnej bitwie pod Kostiuchnówką. Na początku swojej służby Konarski miał problem z akceptacją przez swoich kolegów, był bowiem od nich starszy o kilkanaście lat, górował nad nimi wykształceniem oraz doświadczeniem życiowym. Jednak nie wywyższał się i starał się jak najlepiej pełnić służbę szeregowego, co zjednało mu szacunek legionistów. Autor usuniętego rozdziału opisał w nim w sposób barwny sylwetki dowódców, późniejszych wyższych oficerów i polityków, m.in. Felicjana Sławoja-Składkowskiego, Michała Karaszewicza-Tokarzewskiego, Stefana Grota-Roweckiego, Tytusa Filipowicza i innych. W tekście znalazło się też sporo wartościowych informacji o życiu codziennym żołnierzy tego pułku.
EN
Jan Antoni Władysław Hernich (1899-1920) was a native of Wadowice and a pupil of the Wadowice Secondary School, a legionnaire and later an officer of the 12th Wadowice Land Infantry Regiment. He died on August 1st, 1920 in the battle of Leszniów in Volhynia, as the only officer of this regiment born in Wadowice, the town where the regiment was formed and which later became its peaceful garrison. The battle fought by the 12th IR against the 1st Horse Army of Siemion Budionny for the rebound of Leszniów occupied by the Bolsheviks was part of the Polish Army’s operation to regain Brody and stop the Bolshevik army in its march to Lviv. The Wadowice Land Infantry Regiment played an important and glorious role in this operation, and the anniversary of beating the Bolsheviks near Leszniów was later celebrated as the 12th IR, and the figure of Jan Hernich was considered a hero of the regiment. The article recalls the fate of a young hero – a contemporary Wadowician completely unknown – who as a young boy engaged in the struggle for Polish independence, and brie y describes the four-day struggle of the regiment between Beresteczko and Brody. There is also a memoir of one of Jan Hernich’s colleagues, who described the death of his friend in 1924 in the regiment’s commemorative publication. The author of the article, on the example of the losses of the 12th IR in the battle of Leszniów, also pointed out the contradictions in the records concerning the regiment’s war losses given in various sources and publications.
11
51%
EN
The article refers to certain events from World War I, which took place in Nałęczów and its nearby areas. Their direct witnesses were four inhabitants of that town: two authors of the diaries – Łucja Hornowska and Jadwiga Malewska, the author of the memoirs – Mieczysław Rogalski, and Zbigniew Czarkowski – a local photographer. There were no fights in Nałęczów, however, the local health resort infrastructure, as well as the numerous guest houses for patients were used for military purposes as medical infrastructure for the front and places of accommodation. At the end of September 1914, the Russian field hospital of the 87th Brigade of the 145th Novocherkassk Infantry Regiment was installed in the town. The authors of memoirs and diaries describe the sounds of artilleries of the sides fighting with each other during the Galicia Operation (18 August – 11 September 1914), in particular, during the battles of Komarów and Kraśnik, and recollect hundreds of wounded people brought to Nałęczów. Further descriptions are connected with the battles of Warsaw and Ivangorod (Dęblin) on 28 June – 8 November 1914 and with the march-past of the forces taking part in those events. In May 1915, after the battle of Gorlice, Nałęczów witnessed the withdrawal of Russian forces and a short stay of Duke of Oldenburg, a chief of common evacuation. The evacuation of Russians through Nałęczów lasted until the end of July 1915. At that time, General Stegman’s artillery brigade, General Mishchenko’s corpse, General Ragoza’s corpse and General Kisielewski’s brigade marched through that area. Austrian and German forces marched into Nałęczów on 30 July 1915. Soon after, the Germans withdrew and the region of Nałęczów found itself under the Austro-Hungarian occupation. The capital of the newly-formed government was established by Austrians in Lublin on 1 October 1915. In early autumn, Archduke Joseph Ferdinand was lodged in Nałęczów for nearly two weeks. The military activities, which continued from the summer 1914, made the life of civilians very difficult. In order to counteract the difficulties, on 10 August 1914, in Nałęczów, like in the entire Congress Poland, by consent of the authorities, the Citizens’ Committee was established. In autumn 1915, after the Main Rescue Committee had been established in the territory under the Austrian occupation, the Citizens’ Committee was renamed the Rescue Committee with the scope of activities similar to the one of the Citizens’ Committee. After the Russians had left Congress Poland, the independence movement had greater opportunities for development, since Austrian authorities gave much of a freedom to local organizations. The independence movement, inspired by National Divisions, formed in many locations, developed under the Austrian occupation. One of the National Divisions was also created in Nałęczów. On its initiative, important anniversaries, like the anniversary of the January Uprising or the 125th anniversary of adopting the Constitution of May 3, were celebrated. In November 1916, the 6th Infantry Regiment of Polish Legions came for a rest to Nałęczów and quartered there for over a month. The legionists initiated the Polish Military Organization and an underground recruit school in the town. All events important for the town were documented by Zbigniew Czarkowski, a local photographer. He is also the author of most of the photographs illustrating the article.
EN
In existing Polish historical literature there are not too many papers concerning the image of the enemies of the Polish soldiers fighting in Polish military units during the Great War of 1914–1918. Thus, basing on selected journals, diaries and memories of the soldiers of the Polish Legions, the author has decided to show how they presented the Russian Army prisoners of war, including the injured, who fell into Polish legionaries’ hands during the fights. He has also tried to show their feelings and emotions when in contact with the POWs – until recently their enemies – as well as the way Polish soldiers treated their former enemies when they were but defenseless prisoners. Moreover, the author has pointed out some specific qualities in the way they treated the POWs, including deserters, Poles serving in the tsarist army, perceived above all as compatriots conscripted to the partitioner’s army by force and forced to fight with Polish legionaries.
RU
На текущий момент в польской исторической литературе нет достаточного количества трудов, посвященных образу противников польских солдат, с которыми им пришлось воевать во время Первой мировой войны в 1914–1918 гг. Поэтому на базе избранных дневников и мемуаров солдат Польских Легионов автор решил показать, как в них представлены военнопленные, в том числе раненые, солдаты русской армии, которые во время сражений получали в свои руки польских легионистов. Автор статьи также старался показать чувства и эмоции, сопутствующие им во время такого рода контактов с еще недавним врагом, а также отношение к солдатам, которые были для своих противников уже только лишь беззащитными пленными. Кроме того, автор указал на некоторые специфические черты, проявленные в отношении к пленным, в том числе дезертирам, полякам, служащим в царской армии, в которых видели прежде всего соотечественников, насильно включенных в состав военных сил противника и принужденных к борьбе с польскими легионистами.
PL
W dotychczasowym dorobku polskiej literatury historycznej nie ma zbyt wielu opracowań dotyczących obrazu przeciwników żołnierzy polskich formacji wojskowych, z którymi przyszło im walczyć podczas wielkiej wojny z lat 1914–1918. Dlatego też na podstawie wybranych dzienników, pamiętników i wspomnień żołnierzy Legionów Polskich autor postanowił pokazać, jak przedstawiano w nich jeńców, w tym rannych, pochodzących z Armii Rosyjskiej, którzy w trakcie walk dostawali się w ręce polskich legionistów. Starał się też pokazać uczucia i emocje, które towarzyszyły im podczas kontaktów tego typu z niedawnym jeszcze wrogiem, a także sposób ich traktowania, gdy stawali się już jedynie bezbronnymi jeńcami. Poza tym autor wskazał też na pewne specyficzne cechy w sposobie traktowania jeńców, w tym również dezerterów, Polaków służących w armii carskiej, w których widziano przede wszystkim rodaków przemocą wcielonych do zaborczych sił zbrojnych i zmuszonych walczyć z polskimi legionistami.
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