+dark reality Wrocław, as the city was called at its founding and is called today, was founded by slavs, has a slavic name, was inhabited by slavs, until the Germans took over in the late 14th century. The transfer of the city to Poland in 1945 made it RETURN to Polish hands. And thus Breslau effectively ceased to exist, and Wrocław was RE-born. Admittedly over 500 years of German control and many German generations living in the city made it a drastic change to have to displace these millions of people. However considering the facts; 1. Wrocław was originally Polish/slavic 2. Poland's lands in the east were being annexed by the Soviet Union, therefore that Polish population was also being displaced and need a place to go 3. It was agreed upon by the western allies to set the borders in such a way in order to appease Stalin 4. The German territory admittedly shrunk, but it wasn't reduced to a small scrap of a country, but rather also to it's original territorial extent at the founding of the Holy Roman Empire. Real German territory; Sachsen, Bayern, Ruhr, all truly German territory. While on the other hand; the Śląsk is slavic, mostly Polish, partially Czech and to a small degree, German. 5. Present day Poland's borders are pretty well the same as they were when Poland's first true ruler, Mieszko I, united the slavic tribes and formed the Polish nation. The only territory which very clearly never was truly Polish, but belongs to Poland (and Russia) today is Prussia. However present day Poland also lacks Brześć and Lwów, also two Polish cities, however, located in present day Bel
I arrive in Wroclaw on Thursday can you please tell me where to find the statues of the people coming out of the group. Thanks
Joseph Hanley I think they were on the corner of the road intersection near the Scandic Hotel (look on Google Maps).
1:45: "zbiegł zabijając trzech funkcjonariuszy". ?! W takim razie to morderca. Dostał sprawiedliwy wyrok?
Polish City. Ostrów Tumski. first. second King lived there. in Wrocław. B Chrobry. this slovianish
this German city a not Polish!!!!!!!
+mattep1ao German city i used to live there you dumbass stupid idiot it's Poland
+dark reality Now is polish!
+dark reality
Wrocław, as the city was called at its founding and is called today, was founded by slavs, has a slavic name, was inhabited by slavs, until the Germans took over in the late 14th century. The transfer of the city to Poland in 1945 made it RETURN to Polish hands. And thus Breslau effectively ceased to exist, and Wrocław was RE-born.
Admittedly over 500 years of German control and many German generations living in the city made it a drastic change to have to displace these millions of people. However considering the facts;
1. Wrocław was originally Polish/slavic
2. Poland's lands in the east were being annexed by the Soviet Union, therefore that Polish population was also being displaced and need a place to go
3. It was agreed upon by the western allies to set the borders in such a way in order to appease Stalin
4. The German territory admittedly shrunk, but it wasn't reduced to a small scrap of a country, but rather also to it's original territorial extent at the founding of the Holy Roman Empire. Real German territory; Sachsen, Bayern, Ruhr, all truly German territory. While on the other hand; the Śląsk is slavic, mostly Polish, partially Czech and to a small degree, German.
5. Present day Poland's borders are pretty well the same as they were when Poland's first true ruler, Mieszko I, united the slavic tribes and formed the Polish nation. The only territory which very clearly never was truly Polish, but belongs to Poland (and Russia) today is Prussia. However present day Poland also lacks Brześć and Lwów, also two Polish cities, however, located in present day Bel
i like German pain in the ass....
It's definitely more Polish than German. Heck, even Czechs have more rights to claim this city as theirs than Germans.
Silesia is not in Poland, yes Poland illegally occupies but it doesn’t make it Poland