Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. List of towns of the former Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria. This is a list of major cities and towns which belonged to the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria from the Congress of Vienna in 1815 until the dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918. Between those dates, the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria consisted mostly of the territories gained ...

    Polish
    Ukrainian (transcription)
    Ukrainian ( Cyrillic )
    German
    Bech
    Беч
    Beitsch
    Bokhnya
    Бохня
    Salzberg
    Khshaniv
    Хшанів
    Krenau (1941–1945)
    Duklia
    Дукля
    Dukla
  2. In 1773, Galicia had about 2.6 million inhabitants in 280 cities and market towns and approximately 5,500 villages. There were nearly 19,000 noble families, with 95,000 members (about 3% of the population).

  3. Scroll down to view ALL the towns in Galicia, Austria in the year 1900, including their judicial and administrative districts, and the location of the Jewish, Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic congregations or parishes for that year.

  4. People also ask

  5. Feb 5, 2018 · “A partly-colored administrative map of (East) Galicia and the short-lived Austrian province of West Galicia (including Lublin and Radom), made just after the merger of the Two Galicias and a few years before West Galicia was lost to the Duchy of Warsaw…the map shows political boundaries, ranks towns by three size symbols, identifies ...

  6. Each region divided into Circles ( Kreis) and further into Districts ( Bezirk ). 1877 – “Jewish Administrative Centers (Districts)” created in Galicia. In 1877, the Austrian government assigned to 73 Administrative Districts (ADs) the Galician towns where Jews were known to have lived at the time of the 1870 census.

  7. Maps of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. This group of maps depicts the larger empire of which Galicia was a part. Like Galicia but on a much greater scale, that empire evolved from the 1770s until its dissolution after World War I; the changes complicate any study of central Europe, not only for the shifting borders and political alliances but also through the official and common names of the empire.

  8. Dec 7, 2019 · By the first half of the 19th century, Brody became the second most important town in Galicia, and by the second half of the century, it was the largest trading center in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Not surprisingly, Brody took on such nicknames as the “Eastern Gates of the Austrian Empire,” the “Warehouse of the East and West,” and ...

  1. People also search for