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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LublinLublin - Wikipedia

    Lublin is the capital of the province called Lublin Voivodeship, a province (voivodeship) created in 1999. The city is a separate urban gmina and city county . Municipal government Lublin City Hall. Lublin is governed by the municipal legislature known as the city council (Rada Miasta) and the city's mayor (Prezydent Miasta). The city council ...

    • +48 81
    • 20-001 to 20-999
    • before 12th century
    • Poland
  2. Mar 15, 2023 · Jewish cemeteries in Lublin remained under the administration of the Jewish community. In the city, there were three cemeteries. The first one is a non-existent Jewish cemetery in Wieniawa that ...

  3. Lublin Voivodeship ( Polish: województwo lubelskie [vɔjɛˈvut͡stfɔ luˈbɛlskʲɛ] ⓘ) is a voivodeship ( province) of Poland, located in the southeastern part of the country. It was created on January 1, 1999, out of the former Lublin, Chełm, Zamość, Biała Podlaska and (partially) Tarnobrzeg and Siedlce Voivodeships, pursuant to ...

    • 25,155 km² (9,712 sq mi)
    • Poland
  4. Mar 3, 2024 · Lublin, city, capital of Lubelskie województwo (province), eastern Poland, on the Bystrzyca River. Founded as a stronghold in the late 9th century, the settlement grew up around the castle and received town rights in 1317. It served as a joint meeting ground for Poland and Lithuania, and in 1569.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Jul 27, 2022 · His untimely death at 46 on October 27, 1933 served as a sad and ominous harbinger for the fate of Jews living in Lublin and European Jewry at large. After the Germans captured Lublin on September ...

  6. Photo: Bundesarchiv, Bild 101I-019-1229-30 / Hähle, Johannes / CC-BY-SA 3.0. The deportation of Lublin Jews to the Belzec extermination camp commenced on March 17, 1942, with an estimated 1,400 Jews were deported daily until April 20th. 30,000 Jews had been deported to their deaths, leaving 4,000 in the city.

  7. Jan 31, 2024 · Lublin was a vital center of Jewish culture in Poland and home to a significant share of Jews since the early 1600s. Under the Nazis, the city became a center of mass extermination and its Jewish ...

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