The following is a list of massacres that have occurred in both historic and modern day areas of Poland (numbers may be approximate):
Massacres until 1939
Name | Date | Location | Perpetrators | Deaths | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sack of Sandomierz (1241) | 13 February 1241 | Sandomierz | Mongol Empire | The Mongols massacred almost all residents. | |
Sack of Kraków (1241) | March 1241 | Kraków | Mongol Empire | The Mongols massacred almost all residents. | |
Sack of Sandomierz (1260) | February 1260 | Sandomierz | Mongol Empire | The Mongols massacred almost all residents. | |
Gdańsk massacre | 13 November 1308 | Gdańsk | ![]() |
60–1,000 Polish civilians | |
Gołańcz massacre | 3 May 1656 | Gołańcz | ![]() |
25+ Poles | Remains of 22 adults (incl. six women) and three children were discovered during an archaeological survey in 2014.[1] |
Kościan massacre of 1656 | 10 October 1656 | Kościan | ![]() |
300 Polish inhabitants | [2] |
Massacre of Uman | 20–21 June 1768 | Humań | Cossacks (Ukrainians) | up to 20,000 Poles and Jews | |
Massacre of Praga | 4 November 1794 | Praga, Warsaw | ![]() |
6,000 Polish people killed or wounded | |
Fiszewo massacre | 27 January 1832 | Fiszewo | ![]() |
12 Poles | [3] |
Galician slaughter | early 1846 | Western Galicia | peasants | about 1,000 nobles | |
Warsaw massacres of 1861 | 25–27 February and 8 April 1861 | Warsaw | ![]() |
Over 200 Polish protesters | [4] |
Białaszewo massacre | 31 March 1863 | Białaszewo | ![]() |
16+ Polish civilians | including women[5] |
Bredynki massacre | 6 May 1863 | Bredynki | ![]() |
17 Poles | further 30 people wounded[6] |
Lututów massacre | 15 June 1863 | Lututów | ![]() |
Dozens of Polish POWs | [7] |
Wygoda massacre | 21 July 1863 | Wygoda | ![]() |
50 young Poles | [8][9] |
Białystok pogrom | 14–16 June 1906 | Białystok | Black Hundreds Russian soldiers |
81–88 Jews | |
Mysłowice massacre | 15 August 1919 | Mysłowice | ![]() |
10 Poles | Seven miners, two women and a 13-year-old boy[10] |
Wilno school massacre | 6 May 1925 | Wilno (now Vilnius) | 2 students | 5 (including themselves) | First school shooting in Polish history |
Massacres during World War II and communist rule
Name | Date | Location | Perpetrators | Deaths | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelligenzaktion | September 1939-Spring 1942 | Poland | ![]() |
up to 100,000 Polish people, mostly intellectuals | |
Zimnowoda and Parzymiechy massacre | 2 September 1939 | Zimnowoda and Parzymiechy | ![]() |
113 Poles | including 30 children[11] |
Gostyń massacre | 2 September 1939 | Gostyń | ![]() |
13 Poles | including four women and a parish priest[12] |
Łaziska massacre | 2–6 September 1939 | Łaziska Górne, Łaziska Dolne and Łaziska Średnie | ![]() |
69 Poles | including 30 children[13] |
Albertów massacre | 3 September 1939 | Albertów | ![]() |
159 Poles | [11] |
Krzepice massacre | 3 September 1939 | Krzepice | ![]() |
30 Poles | [14] |
Mysłów massacre | 3 September 1939 | Mysłów | ![]() |
22 Poles | Victims were burned alive, including 10 children.[11] |
Pińczyce massacre | 3 September 1939 | Pińczyce | ![]() |
20 Poles | [14] |
Świekatowo massacre | 3 September 1939 | Świekatowo | ![]() |
26 Poles | [15] |
Święta Anna massacre | 3 September 1939 | Święta Anna | ![]() |
29 Poles | [14] |
Jankowice massacre | 3 September 1939 | Jankowice | ![]() |
13 Poles | including women and children[12] |
Zgoń massacre | 3 September 1939 | Zgoń | ![]() |
8 Poles | including one woman[16] |
Lędziny massacre | 3 September 1939 | Lędziny | ![]() |
7 Poles | including a 16-year-old girl[17] |
Bloody Sunday | 3–4 September 1939 | Bydgoszcz | ![]() |
254 | |
Świętochłowice massacre | 3–4 September 1939 | Świętochłowice | ![]() |
10 Poles | [18] |
Częstochowa massacre (Bloody Monday) |
4 September 1939 | Częstochowa | ![]() |
88–200 | |
Złoczew massacre | 4 September 1939 | Złoczew | ![]() |
200 Poles and Jews | |
Katowice massacre (Bloody Monday) |
4 September 1939 | Katowice | ![]() |
about 80 Polish defenders | including Polish boy and girl scouts |
Kruszyna massacre | 4 September 1939 | Kruszyna | ![]() |
dozens of Poles | including 10 children[14] |
Cielętniki massacre | 4 September 1939 | Cielętniki | ![]() |
28 Poles | including four children[14] |
Pasternik massacre | 4 September 1939 | Pasternik | ![]() |
29 Poles | including one woman[19] |
Pławno massacre | 4 September 1939 | Pławno | ![]() |
15 Poles | [14] |
Pszczyna massacre | 4 September 1939 | Pszczyna | ![]() |
14 Poles | 13 boy scouts and a teacher[12] |
Siewierz massacre | 4 September 1939 | Siewierz | ![]() |
10 Poles | including several teenagers[20] |
Wyry massacre | 4–6 September 1939 | Wyry | ![]() |
over 10 Poles | [12] |
Serock massacre | 5 September 1939 | Serock | ![]() |
over 80 Polish POWs | [21] |
Kajetanowice massacre | 5 September 1939 | Kajetanowice | ![]() |
over 70 Poles | including ten children under the age of 16[14] |
Krasnosielc massacre | 5–6 September 1939 | Krasnosielc | ![]() |
50 Jews | |
Moryca and Longinówka massacre | 6 September 1939 | Moryca and Longinówka | ![]() |
Polish POWs, including 19 officers | [21] |
Uniejów massacre | 6, 8 September 1939 | Uniejów | ![]() |
50 | [22] |
Będzin massacres | 6, 9 September 1939 | Będzin | ![]() |
20 Poles and 100 Jews | [23] |
Wylazłów massacre | 7 September 1939 | Wylazłów | ![]() |
24 Poles | [22] |
Mordarka massacre | 7 September 1939 | Mordarka | ![]() |
9 Jews and one Pole | [24] |
Wągrowiec massacre | 7 September 1939 | Wągrowiec | ![]() |
8 Poles | [22] |
Balin massacre | 8 September 1939 | Balin | ![]() |
21 Poles | [22] |
Koźle massacre | 8 September 1939 | Koźle | ![]() |
17 Poles | [25] |
Massacre in Ciepielów | 8 September 1939 | Ciepielów | ![]() |
170-200 Jewish civilians | |
Tyszki massacre | 8 September 1939 | Tyszki-Ciągaczki | ![]() |
33 Poles | [26] |
Chechło massacre | 8 September 1939 | Chechło near Pabianice | ![]() |
30 Poles | [27] |
Dominikowice massacre | 8 September 1939 | Dominikowice | ![]() |
23 Poles | [25] |
Czekaj massacre | 8 September 1939 | Czekaj | ![]() |
13 Poles | [22] |
Siemianowice Śląskie massacre | 8 September 1939 | Siemianowice Śląskie | ![]() |
6 Poles | [18] |
Mszczonów massacres | 8, 11 September 1939 | Mszczonów | ![]() |
11 Polish POWs and 20 Polish civilians | Including the town's mayor.[21][26] |
Sławków massacre | 9 September 1939 | Sławków | ![]() |
98 Jews | [28] |
Wyszków massacre | 9 September 1939 | Wyszków | ![]() |
65+ Jews | [28] |
Orło massacre | 9 September 1939 | Orło | ![]() |
10 Poles | [27] |
Pniewo massacre | 9 September 1939 | Pniewo | ![]() |
Over 10 Poles | [26] |
Łęczyca massacre | 9–10 September 1939 | Łęczyca | ![]() |
29 Poles | [26] |
Mszadla massacre | 10 September 1939 | Mszadla | ![]() |
153 Poles | [29] |
Gniazdowo massacre | 10 September 1939 | Gniazdowo | ![]() |
around 20 Poles | [27] |
Zdziechowa massacre | 10 September 1939 | Zdziechowa | ![]() |
24 Poles | [30] |
Rawa Mazowiecka massacre | 10 September 1939 | Rawa Mazowiecka | ![]() |
40 | [26] |
Bądków massacre | 10 September 1939 | Bądków | ![]() |
22 Poles | including a 14-year-old boy[25] |
Piaseczno massacre of 1939 | 10 September 1939 | Piaseczno | ![]() |
21 Polish POWs | [21] |
Laski Szlacheckie massacre | 10 September 1939 | Laski Szlacheckie | ![]() |
20 Poles | including four families[26] |
Karczew massacre | 11 September 1939 | Karczew | ![]() |
75 Poles | [31] |
Skierniewice massacre | 11 September 1939 | Skierniewice | ![]() |
60 | [31] |
Kowalewice massacre | 11 September 1939 | Kowalewice | ![]() |
23 Poles | [32] |
Obora massacre | 11 September 1939 | Obora | ![]() |
22 Poles | [27] |
Niewolno massacre | 11 September 1939 | Niewolno | ![]() |
18 Poles | [33] |
Jankowo Dolne massacre | 11 September 1939 | Jankowo Dolne | ![]() |
12 Poles | including women and children[22] |
Szczucin massacre | 12 September 1939 | Szczucin | ![]() |
around 40 Polish POWs and around 30 Polish civilians | [34] |
Parma massacre | 12 September 1939 | Parma | ![]() |
32 Poles | [26] |
Koźmice Wielkie massacre | 12 September 1939 | Koźmice Wielkie | ![]() |
32 Jews | [28] |
Sadówka massacre | 12 September 1939 | Sadówka | ![]() |
around 12 Poles | [35] |
Łowicz massacre | 13 September 1939 | Łowicz | ![]() |
21 | [26] |
Mień massacre | 13 September 1939 | Mień | ![]() |
9 Poles | [36] |
Zambrów massacre | night of 13–14 September 1939 | Zambrów | ![]() |
more than 200 Polish POW | |
Olszewo massacre | 14 September 1939 | Olszewo | ![]() |
30 Polish POWs and 23 civilians | [36] |
Moskwin massacre | 14 September 1939 | Moskwin | ![]() |
9 Poles | [37] |
Sulejówek massacre | 15 September 1939 | Sulejówek and Długa Szlachecka | ![]() |
over 90 Poles | [26] |
Massacre in Dynów | 15-28 September 1939 | Dynów | ![]() |
Around 300 killed | |
Retki massacre | 16 September 1939 | Retki | ![]() |
22 Poles | [26] |
Henryków massacre | 17 September 1939 | Henryków | ![]() |
76 Poles | including women and children[31] |
Leszno massacre | 17 September 1939 | Leszno | ![]() |
around 50 Poles | [31] |
Bąków massacre | 17 September 1939 | Bąków | ![]() |
18 Poles | including two families[26] |
Śladów massacre | 18 September 1939 | Śladów | ![]() |
around 300 Poles, including POWs and refugees | including women and children[31] |
Mogilno massacre | 18 September 1939 | Mogilno | ![]() |
40 Polish (1 Jewish descent) | |
Błonie massacre | 18 September 1939 | Błonie | ![]() |
50 Jews and Poles | |
Gąbin massacre | 19–21 September 1939 | Gąbin | ![]() |
20 Poles | [31] |
Zakroczym massacre | 28 September 1939 | Zakroczym | ![]() |
about 600 Polish POWs | |
Majdan Wielki massacre | 20 September 1939 | Majdan Wielki | ![]() |
42 Polish POWs | [34] |
Boryszew massacre | 22 September 1939 | Boryszew | ![]() |
50 Polish POWs | [38] |
Psia Górka massacre | 22 September 1939 | Psia Górka | ![]() |
over 100 Polish POWs and 300 Polish civilians | [39] |
Husynne massacre | 23 September 1939 | Husynne | ![]() |
25 Polish POWs | [39] |
Mokrany massacre | 28 September 1939 | Mokrany | ![]() |
18 Polish POWs | [39] |
Luszkówko massacre | September 1939–January 1940 | Luszkówko | ![]() |
around 1,000 Poles | The victims were mentally ill people from a psychiatric hospital in Świecie.[40] |
Szczuczki massacre | 1 October 1939 | Szczuczki | ![]() |
64 Poles | including ten boys under the age of 18[31] |
Valley of Death (Bydgoszcz) | October–November 1939 | Bydgoszcz | ![]() |
1,200–1,400 | |
Dalki massacre | 7 November 1939 | Dalki | ![]() |
24 Poles | including 10 defenders of Kłecko[41] |
Ostrów Mazowiecka massacre | 11 November 1939 | Ostrów Mazowiecka | ![]() |
up to 600 Jews | |
Wawer massacre | 26–27 December 1939 | Wawer | ![]() |
107 | 7 shot but survived |
Palmiry massacre | December 1939–June 1941 | Palmiry | ![]() |
1,700 Poles and Jews | |
Sieklówka massacre | December 1939–January 1940 | Sieklówka | ![]() |
93 Poles | [42] |
Piotrowice massacre | 18 January 1940 | Piotrowice | ![]() |
39 Poles | [43] |
Dąbrówka Mała massacre | 3–4 April 1940 | Dąbrówka Mała | ![]() |
40 Poles | [43] |
Celiny massacre | 4 April 1940 | Celiny | ![]() |
29 Poles | [43] |
Skłoby massacre | 11 April 1940 | Skłoby | ![]() |
265 Poles | including women and children[44] |
Katyn massacre | April–May 1940 | Katyn Forest | ![]() |
22,000 Polish killed, most of them officers | 21,857 confirmed by Soviet documents, about 440 of the prospective victims escaped the shootings. After intense research, today most of the victims are known name by name. |
Bloody Wednesday of Olkusz | 31 July 1940 | Olkusz | ![]() |
20 Polish civilians | |
NKVD prisoner massacres in Poland | June–November 1941 | Eastern Poland | ![]() |
20,000–30,000 | |
Nowosiółki massacre | 1941 | Nowosiółki | ![]() |
Several hundred | The victims were patients of a local psychiatric hospital.[45] |
Szczuczyn pogrom | 25–28 June 1941 | Szczuczyn | Polish nationalists | 300 Jews | Pogrom halted after intervention by German army in favor of the Jews. Additional 100 Jews killed in July by Poles. The Jews were subsequently murdered by the Germans. |
Lviv pogroms | June–July 1941 | Lviv | local crowds, Ukrainian nationalists, Germans | 6,000 Jews | |
Ponary massacre | July 1941–August 1944 | Ponary | ![]() Ypatingasis būrys |
100,000 Jews, Poles and Russians | |
Radziłów pogrom | 7–9 July 1941 | Radziłów | Poles | 600–2,000 Jews | |
Jedwabne pogrom | 10 July 1941 | Jedwabne | Poles (German military police was present, but did not intervene) | 340–1,600 Jews | |
Massacre of Lwów professors | July 1941 | Lviv | ![]() |
45 Polish professors | |
Mass murders in Tykocin | August 1941 | Tykocin | ![]() |
some 700 Jews | Some 150 Jews managed to escape the massacre, however most were handed over to the Germans. |
Czarny Las massacre | 14–15 August 1941 | Czarny Las near Stanisławów | ![]() |
250–300 Poles | |
Święciany massacre | 19–20 May 1942 | Švenčionys, modern-day Lithuania (then eastern Poland) | Lithuanian Security Police | 400–1,200 Poles | |
Nowy Bidaczów massacre | 6 October 1942 | Nowy Bidaczów | ![]() |
22 Poles | retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[46] |
Stary Ciepielów and Rekówka massacre | 6 December 1942 | Stary Ciepielów and Rekówka | ![]() |
31 Poles (including children) and 2 Jews | including women and children; retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust |
Kitów massacre | 11 December 1942 | Kitów | ![]() |
164+ Poles | including women and children |
Samoklęski massacre | January 1943 | Samoklęski | ![]() |
27 Jews and one Pole | retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[47] |
Siedliska massacre | 15 March 1943 | Siedliska | ![]() |
5 Poles and 4 Jews | retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust |
Naliboki massacre | 8 May 1943 | Naliboki, modern-day Belarus (then eastern Poland) | ![]() |
129 (including one child) | |
Warsaw Ghetto massacre | 19 April–16 May 1943 | Warsaw ghetto, Warsaw | ![]() |
13,000 Jews | 6,000 Jews burnt to death by German forces. |
Szarajówka massacre | 18 May 1943 | Szarajówka | ![]() |
58–67 Poles | |
Kielce cemetery massacre | 23 May 1943 | Jewish Cemetery, Kielce | ![]() |
45 Jewish children | |
Posądza massacre | 22 June 1943 | Posądza | ![]() |
7 Poles | including three children; retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[48] |
Majdan Nowy massacre | 24 June 1943 | Majdan Nowy | ![]() |
28–36 Poles | |
Cegłów massacre | 28 June 1943 | Cegłów | ![]() |
26 Poles and an unknown number of Jews | including women and children; retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[48] |
Majdan Stary massacre | 3 July 1943 | Majdan Stary | ![]() |
75 Poles | |
Michniów massacre | 12–13 July 1943 | Michniów | ![]() |
about 204 Poles | including 48 children |
Sikory-Tomkowięta massacre | 13 July 1943 | Sikory-Tomkowięta | ![]() |
49 Poles | [49] |
Łysa Góra massacre | 13 July 1943 | Łysa Góra near Zawady | ![]() |
58 Poles | [49] |
Krasowo-Częstki massacre | 17 July 1943 | Krasowo-Częstki | ![]() |
257 Poles | including 83 children under the age of 17[49] |
Wnory-Wandy massacre | 21 July 1943 | Wnory-Wandy | ![]() |
32 Poles | [50] |
Gamratka massacre | 27 July 1943 | Gamratka | ![]() |
3 Jews and 2 Poles | retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[51] |
Jasionowo massacre | 2 August 1943 | Jasionowo | ![]() |
58 Poles | including 19 children[50] |
Szczurowa massacre | 3 August 1943 | Szczurowa | ![]() |
93 Romanis | |
Operation Harvest Festival | 3 August 1943 | Lublin District | ![]() |
43,000 Jews of Majdanek, Poniatowa and Trawniki | |
Tyczyn massacre | 15 October 1943 | Tyczyn | ![]() |
5 Poles | including one woman; retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[52] |
Kietlin massacre | October 1943 | Kietlin | ![]() |
8 Jews and 3 Poles | including women and children; retribution for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust[53] |
Koniuchy massacre | 29 January 1944 | Kaniūkai, modern-day Lithuania (then Eastern Poland) | ![]() |
30–40 Poles | |
Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia (Volhynian slaughter) |
1943–1944 | Volhynia | ![]() |
about 91,000 (±15,000) mostly Polish people | by far most of the victimes were Poles, but also Ukrainians and people of ethnic minorities were killed |
Huta Pieniacka massacre | 28 February 1944 | Huta Pieniacka | Ukrainian nationalists | 500[54]–1,200[55] | |
Jabłoń-Dobki massacre | 8 March 1944 | Jabłoń-Dobki | ![]() |
91 Poles | including 31 women and 31 children[50] |
Chodaczków Wielki massacre | 16 April 1944 | Chodaczków Wielki | ![]() |
862 Poles | including children |
Sochy massacre | 1 June 1944 | Sochy | ![]() |
181–200 Polish civilians | |
Lublin Castle massacre | 22 July 1944 | Lublin | ![]() |
over 300 Poles and Jews | |
Ochota massacre | 4–25 August 1944 | Ochota, Warsaw | ![]() |
10,000 Polish civilians | Including gang rape, looting and arson. |
Wola massacre | 5–12 August 1944 | Wola, Warsaw | ![]() |
40,000–50,000 Poles | about 30,000 killed during the first three days |
Małaszek massacre | 31 August 1944 | Małaszek | ![]() |
over 30 Poles | including women and children[56] |
Plewki massacre | 31 August 1944 | Plewki | ![]() |
11 Poles | [56] |
Lipniak-Majorat massacre | 2 September 1944 | Lipniak-Majorat | ![]() |
around 450 Poles | including women and children[56] |
Bloody Christmas Eve in Ochotnica Dolna | 23 December 1944 | Ochotnica Dolna | ![]() |
56 Poles | including 19 children and 21 women |
Nieławice massacre | 31 December 1944–1 January 1945 | Nieławice | ![]() |
56 Poles | including 32 children under the age of 14[57] |
Zawady Małe massacre | 21–22 January 1945 | Zawady Małe | ![]() |
110 Poles and 7 Russians | |
Marchwacz massacre | 21–22 January 1945 | Marchwacz | ![]() |
63 Polish civilians, 12 Soviet POWs | [58] |
Dąbrówka Nowa Massacre | 22 January 1945 | Dąbrówka Nowa | ![]() |
over 100 Latvians | |
Kortowo massacre | 22 January 1945 | Kortowo | ![]() |
around 600 | [59] |
Biadki massacre | 23 January 1945 | Biadki | ![]() |
18 Hungarian POWs | [60] |
Łomnica massacre | 24 January 1945 | Łomnica | ![]() |
17 | Massacre committed during a death march.[61] |
Przyszowice massacre | 26–28 January 1945 | Przyszowice | ![]() |
54–69 | |
Kuźnica Żelichowska massacre | 28 January 1945 | Kuźnica Żelichowska | ![]() |
6 Italian POW generals | [62] |
Podgaje massacre | 31 January 1945 | Podgaje | ![]() |
160–210 Polish POWs | |
Leśno massacre | 9 February 1945 | Leśno | ![]() |
64 Jewish women | [63] |
Pawłokoma massacre | 3 March 1945 | Pawłokoma | Poles | 150–366 Ukrainians | |
Wierzchowiny massacre | 6 June 1945 | Wierzchowiny | National Armed Forces | 50-196 | |
Augustów roundup | 10-25 July 1945 | Suwałki and Augustów regions | ![]() |
about 600 anti-communist | Out of 2,000 arrested by the Soviet forces, about 600 have disappeared. |
Zawadka Morochowska massacres | 25 January, 28 March, and 13 April 1946 | Zawadka Morochowska | Polish People's Army | 73 Ukrainians and Lemkos | |
1946 pacification of villages by PAS NZW | February 1946 | Bielsk and Hajnówka County | Rajs' unit | 79 Belarusians | |
Kielce pogrom | 4 July 1946 | Kielce | Poles | 38–42 Jews | |
Pacification of Wujek | 16 December 1981 | Wujek Coal Mine | ZOMO | 9 striking miners |
References
- ↑ Olszacki, Tomasz; Różański, Artur; Łukasik, Sylwia; Krenz-Niedbał, Marta (2011). "Szwedzkie oblężenie zamku w Gołańczy 3 maja 1656 roku w świetle źródeł pisanych oraz badań archeologicznych i antropologicznych". Residentiae tempore belli et pacis. Materiały do badań i ochrony założeń rezydencjonalnych i obronnych (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Sztuki Polskiej Akademii Nauk. pp. 198, 204, 206–209. ISBN 978-83-65630-80-3.
- ↑ Kuchowicz, Zbigniew; Spieralski, Zdzisław (1953). Stefan Czarniecki, pogromca Szwedów (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Ministerstwa Oborony Narodowej. p. 27.
- ↑ Zawadzki, Wojciech (2011). "Zgony powstańców listopadowych na Żuławach i Powiślu 1831–1832". Studia Elbląskie (in Polish) (XII): 27.
- ↑ Przed Styczniem (in Polish). Warszawa: Muzeum Historii Polski. 2012. p. 4.
- ↑ Katalog miejsc pamięci powstania styczniowego w województwie podlaskim (in Polish). Białystok: Towarzystwo Opieki nad Zabytkami Oddział Białystok. 2013. p. 48.
- ↑ Groniewska, Barbara (1960). "Rola Prus Wschodnich w powstaniu styczniowym". Komunikaty Mazursko-Warmińskie (in Polish). No. 1. pp. 13–14.
- ↑ Zieliński, Stanisław (1913). Bitwy i potyczki 1863–1864. Na podstawie materyałów drukowanych i rękopiśmiennych Muzeum Narodowego w Rapperswilu (in Polish). Rapperswil: Fundusz Wydawniczy Muzeum Narodowego w Rapperswilu. p. 205.
- ↑ Katalog miejsc pamięci powstania styczniowego w województwie podlaskim. pp. 13, 55.
- ↑ Lipiński, Tadeusz (2003). "Powstanie Styczniowe w Łomżyńskiem". Zeszyty Naukowe Ostrołęckiego Towarzystwa Naukowego (in Polish) (17): 33.
- ↑ Bezeg, Bolesław (2011). "Alfons Zgrzebniok – chłopak z Dziergowic. Wódz dwóch powstań". Historia Lokalna (in Polish). No. 1 (7). Opole. p. 8. ISSN 1899-4644.
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- 1 2 3 4 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 134.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, pp. 132–133.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 99.
- ↑ Datner, Szymon. 55 dni Wehrmachtu w Polsce (in Polish). p. 185.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 132.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 133.
- 1 2 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 135.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 131.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 136.
- 1 2 3 4 Sudoł 2011, p. 80.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 94.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, pp. 98, 124.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 87.
- 1 2 3 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 93.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 96.
- 1 2 3 4 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 95.
- 1 2 3 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 124.
- ↑ Datner, Szymon. 55 dni Wehrmachtu w Polsce (in Polish). p. 333.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 91.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 97.
- ↑ Datner, Szymon. 55 dni Wehrmachtu w Polsce (in Polish). p. 352.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 92.
- 1 2 Sudoł 2011, p. 81.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, pp. 93, 125.
- 1 2 Monkiewicz 1988, p. 30.
- ↑ Monkiewicz, Waldemar; Krętowski, Józef (1986). "Zbrodnie hitlerowskie na ludziach chorych i niepełnosprawnych". Białostocczyzna (in Polish). No. 1. Białystok: Białostockie Towarzystwo Naukowe. p. 25.
- ↑ Sudoł 2011, p. 82.
- 1 2 3 Ocaleni z "nieludzkiej ziemi" (in Polish). Łódź: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. 2012. p. 21. ISBN 978-83-63695-00-2.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 167.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, p. 211.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, pp. 258–259, 272.
- 1 2 3 Wardzyńska 2009, p. 142.
- ↑ Wardzyńska 2009, pp. 254–255.
- ↑ Robert Fiłończuk. "Pacjentów zwieziono do lasu i tam rozstrzelano. Mord Niemców na pół tysiącu chorych psychicznie". Polska Agencja Prasowa (in Polish). Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 89.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 92.
- 1 2 Datner 1968, p. 99.
- 1 2 3 Markiewicz 2003, p. 67.
- 1 2 3 Markiewicz 2003, p. 68.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 100.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 101.
- ↑ Datner 1968, p. 102.
- ↑ Ukrainian archives
- ↑ Pure Soldiers Or Sinister Legion
- 1 2 3 Księga pamięci żołnierzy Armii Krajowej Obwodu Ostrów Maz. 1939-1944 (in Polish). Warszawa. 2007. pp. 21–22.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ↑ Monkiewicz 1988, p. 32.
- ↑ Anna Czuchra (30 January 2016). "71. rocznica mordu na mieszkańcach Marchwacza". Wielkopolski Urząd Wojewódzki w Poznaniu (in Polish). Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ↑ "Dzisiaj mija 74. rocznica rzezi w Kortowie. Sowieckie oddziały zamordowały około 600 osób". Radio Olsztyn (in Polish). Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ↑ Gałkiewicz, Anna (2001). "Informacja o śledztwach prowadzonych w OKŚZpNP w Łodzi w sprawach o zbrodnie popełnione przez funkcjonariuszy sowieckiego aparatu terroru". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 7. IPN. p. 20. ISSN 1641-9561.
- ↑ "75. rocznica likwidacji i ewakuacji więźniów obozu karno-śledczego w Żabikowie". Muzeum Martyrologiczne w Żabikowie (in Polish). 19 January 2020. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
- ↑ Muraca, Ilio (2008). "E quei generali marciavano, marciavano e morivano". Patria Indipendente (in Italian). No. 9. Roma. pp. 21–23. ISSN 0031-3130.
- ↑ Hamerska, Małgorzata (2012). "Miejsca pamięci narodowej w powiecie chojnickim". Zeszyty Chojnickie (in Polish). No. 27. Chojnice: Chojnickie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Nauk. p. 72.
Bibliography
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