Curzon Line
View on Wikipedia| Historical demarcation line of World War II | |
Lighter blue line: Curzon Line "B" as proposed in 1919. Darker blue line: "Curzon" Line "A" as drawn by Lewis Namier in 1919. Pink areas: Pre–World War II provinces of Germany transferred to Poland after the war. Grey area: Pre–World War II Polish territory east of the Curzon Line annexed by the Soviet Union after the war. |
The Curzon Line was a proposed demarcation line between the Second Polish Republic and the Soviet Union, two new states emerging after World War I. Based on a suggestion by Herbert James Paton, it was first proposed in 1919 by Lord Curzon, the British Foreign Secretary, to the Supreme War Council as a diplomatic basis for a future border agreement.[1][2][3]
The line became a major geopolitical factor during World War II, when the USSR invaded eastern Poland, resulting in the split of Poland's territory between the USSR and Nazi Germany roughly along the Curzon Line in accordance with final rounds of secret negotiations surrounding the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. After the German attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, Operation Barbarossa, the Allies did not agree that Poland's future eastern border should be changed from the pre-war status quo in 1939 until the Tehran Conference. Churchill's position changed after the Soviet victory at the Battle of Kursk.[4]
Following a private agreement at the Tehran Conference, confirmed at the 1945 Yalta Conference, the Allied leaders Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Stalin issued a statement affirming the use of the Curzon Line, with some five-to-eight-kilometre variations, as the eastern border between Poland and the Soviet Union.[5] When Churchill proposed to annex parts of Eastern Galicia, including the city of Lviv, to Poland's territory (following Line B), Stalin argued that the Soviet Union could not demand less territory for itself than the British Government had reconfirmed previously several times. The Allied arrangement involved compensation for this loss via the incorporation of formerly German areas (the so-called Recovered Territories) into Poland. As a result, the current border between Poland and the countries of Belarus and Ukraine is an approximation of the Curzon Line.
| Territorial evolution of Poland in the 20th century |
|---|
Early history
[edit]
At the end of World War I, the Second Polish Republic reclaimed its sovereignty following the disintegration of the occupying forces of three neighbouring empires. Imperial Russia was amid the Russian Civil War after the October Revolution, Austria-Hungary split and went into decline, and the German Reich bowed to pressure from the victorious forces of the Allies of World War I. The Allied victors agreed that an independent Polish state should be recreated from territories previously part of the Russian, the Austro-Hungarian and the German empires, after 123 years of upheavals and military partitions by them.[6]
The Supreme War Council tasked the Commission on Polish Affairs with recommending Poland's eastern border, based on spoken language majority, which became later known as the Curzon Line.[7] Their result was created December 8, 1919. The Allies forwarded it as an armistice line several times during the subsequent Polish-Soviet Wars,[7] most notably in a note from the British government to the Soviets signed by Lord Curzon of Kedleston, the British Foreign Secretary. Both parties disregarded the line when the military situation lay in their favour, and it did not play a role in establishing the Polish–Soviet border in 1921. Instead, the final Peace of Riga (or Treaty of Riga) provided Poland with almost 135,000 square kilometres (52,000 sq mi) of land that was, on average, about 250 kilometres (160 mi) east of the Curzon Line.
Characteristics
[edit]The Northern half of the Curzon Line lay approximately along the border which was established between the Kingdom of Prussia and the Russian Empire in 1797, after the Third Partition of Poland, which was the last border recognised by the United Kingdom. Along most of its length, the line at least in principle was intended to follow a generally ethnic or ethnolinguistic boundary - areas West of the line generally contained an overall Polish majority while areas to its East less so- borderland areas were inhabited by Ukrainians, Belarusians, Poles, Jews and Lithuanians.[8][9][10][11][12] Its 1920 northern extension into Lithuania divided the area disputed between Poland and Lithuania. There were two versions of the southern portion of the line: "A" and "B". Version "B" allocated Lwów (Lviv) to Poland.
End of World War I
[edit]The US President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points included the statement "An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations, which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea..." Article 87 of the Versailles Treaty stipulated that "The boundaries of Poland not laid down in the present Treaty will be subsequently determined by the Principal Allied and Associated Powers." In accordance with these declarations, the Supreme War Council tasked the Commission on Polish Affairs with proposing Poland's eastern boundaries in lands that were inhabited by a mixed population of Poles, Lithuanians, Ukrainians and Belarusians.[13][14] The Commission issued its recommendation on 22 April; its proposed Russo-Polish borders were close to those of the 19th-century Congress Poland.[14]
The Supreme Council continued to debate the issue for several months. On 8 December, the Council published a map and description of the line along with an announcement that it recognized "Poland's right to organize a regular administration of the territories of the former Russian Empire situated to the West of the line described below."[14] At the same time, the announcement stated the Council was not "...prejudging the provisions which must in the future define the eastern frontiers of Poland" and that "the rights that Poland may be able to establish over the territories situated to the East of the said line are expressly reserved."[14] The announcement had no immediate impact, although the Allies recommended its consideration in an August 1919 proposal to Poland, which was ignored.[14][15]


Polish–Soviet War of 1919–1921
[edit]Polish forces pushed eastward, taking Kiev in May 1920. Following a strong Soviet counteroffensive, Prime Minister Władysław Grabski sought Allied assistance in July. Under pressure, he agreed to a Polish withdrawal to the 1919 version of the line and, in Galicia, an armistice near the current line of battle.[16] On 11 July 1920, Curzon signed a telegram sent to the Bolshevik government proposing that a ceasefire be established along the line, and his name was subsequently associated with it.[14]
Curzon's July 1920 proposal differed from the 19 December announcement in two significant ways.[17] The December note did not address the issue of Galicia, since it had been a part of the Austrian Empire rather than the Russian, nor did it address the Polish-Lithuanian dispute over the Vilnius Region, since those borders were demarcated at the time by the Foch Line.[17] The July 1920 note specifically addressed the Polish-Lithuanian dispute by mentioning a line running from Grodno to Vilnius (Wilno) and thence north to Daugavpils, Latvia (Dynaburg).[17] It also mentioned Galicia, where earlier discussions had resulted in the alternatives of Line A and Line B.[17] The note endorsed Line A, which included Lwów and its nearby oil fields within Russia.[18] This portion of the line did not correspond to the current line of battle in Galicia, as per Grabski's agreement, and its inclusion in the July note has lent itself to disputation.[16]
On 17 July, the Soviets responded to the note with a refusal. Georgy Chicherin, representing the Soviets, commented on the delayed interest of the British for a peace treaty between Russia and Poland. He agreed to start negotiations as long as the Polish side asked for it. The Soviet side at that time offered more favourable border solutions to Poland than the ones offered by the Curzon Line.[19] In August the Soviets were defeated by the Poles just outside Warsaw and forced to retreat. During the ensuing Polish offensive, the Polish government repudiated Grabski's agreement with regard to the line on the grounds that the Allies had not delivered support or protection.[20]
Peace of Riga
[edit]
At the March 1921 Treaty of Riga the Soviets conceded[21] a frontier well to the east of the Curzon Line, where Poland had conquered a great part of the Vilna Governorate (1920/1922), including the town of Wilno (Vilnius), and East Galicia (1919), including the city of Lwów, as well as most of the region of Volhynia (1921). The treaty provided Poland with almost 135,000 square kilometres (52,000 sq mi) of land that was, on average, about 250 kilometres (160 mi) east of the Curzon Line.[22][23] The Polish-Soviet border was recognised by the League of Nations in 1923[citation needed] and confirmed by various Polish-Soviet agreements.[citation needed] Within the annexed regions, Poland founded several administrative districts, such as the Volhynian Voivodeship, the Polesie Voivodeship, and the Wilno Voivodeship.
As a concern of possible expansion of Polish territory, Polish politicians traditionally could be subdivided into two opposite groups advocating contrary approaches: restoration of Poland based on its former western territories one side and, alternatively, restoration of Poland based on its previous holdings in the east on the other.
During the first quarter of the 20th century, a representative of the first political group was Roman Dmowski, an adherent of the pan-slavistic movement and author of several political books and publications[24] of some importance, who approached the issue pragmatically, but advocating for incorporation of available land based on a ethnographic principle combined with a theory of easy assimilation of Belarusians within a centralised Polish state- the task potentially to be shared with Russia concerning Belarusians beyond the border which he viewed it would be possible to incorporate and assimilate.
This resulted in a modification of the Dmowski Line in negotiations for the Treaty of Riga, in which the Polish delegation (consisting of a majority of parliamentary representatives, Dmowski’s Zjednoczenie Ludowo-Narodowe being the strongest party) unilaterally ceding claims to the Minsk area without basis on the line of actual control, and despite it having a higher Polish-identified population (in absolute and proportionally) than many of the areas still claimed within the border. The goal is thought to be jeopardising Józef Piłsudski’s ambitions for creating a Polish-Belarusian federation, as a remnant of his ‘federationist idea’ (opposed to Dmowski’s ‘incorporation its idea’) with a Belarusian capital in Minsk. It was predicted that a Belarusian entity without Minsk would be deemed politically illegitimate and untenable to the local population. An anti-communist, but believing in the inevitability of a White victory in the Russian Civil War he wished to concentrate on resisting a more dangerous enemy of the Polish nation than Russia, which in his view was Germany.
The most powerful representative of the opposed group was Józef Piłsudski, a former socialist who was born in the Vilna Governorate annexed during the 1795 Third Partition of Poland by the Russian Empire, whose political vision was essentially a far-reaching restoration of the borders of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, ideally in the form of a multinational federation. Because the Russian Empire had collapsed into a state of civil war following the Russian Revolution of 1917, and the Soviet Army had been defeated and been weakened considerably at the end of World War I by Germany's army, resulting in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Piłsudski took the chance and used military force in an attempt to realise his political vision by concentrating on the east and involving himself in the Polish–Soviet War.
World War II
[edit]The terms of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939 provided for the partition of Poland along the line of the San, Vistula and Narew rivers which did not go along the Curzon Line but reached far beyond it and awarded the Soviet Union with territories of Lublin and near Warsaw. In September, after the military defeat of Poland, the Soviet Union annexed all territories east of the Curzon Line plus Białystok and Eastern Galicia. The territories east of this line were incorporated into the Byelorussian SSR and Ukrainian SSR after falsified referendums[citation needed] and hundreds of thousands of Poles and a lesser number of Jews were deported eastwards into the Soviet Union. In July 1941 these territories were seized by Nazi Germany in the course of the invasion of the Soviet Union. During the German occupation most of the Jewish population was deported or killed by the Germans.
In 1944, the Soviet armed forces recaptured eastern Poland from the Germans. The Soviets unilaterally declared a new frontier between the Soviet Union and Poland (approximately the same as the Curzon Line). The Polish government-in-exile in London bitterly opposed this, insisting on the "Riga line". At the Tehran and Yalta conferences between Stalin and the western Allies, the allied leaders Roosevelt and Churchill asked Stalin to reconsider, particularly over Lwów, but he refused. During the negotiations at Yalta, Stalin posed the question "Do you want me to tell the Russian people that I am less Russian than Lord Curzon?"[25] The altered Curzon Line thus became the permanent eastern border of Poland and was recognised by the western Allies in July 1945. The border was later adjusted several times, the biggest revision being in 1951.
When the Soviet Union ceased to exist in 1991, the Curzon Line became Poland's eastern border with Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine.
Ethnicity east of the Curzon Line until 1939
[edit]

The ethnic composition of these areas proved difficult to measure, both during the interwar period and after World War II. A 1944 article in The Times estimated that in 1931 between 2.2 and 2.5 million Poles lived east of the Curzon Line.[26] According to historian Yohanan Cohen's estimate, in 1939 the population in the territories of interwar Poland east of the Curzon Line gained via the Treaty of Riga totalled 12 million, consisting of over 5 million Ukrainians, between 3.5 and 4 million Poles, 1.5 million Belarusians, and 1.3 million Jews.[27] During World War II, politicians gave varying estimates of the Polish population east of the Curzon Line that would be affected by population transfers. Winston Churchill mentioned "3 to 4 million Poles east of the Curzon Line".[28] Stanisław Mikołajczyk, then Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile, counted this population as 5 million.[29]
Ukrainians and Belarusians if counted together composed the majority of the population of interwar Eastern Poland.[30] The area also had a significant number of Jewish inhabitants. Poles constituted majorities in the main cities (followed by Jews) and in some rural areas, such as Vilnius region or Wilno Voivodeship.[30][31][32]
After the Soviet deportation of Poles and Jews in 1939–1941 (see Polish minority in Soviet Union), The Holocaust and the ethnic cleansing of the Polish population of Volhynia and East Galicia by Ukrainian Nationalists, the Polish population in the territories had decreased considerably. The cities of Wilno, Lwów, Grodno and some smaller towns still had significant Polish populations. After 1945, the Polish population of the area east of the new Soviet-Polish border was in general confronted with the alternative either to accept a different citizenship or to emigrate. According to more recent research, about 3 million Roman Catholic Poles lived east of the Curzon Line within interwar Poland's borders, of whom about 2.1 million[33] to 2.2 million[34] died, fled, emigrated or were expelled to the newly annexed German territories.[35][36] There still exists a big Polish minority in Lithuania and a big Polish minority in Belarus today. The cities of Vilnius, Grodno and some smaller towns still have significant Polish populations. Vilnius District Municipality and Sapotskin region have a Polish majority.
Ukrainian nationalists continued their partisan war and were imprisoned by the Soviets and sent to the Gulag. There they revolted, actively participating in several uprisings (Kengir uprising, Norilsk uprising, Vorkuta uprising).
Polish population east of the Curzon Line before World War II can be estimated by adding together figures for Former Eastern Poland and for pre-1939 Soviet Union:
| 1. Interwar Poland | Polish mother tongue (of whom Roman Catholics) | Source (census) | Today part of: |
|---|---|---|---|
| South-Eastern Poland | 2,243,011 (1,765,765)[37][38] | 1931 Polish census[39] | |
| North-Eastern Poland | 1,663,888 (1,358,029)[40][41] | 1931 Polish census | |
| 2. Interwar USSR | Ethnic Poles according to official census | Source (census) | Today part of: |
| Soviet Ukraine | 476,435 | 1926 Soviet census | |
| Soviet Belarus | 97,498 | 1926 Soviet census | |
| Soviet Russia | 197,827 | 1926 Soviet census | |
| rest of the USSR | 10,574 | 1926 Soviet census | |
| 3. Interwar Baltic states | Ethnic Poles according to official census | Source (census) | Today part of: |
| Lithuania | 65,599 [Note 1] | 1923 Lithuanian census | |
| Latvia | 59,374 | 1930 Latvian census[42] | |
| Estonia | 1,608 | 1934 Estonian census | |
| TOTAL (1., 2., 3.) | 4 to 5 million ethnic Poles |
Two tables below show the linguistic (mother tongue) and religious structure of interwar South-Eastern Poland (nowadays part of Western Ukraine) and interwar North-Eastern Poland (nowadays part of Western Belarus and southern Lithuania) by county, according to the 1931 census.
South-East Poland:
| County | Pop. | Polish | % | Yiddish & Hebrew | % | Ukrainian & Ruthenian | % | Other language | % | Roman Catholic | % | Jewish | % | Uniate & Orthodox | % | Other religion | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dubno | 226709 | 33987 | 15.0% | 17430 | 7.7% | 158173 | 69.8% | 17119 | 7.6% | 27638 | 12.2% | 18227 | 8.0% | 173512 | 76.5% | 7332 | 3.2% |
| Horokhiv | 122045 | 21100 | 17.3% | 9993 | 8.2% | 84224 | 69.0% | 6728 | 5.5% | 17675 | 14.5% | 10112 | 8.3% | 87333 | 71.6% | 6925 | 5.7% |
| Kostopil | 159602 | 34951 | 21.9% | 10481 | 6.6% | 105346 | 66.0% | 8824 | 5.5% | 34450 | 21.6% | 10786 | 6.8% | 103912 | 65.1% | 10454 | 6.6% |
| Kovel | 255095 | 36720 | 14.4% | 26476 | 10.4% | 185240 | 72.6% | 6659 | 2.6% | 35191 | 13.8% | 26719 | 10.5% | 187717 | 73.6% | 5468 | 2.1% |
| Kremenets | 243032 | 25758 | 10.6% | 18679 | 7.7% | 196000 | 80.6% | 2595 | 1.1% | 25082 | 10.3% | 18751 | 7.7% | 195233 | 80.3% | 3966 | 1.6% |
| Liuboml | 85507 | 12150 | 14.2% | 6818 | 8.0% | 65906 | 77.1% | 633 | 0.7% | 10998 | 12.9% | 6861 | 8.0% | 65685 | 76.8% | 1963 | 2.3% |
| Lutsk | 290805 | 56446 | 19.4% | 34142 | 11.7% | 172038 | 59.2% | 28179 | 9.7% | 55802 | 19.2% | 34354 | 11.8% | 177377 | 61.0% | 23272 | 8.0% |
| Rivne | 252787 | 36990 | 14.6% | 37484 | 14.8% | 160484 | 63.5% | 17829 | 7.1% | 36444 | 14.4% | 37713 | 14.9% | 166970 | 66.1% | 11660 | 4.6% |
| Sarny | 181284 | 30426 | 16.8% | 16019 | 8.8% | 129637 | 71.5% | 5202 | 2.9% | 28192 | 15.6% | 16088 | 8.9% | 132691 | 73.2% | 4313 | 2.4% |
| Volodymyr | 150374 | 40286 | 26.8% | 17236 | 11.5% | 88174 | 58.6% | 4678 | 3.1% | 38483 | 25.6% | 17331 | 11.5% | 89641 | 59.6% | 4919 | 3.3% |
| Zdolbuniv | 118334 | 17826 | 15.1% | 10787 | 9.1% | 81650 | 69.0% | 8071 | 6.8% | 17901 | 15.1% | 10850 | 9.2% | 86948 | 73.5% | 2635 | 2.2% |
| Borshchiv | 103277 | 46153 | 44.7% | 4302 | 4.2% | 52612 | 50.9% | 210 | 0.2% | 28432 | 27.5% | 9353 | 9.1% | 65344 | 63.3% | 148 | 0.1% |
| Brody | 91248 | 32843 | 36.0% | 7640 | 8.4% | 50490 | 55.3% | 275 | 0.3% | 22521 | 24.7% | 10360 | 11.4% | 58009 | 63.6% | 358 | 0.4% |
| Berezhany | 103824 | 48168 | 46.4% | 3716 | 3.6% | 51757 | 49.9% | 183 | 0.2% | 41962 | 40.4% | 7151 | 6.9% | 54611 | 52.6% | 100 | 0.1% |
| Buchach | 139062 | 60523 | 43.5% | 8059 | 5.8% | 70336 | 50.6% | 144 | 0.1% | 51311 | 36.9% | 10568 | 7.6% | 77023 | 55.4% | 160 | 0.1% |
| Chortkiv | 84008 | 36486 | 43.4% | 6474 | 7.7% | 40866 | 48.6% | 182 | 0.2% | 33080 | 39.4% | 7845 | 9.3% | 42828 | 51.0% | 255 | 0.3% |
| Kamianka-Buzka | 82111 | 41693 | 50.8% | 4737 | 5.8% | 35178 | 42.8% | 503 | 0.6% | 29828 | 36.3% | 6700 | 8.2% | 45113 | 54.9% | 470 | 0.6% |
| Kopychyntsi | 88614 | 38158 | 43.1% | 5164 | 5.8% | 45196 | 51.0% | 96 | 0.1% | 31202 | 35.2% | 7291 | 8.2% | 50007 | 56.4% | 114 | 0.1% |
| Pidhaitsi | 95663 | 46710 | 48.8% | 3464 | 3.6% | 45031 | 47.1% | 458 | 0.5% | 38003 | 39.7% | 4786 | 5.0% | 52634 | 55.0% | 240 | 0.3% |
| Peremyshliany | 89908 | 52269 | 58.1% | 4445 | 4.9% | 32777 | 36.5% | 417 | 0.5% | 38475 | 42.8% | 6860 | 7.6% | 44002 | 48.9% | 571 | 0.6% |
| Radekhiv | 69313 | 25427 | 36.7% | 3277 | 4.7% | 39970 | 57.7% | 639 | 0.9% | 17945 | 25.9% | 6934 | 10.0% | 42928 | 61.9% | 1506 | 2.2% |
| Skalat | 89215 | 60091 | 67.4% | 3654 | 4.1% | 25369 | 28.4% | 101 | 0.1% | 45631 | 51.1% | 8486 | 9.5% | 34798 | 39.0% | 300 | 0.3% |
| Ternopil | 142220 | 93874 | 66.0% | 5836 | 4.1% | 42374 | 29.8% | 136 | 0.1% | 63286 | 44.5% | 17684 | 12.4% | 60979 | 42.9% | 271 | 0.2% |
| Terebovlia | 84321 | 50178 | 59.5% | 3173 | 3.8% | 30868 | 36.6% | 102 | 0.1% | 38979 | 46.2% | 4845 | 5.7% | 40452 | 48.0% | 45 | 0.1% |
| Zalishchyky | 72021 | 27549 | 38.3% | 3261 | 4.5% | 41147 | 57.1% | 64 | 0.1% | 17917 | 24.9% | 5965 | 8.3% | 48069 | 66.7% | 70 | 0.1% |
| Zbarazh | 65579 | 32740 | 49.9% | 3142 | 4.8% | 29609 | 45.2% | 88 | 0.1% | 24855 | 37.9% | 3997 | 6.1% | 36468 | 55.6% | 259 | 0.4% |
| Zboriv | 81413 | 39624 | 48.7% | 2522 | 3.1% | 39174 | 48.1% | 93 | 0.1% | 26239 | 32.2% | 5056 | 6.2% | 49925 | 61.3% | 193 | 0.2% |
| Zolochiv | 118609 | 56628 | 47.7% | 6066 | 5.1% | 55381 | 46.7% | 534 | 0.5% | 36937 | 31.1% | 10236 | 8.6% | 70663 | 59.6% | 773 | 0.7% |
| Dolyna | 118373 | 21158 | 17.9% | 9031 | 7.6% | 83880 | 70.9% | 4304 | 3.6% | 15630 | 13.2% | 10471 | 8.8% | 89811 | 75.9% | 2461 | 2.1% |
| Horodenka | 92894 | 27751 | 29.9% | 5031 | 5.4% | 59957 | 64.5% | 155 | 0.2% | 15519 | 16.7% | 7480 | 8.1% | 69789 | 75.1% | 106 | 0.1% |
| Kalush | 102252 | 18637 | 18.2% | 5109 | 5.0% | 77506 | 75.8% | 1000 | 1.0% | 14418 | 14.1% | 6249 | 6.1% | 80750 | 79.0% | 835 | 0.8% |
| Kolomyia | 176000 | 52006 | 29.5% | 11191 | 6.4% | 110533 | 62.8% | 2270 | 1.3% | 31925 | 18.1% | 20887 | 11.9% | 121376 | 69.0% | 1812 | 1.0% |
| Kosiv | 93952 | 6718 | 7.2% | 6730 | 7.2% | 79838 | 85.0% | 666 | 0.7% | 4976 | 5.3% | 7826 | 8.3% | 80903 | 86.1% | 247 | 0.3% |
| Nadvírna | 140702 | 16907 | 12.0% | 11020 | 7.8% | 112128 | 79.7% | 647 | 0.5% | 15214 | 10.8% | 11663 | 8.3% | 113116 | 80.4% | 709 | 0.5% |
| Rohatyn | 127252 | 36152 | 28.4% | 6111 | 4.8% | 84875 | 66.7% | 114 | 0.1% | 27108 | 21.3% | 9466 | 7.4% | 90456 | 71.1% | 222 | 0.2% |
| Stanyslaviv | 198359 | 49032 | 24.7% | 26996 | 13.6% | 120214 | 60.6% | 2117 | 1.1% | 42519 | 21.4% | 29525 | 14.9% | 123959 | 62.5% | 2356 | 1.2% |
| Stryi | 152631 | 25186 | 16.5% | 15413 | 10.1% | 106183 | 69.6% | 5849 | 3.8% | 23404 | 15.3% | 17115 | 11.2% | 108159 | 70.9% | 3953 | 2.6% |
| Sniatyn | 78025 | 17206 | 22.1% | 4341 | 5.6% | 56007 | 71.8% | 471 | 0.6% | 8659 | 11.1% | 7073 | 9.1% | 61797 | 79.2% | 496 | 0.6% |
| Tlumach | 116028 | 44958 | 38.7% | 3677 | 3.2% | 66659 | 57.5% | 734 | 0.6% | 31478 | 27.1% | 6702 | 5.8% | 76650 | 66.1% | 1198 | 1.0% |
| Zhydachiv | 83817 | 16464 | 19.6% | 4728 | 5.6% | 61098 | 72.9% | 1527 | 1.8% | 15094 | 18.0% | 5289 | 6.3% | 63144 | 75.3% | 290 | 0.3% |
| Bibrka | 97124 | 30762 | 31.7% | 5533 | 5.7% | 60444 | 62.2% | 385 | 0.4% | 22820 | 23.5% | 7972 | 8.2% | 66113 | 68.1% | 219 | 0.2% |
| Dobromyl | 93970 | 35945 | 38.3% | 4997 | 5.3% | 52463 | 55.8% | 565 | 0.6% | 25941 | 27.6% | 7522 | 8.0% | 59664 | 63.5% | 843 | 0.9% |
| Drohobych | 194456 | 91935 | 47.3% | 20484 | 10.5% | 79214 | 40.7% | 2823 | 1.5% | 52172 | 26.8% | 28888 | 14.9% | 110850 | 57.0% | 2546 | 1.3% |
| Horodok | 85007 | 33228 | 39.1% | 2975 | 3.5% | 47812 | 56.2% | 992 | 1.2% | 22408 | 26.4% | 4982 | 5.9% | 56713 | 66.7% | 904 | 1.1% |
| Yavoriv | 86762 | 26938 | 31.0% | 3044 | 3.5% | 55868 | 64.4% | 912 | 1.1% | 18394 | 21.2% | 5161 | 5.9% | 62828 | 72.4% | 379 | 0.4% |
| Lviv City | 312231 | 198212 | 63.5% | 75316 | 24.1% | 35137 | 11.3% | 3566 | 1.1% | 157490 | 50.4% | 99595 | 31.9% | 50824 | 16.3% | 4322 | 1.4% |
| Lviv County | 142800 | 80712 | 56.5% | 1569 | 1.1% | 58395 | 40.9% | 2124 | 1.5% | 67430 | 47.2% | 5087 | 3.6% | 67592 | 47.3% | 2691 | 1.9% |
| Mostyska | 89460 | 49989 | 55.9% | 2164 | 2.4% | 37196 | 41.6% | 111 | 0.1% | 34619 | 38.7% | 5428 | 6.1% | 49230 | 55.0% | 183 | 0.2% |
| Rava-Ruska | 122072 | 27376 | 22.4% | 10991 | 9.0% | 82133 | 67.3% | 1572 | 1.3% | 22489 | 18.4% | 13381 | 11.0% | 84808 | 69.5% | 1394 | 1.1% |
| Rudky | 79170 | 38417 | 48.5% | 4247 | 5.4% | 36254 | 45.8% | 252 | 0.3% | 27674 | 35.0% | 5396 | 6.8% | 45756 | 57.8% | 344 | 0.4% |
| Sambir | 133814 | 56818 | 42.5% | 7794 | 5.8% | 68222 | 51.0% | 980 | 0.7% | 43583 | 32.6% | 11258 | 8.4% | 78527 | 58.7% | 446 | 0.3% |
| Sokal | 109111 | 42851 | 39.3% | 5917 | 5.4% | 59984 | 55.0% | 359 | 0.3% | 25425 | 23.3% | 13372 | 12.3% | 69963 | 64.1% | 351 | 0.3% |
| Turka | 114457 | 26083 | 22.8% | 7552 | 6.6% | 80483 | 70.3% | 339 | 0.3% | 6301 | 5.5% | 10627 | 9.3% | 97339 | 85.0% | 190 | 0.2% |
| Zhovkva | 95507 | 35816 | 37.5% | 3344 | 3.5% | 56060 | 58.7% | 287 | 0.3% | 20279 | 21.2% | 7848 | 8.2% | 66823 | 70.0% | 557 | 0.6% |
| South-East Poland | 6922206 | 2243011 | 32.4% | 549782 | 7.9% | 3983550 | 57.6% | 145863 | 2.1% | 1707428 | 24.7% | 708172 | 10.2% | 4387812 | 63.4% | 118794 | 1.7% |
North-East Poland:
| County | Pop. | Polish | % | Yiddish & Hebrew | % | Belarusian, Poleshuk & Russian | % | Other language [Note 4] | % | Roman Catholic | % | Jewish | % | Orthodox & Uniate | % | Other religion | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baranavichy | 161038 | 74916 | 46.5% | 15034 | 9.3% | 70627 | 43.9% | 461 | 0.3% | 45126 | 28.0% | 16074 | 10.0% | 99118 | 61.5% | 720 | 0.4% |
| Lida | 183485 | 145609 | 79.4% | 14546 | 7.9% | 20538 | 11.2% | 2792 | 1.5% | 144627 | 78.8% | 14913 | 8.1% | 23025 | 12.5% | 920 | 0.5% |
| Nyasvizh | 114464 | 27933 | 24.4% | 8754 | 7.6% | 77094 | 67.4% | 683 | 0.6% | 22378 | 19.6% | 8880 | 7.8% | 82245 | 71.9% | 961 | 0.8% |
| Novogrudok | 149536 | 35084 | 23.5% | 10326 | 6.9% | 103783 | 69.4% | 343 | 0.2% | 28796 | 19.3% | 10462 | 7.0% | 109162 | 73.0% | 1116 | 0.7% |
| Slonim | 126510 | 52313 | 41.4% | 10058 | 8.0% | 63445 | 50.2% | 694 | 0.5% | 23817 | 18.8% | 12344 | 9.8% | 89724 | 70.9% | 625 | 0.5% |
| Stowbtsy | 99389 | 51820 | 52.1% | 6341 | 6.4% | 40875 | 41.1% | 353 | 0.4% | 37856 | 38.1% | 6975 | 7.0% | 54076 | 54.4% | 482 | 0.5% |
| Shchuchyn | 107203 | 89462 | 83.5% | 6705 | 6.3% | 10658 | 9.9% | 378 | 0.4% | 60097 | 56.1% | 7883 | 7.4% | 38900 | 36.3% | 323 | 0.3% |
| Valozhyn | 115522 | 76722 | 66.4% | 5261 | 4.6% | 33240 | 28.8% | 299 | 0.3% | 61852 | 53.5% | 5341 | 4.6% | 47923 | 41.5% | 406 | 0.4% |
| Braslaw | 143161 | 93958 | 65.6% | 7181 | 5.0% | 37689 | 26.3% | 4333 | 3.0% | 89020 | 62.2% | 7703 | 5.4% | 29713 | 20.8% | 16725 | 11.7% |
| Dzisna | 159886 | 62282 | 39.0% | 11762 | 7.4% | 85051 | 53.2% | 791 | 0.5% | 56895 | 35.6% | 11948 | 7.5% | 88118 | 55.1% | 2925 | 1.8% |
| Molodechno | 91285 | 35523 | 38.9% | 5789 | 6.3% | 49747 | 54.5% | 226 | 0.2% | 21704 | 23.8% | 5910 | 6.5% | 63074 | 69.1% | 597 | 0.7% |
| Oshmyany | 104612 | 84951 | 81.2% | 6721 | 6.4% | 11064 | 10.6% | 1876 | 1.8% | 81369 | 77.8% | 7056 | 6.7% | 15125 | 14.5% | 1062 | 1.0% |
| Pastavy | 99907 | 47917 | 48.0% | 2683 | 2.7% | 49071 | 49.1% | 236 | 0.2% | 50751 | 50.8% | 2769 | 2.8% | 44477 | 44.5% | 1910 | 1.9% |
| Švenčionys | 136475 | 68441 | 50.1% | 7654 | 5.6% | 16814 | 12.3% | 43566 | 31.9% | 117524 | 86.1% | 7678 | 5.6% | 1978 | 1.4% | 9295 | 6.8% |
| Vilyeyka | 131070 | 59477 | 45.4% | 5934 | 4.5% | 65220 | 49.8% | 439 | 0.3% | 53168 | 40.6% | 6113 | 4.7% | 70664 | 53.9% | 1125 | 0.9% |
| Vilnius-Trakai | 214472 | 180546 | 84.2% | 6508 | 3.0% | 9263 | 4.3% | 18155 | 8.5% | 201053 | 93.7% | 6613 | 3.1% | 2988 | 1.4% | 3818 | 1.8% |
| Vilnius City | 195071 | 128628 | 65.9% | 54596 | 28.0% | 9109 | 4.7% | 2738 | 1.4% | 125999 | 64.6% | 55006 | 28.2% | 9598 | 4.9% | 4468 | 2.3% |
| Brest | 215927 | 50248 | 23.3% | 32089 | 14.9% | 115323 | 53.4% | 18267 | 8.5% | 43020 | 19.9% | 32280 | 14.9% | 135911 | 62.9% | 4716 | 2.2% |
| Drahichyn | 97040 | 6844 | 7.1% | 6947 | 7.2% | 81557 | 84.0% | 1692 | 1.7% | 5699 | 5.9% | 6981 | 7.2% | 83147 | 85.7% | 1213 | 1.3% |
| Kamin-Kashyrskyi | 94988 | 6692 | 7.0% | 4014 | 4.2% | 75699 | 79.7% | 8583 | 9.0% | 6026 | 6.3% | 4037 | 4.3% | 83113 | 87.5% | 1812 | 1.9% |
| Kobryn | 113972 | 10040 | 8.8% | 10489 | 9.2% | 71435 | 62.7% | 22008 | 19.3% | 8973 | 7.9% | 10527 | 9.2% | 93426 | 82.0% | 1046 | 0.9% |
| Kosava | 83696 | 8456 | 10.1% | 6300 | 7.5% | 68769 | 82.2% | 171 | 0.2% | 7810 | 9.3% | 6333 | 7.6% | 68941 | 82.4% | 612 | 0.7% |
| Luninyets | 108663 | 16535 | 15.2% | 7811 | 7.2% | 83769 | 77.1% | 548 | 0.5% | 13754 | 12.7% | 8072 | 7.4% | 85728 | 78.9% | 1109 | 1.0% |
| Pinsk | 184305 | 29077 | 15.8% | 25088 | 13.6% | 128787 | 69.9% | 1353 | 0.7% | 16465 | 8.9% | 25385 | 13.8% | 140022 | 76.0% | 2433 | 1.3% |
| Pruzhany | 108583 | 17762 | 16.4% | 9419 | 8.7% | 81032 | 74.6% | 370 | 0.3% | 16311 | 15.0% | 9463 | 8.7% | 82015 | 75.5% | 794 | 0.7% |
| Stolin | 124765 | 18452 | 14.8% | 10809 | 8.7% | 92253 | 73.9% | 3251 | 2.6% | 6893 | 5.5% | 10910 | 8.7% | 105280 | 84.4% | 1682 | 1.3% |
| Grodno | 213105 | 101089 | 47.4% | 35354 | 16.6% | 69832 | 32.8% | 6830 | 3.2% | 89122 | 41.8% | 35693 | 16.7% | 87205 | 40.9% | 1085 | 0.5% |
| Volkovysk | 171327 | 83111 | 48.5% | 13082 | 7.6% | 74823 | 43.7% | 311 | 0.2% | 76373 | 44.6% | 13283 | 7.8% | 80621 | 47.1% | 1050 | 0.6% |
| North-East Poland | 3849457 | 1663888 | 43.2% | 347255 | 9.0% | 1696567 | 44.1% | 141747 | 3.7% | 1512478 | 39.3% | 356632 | 9.3% | 1915317 | 49.7% | 65030 | 1.7% |
Largest cities and towns
[edit]In 1931, according to the Polish National Census, the ten largest cities in Polish Eastern Borderlands were: Lwów (pop. 312,200), Wilno (pop. 195,100), Stanisławów (pop. 60,000), Grodno (pop. 49,700), Brześć nad Bugiem (pop. 48,400), Borysław (pop. 41,500), Równe (pop. 40,600), Tarnopol (pop. 35,600), Łuck (pop. 35,600) and Kołomyja (pop. 33,800).
In addition, Daugavpils (pop. 43,200 in 1930) in inter-war Latvia was also a major Polish community with 21% ethnic Polish inhabitants.
| City | Pop. | Polish | Yiddish & Hebrew | German | Ukrainian & Ruthenian | Belarusian | Russian | Lithuanian | Other | Today part of: |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lwów | 312,231 | 63.5% (198,212) | 24.1% (75,316) | 0.8% (2,448) | 11.3% (35,137) | 0% (24) | 0.1% (462) | 0% (6) | 0.2% (626) | |
| Wilno | 195,071 | 65.9% (128,628) | 28% (54,596) | 0.3% (561) | 0.1% (213) | 0.9% (1,737) | 3.8% (7,372) | 0.8% (1,579) | 0.2% (385) | |
| Stanisławów | 59,960 | 43.7% (26,187) | 38.3% (22,944) | 2.2% (1,332) | 15.6% (9,357) | 0% (3) | 0.1% (50) | 0% (1) | 0.1% (86) | |
| Grodno | 49,669 | 47.2% (23,458) | 42.1% (20,931) | 0.2% (99) | 0.2% (83) | 2.5% (1,261) | 7.5% (3,730) | 0% (22) | 0.2% (85) | |
| Brześć | 48,385 | 42.6% (20,595) | 44.1% (21,315) | 0% (24) | 0.8% (393) | 7.1% (3,434) | 5.3% (2,575) | 0% (1) | 0.1% (48) | |
| Daugavpils | 43,226 | 20.8% (9,007) | 26.9% (11,636) | - | - | 2.3% (1,006) | 19.5% (8,425) | - | 30.4% (13,152) | |
| Borysław | 41,496 | 55.3% (22,967) | 25.4% (10,538) | 0.5% (209) | 18.5% (7,686) | 0% (4) | 0.1% (37) | 0% (2) | 0.1% (53) | |
| Równe | 40,612 | 27.5% (11,173) | 55.5% (22,557) | 0.8% (327) | 7.9% (3,194) | 0.1% (58) | 6.9% (2,792) | 0% (4) | 1.2% (507) | |
| Tarnopol | 35,644 | 77.7% (27,712) | 14% (5,002) | 0% (14) | 8.1% (2,896) | 0% (2) | 0% (6) | 0% (0) | 0% (12) | |
| Łuck | 35,554 | 31.9% (11,326) | 48.6% (17,267) | 2.3% (813) | 9.3% (3,305) | 0.1% (36) | 6.4% (2,284) | 0% (1) | 1.5% (522) | |
| Kołomyja | 33,788 | 65% (21,969) | 20.1% (6,798) | 3.6% (1,220) | 11.1% (3,742) | 0% (0) | 0% (6) | 0% (2) | 0.2% (51) | |
| Drohobycz | 32,261 | 58.4% (18,840) | 24.8% (7,987) | 0.4% (120) | 16.3% (5,243) | 0% (13) | 0.1% (21) | 0% (0) | 0.1% (37) | |
| Pińsk | 31,912 | 23% (7,346) | 63.2% (20,181) | 0.1% (45) | 0.3% (82) | 4.3% (1,373) | 9% (2,866) | 0% (2) | 0.1% (17) | |
| Stryj | 30,491 | 42.3% (12,897) | 31.4% (9,561) | 1.6% (501) | 24.6% (7,510) | 0% (0) | 0% (10) | 0% (0) | 0% (12) | |
| Kowel | 27,677 | 37.2% (10,295) | 46.2% (12,786) | 0.2% (50) | 9% (2,489) | 0.1% (27) | 7.1% (1,954) | 0% (1) | 0.3% (75) | |
| Włodzimierz | 24,591 | 39.1% (9,616) | 43.1% (10,611) | 0.6% (138) | 14% (3,446) | 0.1% (18) | 2.9% (724) | 0% (0) | 0.2% (38) | |
| Baranowicze | 22,818 | 42.8% (9,758) | 41.3% (9,423) | 0.1% (25) | 0.2% (50) | 11.1% (2,537) | 4.4% (1,006) | 0% (1) | 0.1% (18) | |
| Sambor | 21,923 | 61.9% (13,575) | 24.3% (5,325) | 0.1% (28) | 13.2% (2,902) | 0% (4) | 0% (4) | 0% (0) | 0.4% (85) | |
| Krzemieniec | 19,877 | 15.6% (3,108) | 36.4% (7,245) | 0.1% (23) | 42.4% (8,430) | 0% (6) | 4.4% (883) | 0% (2) | 0.9% (180) | |
| Lida | 19,326 | 63.3% (12,239) | 32.6% (6,300) | 0% (5) | 0.1% (28) | 2.1% (414) | 1.7% (328) | 0% (2) | 0.1% (10) | |
| Czortków | 19,038 | 55.2% (10,504) | 25.5% (4,860) | 0.1% (11) | 19.1% (3,633) | 0% (0) | 0.1% (17) | 0% (0) | 0.1% (13) | |
| Brody | 17,905 | 44.9% (8,031) | 35% (6,266) | 0.2% (37) | 19.8% (3,548) | 0% (5) | 0.1% (9) | 0% (0) | 0.1% (9) | |
| Słonim | 16,251 | 52% (8,452) | 41.1% (6,683) | 0.1% (9) | 0.3% (45) | 4% (656) | 2.3% (369) | 0% (2) | 0.2% (35) | |
| Wołkowysk | 15,027 | 49.6% (7,448) | 38.8% (5,827) | 0% (7) | 0.1% (10) | 6.9% (1,038) | 4.6% (689) | 0% (3) | 0% (5) |
Poles east of the Curzon Line after expulsion
[edit]Despite the expulsion of most ethnic Poles from the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1958, the Soviet census of 1959 still counted around 1.4 million ethnic Poles remaining in the USSR:
| Republic of the USSR | Ethnic Poles in 1959 census |
|---|---|
| Byelorussian SSR | 538,881 |
| Ukrainian SSR | 363,297 |
| Lithuanian SSR | 230,107 |
| Latvian SSR | 59,774 |
| Estonian SSR | 2,256 |
| rest of the USSR | 185,967 |
| TOTAL | 1,380,282 |
According to a more recent census, there were about 295,000 Poles in Belarus in 2009 (3.1% of the Belarus population).[54]
Ethnicity west of the Curzon Line until 1939
[edit]According to Piotr Eberhardt, in 1939, the population of all territories between the Oder-Neisse Line and the Curzon Line—all territories which formed post-1945 Poland—totalled 32,337,800 inhabitants, of whom the largest groups were ethnic Poles (approximately 67%), ethnic Germans (approximately 25%), and Jews (2,254,300 or 7%), with 657,500 (2%) Ukrainians, 140,900 Belarusians and 47,000 people of all other ethnic groups also in the region.[55] Much of the Ukrainian population was forcibly resettled after World War II to Soviet Ukraine or scattered in the new Polish Recovered Territories of Silesia, Pomerania, Lubusz Land, Warmia and Masuria in an ethnic cleansing by the Polish military in an operation called Operation Vistula.
See also
[edit]- 1893 Afghanistan’s Durand Line
- 1914 India–China McMahon Line
- 1947 India–Pakistan Radcliffe Line
- I Saw Poland Betrayed by Arthur Bliss Lane
- Lewis Bernstein Namier
- Molotov Line
- Oder–Neisse line
- Spa Conference of 1920
- Territorial changes of Poland immediately after World War II
- Zakerzonia
Notes
[edit]- ^ Polish sources estimated, based on the percentage of votes for Polish parties in the 1923 Lithuanian parliamentary election, that the real number of ethnic Poles in interwar Lithuania in 1923 was 202,026.
- ^ Includes German and Czech, etc.
- ^ Includes Protestants, Old Believers, etc.
- ^ Includes Lithuanian and Ukrainian, etc.
- ^ Includes Old Believers, Protestants, etc.
References
[edit]- ^ Sarah Meiklejohn Terry (1983). Poland's Place in Europe: General Sikorski and the Origin of the Oder-Neisse Line, 1939-1943. Princeton University Press. p. 121. ISBN 9781400857173.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2012). "The Curzon line as the eastern boundary of Poland. The origins and the political background". Geographia Polonica. 85 (1): 5–21. doi:10.7163/GPol.2012.1.1.
- ^ R. F. Leslie, Antony Polonsky (1983). The History of Poland Since 1863. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-27501-9.
- ^ Rees, Laurence (2009). World War Two Behind Closed Doors, BBC Books, pp. 122, 220
- ^ "Modern History Sourcebook: The Yalta Conference, Feb. 1945". Fordham University. Retrieved 2010-02-05.
- ^ Henryk Zieliński (1984). "The collapse of foreign authority in the Polish territories". Historia Polski 1914-1939 [History of Poland 1918-1939] (in Polish). Warsaw: Polish Scientific Publishers PWN. pp. 84–88. ISBN 83-01-03866-7.
- ^ a b "Curzon Line | Definition, Facts, & Border | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
- ^ Zara S. Steiner (2005). The Lights that Failed: European International History, 1919–1933. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-822114-2.
- ^ Anna M. Cienciala; Wojciech Materski (2007). Katyn: a crime without punishment. Yale University Press. pp. 9–11. ISBN 978-0-300-10851-4. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
It also happened to coincide with the eastern limits of pedominantly ethnic Polish territory.
- ^ Aviel Roshwald (2001). Ethnic Nationalism and the Fall of Empires: Central Europe, Russia, and the Middle East, 1914–1923. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-17893-8.
- ^ Joseph Marcus (1983). Social and Political History of the Jews in Poland, 1919–1939. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-90-279-3239-6.
- ^ Sandra Halperin (1997). In the Mirror of the Third World: Capitalist Development in Modern Europe. Cornell University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-8014-8290-8.
curzon line ethnographic.
- ^ Richard J. Krickus (2002). The Kaliningrad question. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-7425-1705-9. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f Manfred Franz Boemeke; Manfred F. Boemeke; Gerald D. Feldman; Elisabeth Gläser (1998). The Treaty of Versailles: a reassessment after 75 years. Cambridge University Press. pp. 331–333. ISBN 978-0-521-62132-8. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
- ^ Arno J. Mayer (26 December 2001). The Furies: Violence and Terror in the French and Russian Revolutions. Princeton University Press. p. 300. ISBN 978-0-691-09015-3. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
- ^ a b Piotr Stefan Wandycz (1962). France and her eastern allies, 1919-1925: French-Czechoslovak-Polish relations from the Paris Peace Conference to Locarno. U of Minnesota Press. pp. 154–156. ISBN 978-0-8166-5886-2. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b c d Eric Suy; Karel Wellens (1998). International law: theory and practice : essays in honour of Eric Suy. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-90-411-0582-0. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
- ^ Anna M. Cienciala. "Lecture Notes 11 - THE REBIRTH OF POLAND". University of Kansas. Retrieved 2011-01-26.
- ^ E. H. Carr (1982). The Bolshevik Revolution 1917–1923 (A history of Soviet Russia), volume 3 , p.260, Greek edition, ekdoseis Ypodomi
- ^ Michael Palij (1995). The Ukrainian-Polish defensive alliance, 1919-1921: an aspect of the Ukrainian revolution. CIUS Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-895571-05-9. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
- ^ Henry Butterfield Ryan (19 August 2004). The vision of Anglo-America: the US-UK alliance and the emerging Cold War, 1943-1946. Cambridge University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-521-89284-1. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
A peace was finally concluded and a boundary, much less favourable to Russia than the Curzon Line, was determined at Riga in March 1921 and known as the Riga Line.
- ^ Michael Graham Fry; Erik Goldstein; Richard Langhorne (30 March 2004). Guide to International Relations and Diplomacy. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-8264-7301-1. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ Spencer Tucker (11 November 2010). Battles That Changed History: An Encyclopedia of World Conflict. ABC-CLIO. p. 448. ISBN 978-1-59884-429-0. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ Roman Dmowski: La question polonaise. Paris 1909, in French, translated from the Polish 1908 edition of Niemcy, Rosja a sprawa polska (Germany, Russia and the Polish Question, reprinted in 2010 by Nabu Press, U.S.A., ISBN 978-1-141-67057-4).
- ^ Serhii Plokhy (4 February 2010). Yalta: The Price of Peace. Penguin. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-670-02141-3. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ The Times of 12 January 1944; cited according to Alexandre Abramson (Alius): Die Curzon-Line, Europa Verlag, Zürich 1945, p. 45.
- ^ Yohanan Cohen (1989). Small Nations in Times of Crisis and Confrontation. SUNY Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-7914-0018-0.
- ^ Winston Churchill (11 April 1986). Triumph and Tragedy. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 568. ISBN 978-0-395-41060-8. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
- ^ John Erickson (10 June 1999). The road to Berlin. Yale University Press. p. 407. ISBN 978-0-300-07813-8. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
- ^ a b Anna M. Cienciala. "The foreign policy of Józef Piłsudski and Józef Beck 1926-1939: Misconceptions and interpretations". The Polish Review. Vol. LVI, Nos 1-2. 2011. p. 112.
- ^ Rafal Wnuk. "The Polish underground under Soviet occupation, 1939-1941". Stalin and Europe: Imitation and Domination, 1928-1953. Oxford University Press. 2014. p. 95.
- ^ Piotr Eberhardt, Jan Owsinski (2003). Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth Century Eastern Europe: History, Data and Analysis. Routledge. p. 29.
- ^ Kühne, Jörg-Detlef (2007). Die Veränderungsmöglichkeiten der Oder-Neiße-Linie nach 1945 (in German) (2nd ed.). Baden-Baden: Nomos. see footnote no. 2. ISBN 978-3-8329-3124-7.
- ^ Alexander, Manfred (2008). Kleine Geschichte Polens (in German) (2nd enlarged ed.). Stuttgart: Reclam. p. 321. ISBN 978-3-15-017060-1.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2006). Political Migrations in Poland 1939-1948 (PDF). Warsaw: Didactica. ISBN 9781536110357. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-26.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2011). Political Migrations On Polish Territories (1939-1950) (PDF). Warsaw: Polish Academy of Sciences. ISBN 978-83-61590-46-0.
- ^ "Liczba i rozmieszczenie ludności polskiej na części Kresów obecnie w granicach Ukrainy". Konsnard. 2011.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2003). Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth-century Central-Eastern Europe: History, Data, and Analysis. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 241, Table 4.45. ISBN 9780765606655.
- ^ a b "Polish census of 1931".
- ^ "Liczebność Polaków na Kresach w obecnej Białorusi". Konsnard. 2011.
- ^ "Liczba i rozmieszczenie ludności polskiej na obszarach obecnej Litwy". Konsnard. 2011.
- ^ "Third Population and Housing Census in Latvia in 1930 (in Latvian and in French)". State Statistical Office.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.wołyńskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.tarnopolskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.stanisławowskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.lwowskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:M.Lwów-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1937. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.nowogrodzkie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.wileńskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1936. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ Statystyczny, Główny Urząd (1937), English: Dane spisu powszechnego 1931 - Miasto Wilno (PDF), retrieved 2024-06-13
- ^ "Plik:Woj.poleskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ "Plik:Woj.białostockie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia" (PDF). commons.wikimedia.org (in Polish). 1938. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (1998). "Problematyka narodowościowa Łotwy" (PDF). Zeszyty IGiPZ PAN. 54: 30, Tabela 7 – via Repozytorium Cyfrowe Instytutów Naukowych.
- ^ "Population census 2009". belstat.gov.by. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
- ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2000). "Przemieszczenia ludności na terytorium Polski spowodowane II wojną światową" (PDF). Dokumentacja Geograficzna (in Polish and English). 15. Warsaw: 75–76 – via Repozytorium Cyfrowe Instytutów Naukowych.
Sources
[edit]- Borsody, Stephen. 1993. The New Central Europe. Chapter 10: "Europe's Coming Partition". New York: Boulder. ISBN 0-88033-263-8.
- Byrnes, James F. Speaking Frankly. New York: Harper and Brothers Publishers, 1947, pp. 25–32. From the memoirs of James F. Byrnes, on the Yalta Conference.
- Churchill, Winston S. Closing the Ring. 2nd ed. The Second World War Volume 5. London: The Reprint Society Ltd, 1954, pp. 283–285; 314-317. From the memoirs of Winston Churchill.
- Churchill, Winston S. Triumph and Tragedy. 2nd ed. The Second World War Volume 6. London: The Reprint Society Ltd, 1956, pp. 288–292. From the memoirs of Winston Churchill, on the Yalta Conference.
- Crimea Conference, in Parliamentary Debates. 1944–45, No. 408; fifth series, pp. 1274–1284. Winston Churchill's statement to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, 27 February 1945, describing the outcome of the Yalta Conference.
- Nabrdalik, Bart. April 2006. "Hidden Europe-Bieszczady, Poland". Escape from America Magazine. Vol. 8, Issue 3.
- Rogowska, Anna. Stępień, Stanisław. "Polish-Ukrainian Border in the Last Half of the Century" (in Polish). (The Curzon Line from the historical perspective.)
- Wróbel, Piotr. 2000. "The devil's playground: Poland in World War II" Archived 2018-07-02 at the Wayback Machine. The Wanda Muszynski lecture in Polish studies. Montreal, Quebec: Canadian Foundation for Polish Studies of the Polish Institute of Arts & Sciences.
Further reading
[edit]- Bohdan, Kordan (1997). "Making Borders Stick: Population Transfer and Resettlement in the Trans-Curzon Territories, 1944–1949". International Migration Review. 31 (3): 704–720. doi:10.2307/2547293. JSTOR 2547293. PMID 12292959.
- Rusin, B., "Lewis Namier, the Curzon Line, and the shaping of Poland's eastern frontier after World War I"
External links
[edit]Curzon Line
View on GrokipediaOrigins and Initial Proposal
Proposal During the Paris Peace Conference (December 1919)
On December 8, 1919, the Supreme Council of the Principal Allied and Associated Powers issued a declaration establishing a provisional eastern frontier for Poland amid ongoing conflicts with Bolshevik forces in former Russian territories.[7] This line, subsequently termed the Curzon Line, was intended as a temporary demarcation to enable Poland to organize administration up to the boundary without prejudice to final territorial determinations, reflecting concerns over Polish overextension beyond ethnically Polish areas.[7] The delineation began at the intersection of the former Russia-Austria-Hungary frontier with the Bug River, proceeded to the administrative boundary between the Byelsk and Brest-Litovsk districts, followed a segmented path through specified points including Grodno and Bialystok, and extended northward along the Suwalki administrative boundary to the old Russia-East Prussia frontier.[7] The proposal stemmed from earlier ethnographic assessments by the Commission on Polish Affairs, which on April 22, 1919, recommended "Line A" as approximating the western limit of non-Polish majorities in the region, based on linguistic and population data from pre-war censuses. The December resolution reaffirmed this line as a minimal provisional boundary, directing Polish forces to withdraw westward and authorizing consolidation of control only up to it, while explicitly reserving rights to eastern territories for future negotiation, potentially with a reconstituted Russian government.[7] This approach prioritized ethnic self-determination principles from the conference but was criticized by Polish representatives, who argued for broader historical and strategic claims including Lviv and Vilnius, viewing the line as insufficient against Bolshevik threats.[1] Implementation terms included halting Soviet advances 50 kilometers east of the line and provisional handling of Vilnius to neutral administration, though enforcement proved challenging amid the Polish-Soviet War.[2] The Supreme Council's decision reflected Allied caution toward Polish ambitions, influenced by reports of mixed ethnic compositions east of the line—predominantly Ukrainian and Belarusian populations per 1916 occupation censuses—aiming to stabilize the region without endorsing permanent conquests. Poland's partial rejection led to continued military operations beyond the line, rendering the proposal more symbolic than operative at the time.[1]Ethnographic Basis and Line Characteristics
The Curzon Line was formally proposed by the Supreme Allied Council on December 8, 1919, as a provisional eastern boundary for the re-emerging Polish state, explicitly grounded in ethnographic considerations to delineate areas of predominant Polish settlement from those dominated by other ethnic groups. This demarcation drew upon the 1897 Imperial Russian census, the most comprehensive demographic survey available, which indicated Polish speakers forming 50-70% of the population in core regions west of the line, such as the former Congress Kingdom, while eastwards in Belarusian and Ukrainian-inhabited territories like the Polesie region and Eastern Galicia, non-Polish groups constituted majorities, with Poles typically comprising 10-25% minorities amid Belarusians (up to 60% in some districts) and Ukrainians (over 70% in Volhynia).[8][2] The line's configuration followed a north-south trajectory approximating this ethnic divide, commencing at the Lithuanian frontier near Grodno (assigned to Poland despite mixed demographics), passing east of Białystok and Brest Litovsk, curving west around the ethnically diverse Lublin area, then southeast through Dorohusk and Ustyluh, east of Hrubieszów, and west of Przemyśl to the Carpathians, thereby excluding much of Eastern Galicia where Ukrainian populations exceeded 60% per the census data. This path prioritized linguistic majorities over fluid cultural overlaps or Polish historical enclaves, reflecting Allied emphasis on Woodrow Wilson's self-determination principle, though it incorporated limited historical adjustments for defensibility.[9][5] While intended as an ethnographic frontier, the Curzon Line faced contemporaneous critique for not fully capturing the mosaic of ethnic distributions, as evidenced by the 1897 census showing interspersed Polish communities east of the line—such as 15-20% in Lviv (Lwów), which the original proposal placed eastward—and for underweighting Polish cultural and administrative legacies in the borderlands predating partitions. British and French inter-Allied commissions, whose reports informed the line, acknowledged zones of "mixed and uncertain ethnic character" dominated by Belarusians deemed unready for independence, yet the boundary's rigidity overlooked potential for plebiscites in contested areas like Upper Silesia analogs. Later analyses, drawing on interwar data, confirmed the line's rough alignment with Polish pluralities west but highlighted its exclusion of significant Polish diasporas in the Kresy, fueling Polish objections favoring broader historic claims.[8][2]Interwar Rejection and Conflict
Polish-Soviet War (1919–1921)
![Caricature depicting the Riga Peace Treaty][float-right] The Polish-Soviet War erupted from border skirmishes in February 1919 between the newly independent Second Polish Republic and Soviet forces seeking to consolidate control over former Russian imperial territories in Eastern Europe. Escalation occurred in early 1920 amid mutual territorial ambitions, with Polish leader Józef Piłsudski aiming to secure ethnographic borders and buffer zones incorporating areas with Polish majorities or strategic value, while Soviet Russia viewed Poland as a barrier to westward revolution. Polish-Ukrainian forces launched a major offensive on April 25, 1920, capturing Kiev on May 7, but Soviet counteroffensives under Mikhail Tukhachevsky and Semyon Budyonny recaptured the city by June and drove westward, threatening Warsaw by late July. As Soviet armies approached central Poland, British Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon, on July 11, 1920, dispatched a note to Soviet Foreign Commissar Georgy Chicherin proposing an immediate armistice along a demarcation line originally suggested by the Allies in December 1919. This line, later termed the Curzon Line, extended roughly from Grodno southward through Brest-Litovsk to the Carpathians, largely aligning with ethnographic divisions to leave predominantly Ukrainian and Belarusian regions east while allocating areas of Polish settlement west. The proposal offered Allied mediation, military supplies to Poland if accepted, and plebiscites in contested zones like Lwów (Lviv) and Wilno (Vilnius), but conditioned further aid on Soviet restraint.[1][10] Polish authorities, including Prime Minister Władysław Grabski, rejected the Curzon Line as insufficiently protective of Polish interests, arguing it would concede vital territories already under Polish control or with mixed populations where Poland held military superiority, and conflicting with Piłsudski's federalist vision for a "Intermarium" alliance against Russia. The Soviets dismissed the note as interventionist but, facing logistical strains, signaled openness to talks while continuing advances. Despite the diplomatic initiative, hostilities persisted, culminating in the Polish "Miracle on the Vistula" victory at the Battle of Warsaw from August 13 to 25, 1920, where outnumbered Polish forces, aided by intelligence and French advisors, encircled and routed Soviet units, killing or capturing over 100,000.[11][12] Polish counteroffensives in September and October pushed Soviet forces eastward beyond the Curzon Line, leading to an armistice on October 12, 1920, and negotiations in Riga. The resulting Treaty of Riga, signed March 18, 1921, delineated Poland's eastern frontier approximately 200 kilometers east of the Curzon Line in key sectors, granting Poland control over about 135,000 square kilometers of additional territory including parts of Volhynia, Polesie, and western Belarus and Ukraine, with populations totaling around 10 million, predominantly non-Polish. This outcome reflected Polish military leverage rather than Allied border proposals, though it sowed ethnic tensions in the interwar Kresy regions.[13][3]Treaty of Riga and Polish Territorial Gains (1921)
The Polish-Soviet War (1919–1921) concluded with armistice negotiations that produced the Treaty of Riga, signed on March 18, 1921, between the Second Polish Republic, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (acting on behalf of Soviet Belarus), and the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.[14] This agreement formally ended hostilities and delineated the eastern border of Poland, disregarding the Curzon Line proposed by the Allies in 1920 as a basis for armistice terms.[15] Under the treaty's territorial provisions, Poland secured control over substantial areas east of the Curzon Line, extending the border eastward by approximately 200–250 kilometers in key sectors, incorporating regions historically known as the Kresy (Borderlands).[15] These gains included western portions of present-day Belarus and Ukraine, such as the areas around Lwów (Lviv), Wilno (Vilnius, secured separately but integrated into Polish administration), and parts of Volhynia and Polesie, totaling roughly 100,000 square kilometers of land with mixed ethnic compositions predominantly featuring Ukrainian and Belarusian majorities alongside Polish minorities.[16] The Soviet signatories renounced claims to these territories, recognizing Polish sovereignty in exchange for mutual non-aggression and economic concessions, including Polish payment of 30 million gold rubles for Soviet-held Polish cultural artifacts and prisoners.[14] Polish forces' decisive victories, notably the Battle of Warsaw in August 1920, shifted the balance from Soviet advances toward Polish counteroffensives, enabling negotiators like Stanisław Szeptycki for Poland to extract borders favorable to Warsaw's federalist ambitions under Józef Piłsudski, who envisioned a confederation incorporating Ukrainian and Belarusian elements against Bolshevik expansion. However, the Riga border's placement beyond ethnographic justifications—often cited by Allied powers for the Curzon Line—incorporated populations where Poles constituted minorities, sowing seeds for interwar ethnic tensions and irredentist claims.[16] The treaty's ratification by Poland's Sejm on April 15, 1921, and Soviet bodies solidified these gains until the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact's fallout in 1939.Revival During World War II
Soviet Invasions and Initial Annexations (1939–1941)
On August 23, 1939, the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, which included a secret additional protocol dividing spheres of influence in Eastern Europe; for Poland, this specified a demarcation line approximating the Curzon Line, running roughly along the Narew, Vistula, and San rivers, with territories east of it falling to Soviet control.[17][18] Following Germany's invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, Soviet forces under orders from Joseph Stalin crossed the border on September 17, 1939, advancing into eastern Poland without a formal declaration of war and encountering minimal organized resistance from the disorganized remnants of the Polish army.[19] The Soviet justification, articulated by Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, claimed the intervention protected ethnic Ukrainians and Belarusians from anarchy amid Poland's collapse, though it aligned with the pact's territorial allocations rather than genuine humanitarian concerns.[20] By early October 1939, Soviet troops had occupied approximately 200,000 square kilometers of Polish territory east of the demarcation line, encompassing about 13 million inhabitants, including major cities like Lviv, Vilnius, and Białystok.[20] On September 28, 1939, a supplementary German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty adjusted the initial partition: Germany ceded additional Polish lands (including Lviv) to the USSR in exchange for Lithuania's assignment to the Soviet sphere of influence, shifting the effective border slightly eastward from the original protocol line in some sectors and formalizing Soviet control over areas historically contested under the Curzon proposal.[21] Soviet authorities then imposed direct rule, conducting rigged elections on October 22, 1939, in the occupied zones labeled as "Western Ukraine" and "Western Belarus," where voters purportedly endorsed union with the Soviet republics under single-slate ballots and amid repression of opposition.[22] On November 1 and 2, 1939, the Supreme Soviets of the Ukrainian and Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republics formally accepted these territories, annexing them into the USSR and thereby implementing a border closely mirroring the Curzon Line as the new Soviet-Polish (de facto Soviet-German) frontier.[22] These annexations involved immediate Sovietization policies, including nationalization of industry, collectivization of agriculture, and mass deportations of perceived elites—Polish officials, landowners, and intellectuals—to Siberia and Kazakhstan, with estimates of over 1 million affected by arrests, executions, or exile by mid-1941.[22] The occupations extended Soviet influence beyond Poland: in June 1940, following the fall of France, the USSR issued ultimatums to the Baltic states—Lithuania on June 14, Latvia and Estonia on June 16—demanding bases and puppet governments, leading to full invasions and annexations by August 6, 1940, incorporating them as Soviet republics.[23] Simultaneously, on June 26, 1940, the Soviets demanded Bessarabia and northern Bukovina from Romania, occupying these regions by July 3 and annexing Bessarabia to the Ukrainian SSR, expanding Soviet borders southward adjacent to the Polish territories.[24] These actions, enabled by the non-aggression pact with Germany, de facto revived the Curzon Line as the USSR's western boundary in the Polish sector while securing buffer zones in the Baltics and Black Sea region, though German Operation Barbarossa on June 22, 1941, rapidly overran these gains, temporarily nullifying the annexations until Soviet reconquest later in the war.[19]Allied-Soviet Negotiations (1943–1945)
In April 1943, Nazi Germany disclosed evidence of the Katyn massacre, implicating Soviet authorities in the execution of approximately 22,000 Polish officers and intellectuals captured during the 1939 invasion; this revelation prompted the Polish government-in-exile in London to request an investigation by the International Red Cross, leading Joseph Stalin to sever diplomatic relations with the Poles on 25 April 1943.[25] Seeking to consolidate territorial gains while maintaining the anti-Hitler coalition, the Soviet Union shifted from demanding the full 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop partition line to proposing the Curzon Line as a "compromise" eastern border for Poland, which approximated ethnographic divisions but still encompassed areas with substantial Polish populations, such as Lviv (Lwów).[26] This adjustment, announced officially by Soviet diplomats, aimed to secure Allied acquiescence by framing the line as ethnically justifiable and offering Poland unspecified compensation from German territories in the west.[27] The pivotal discussions occurred at the Tehran Conference from 28 November to 1 December 1943, where Stalin directly pressed U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to endorse the Curzon Line as Poland's eastern frontier.[25] Roosevelt, prioritizing wartime unity and unfamiliar with detailed Eastern European ethnographics, tentatively supported the proposal, while Churchill, after initial reservations citing Polish historical claims under the 1921 Treaty of Riga, agreed in principle to the line with minor deviations—potentially including Lviv and adjacent oil fields for Poland—to balance Soviet security demands against Allied commitments to Polish sovereignty.[28] These concessions were made without consulting the Polish government-in-exile, reflecting pragmatic Allied deference to Stalin's de facto control over advancing Red Army positions rather than strict adherence to prewar borders or self-determination principles; Soviet records later confirmed the 1939 line as non-sacrosanct, positioning Curzon as a concession for diplomatic leverage.[29] [30] Throughout 1944, as Soviet forces liberated eastern Poland and installed the Soviet-backed Polish Committee of National Liberation (Lublin Committee) on 22 July, negotiations intensified amid Polish exile protests and partisan resistance, including the Warsaw Uprising from 1 August to 2 October.[25] British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Churchill, during Moscow talks in October 1944, urged Stalin to allow adjustments eastward of the Curzon Line for Polish-majority areas, but Stalin rejected significant changes, insisting on the line's acceptance to preclude "revisionist" Polish claims and ensure a buffer against future German aggression.[31] The U.S. State Department, wary of Soviet expansionism but focused on defeating Nazi Germany, maintained ambiguous support for the Tehran understandings, issuing notes in December 1944 affirming no formal commitment to specific borders absent Polish consent, though private Allied assessments acknowledged the line's approximate alignment with 1919 ethnographic data while overlooking Soviet demographic manipulations post-1939.[27] These talks underscored causal tensions: Allied reliance on Soviet military contributions compelled territorial trade-offs, enabling Stalin's incremental absorption of territories historically contested since the Polish-Soviet War, with over 1.5 million prewar Polish residents east of the line facing uncertain futures under Soviet administration.[5]Postwar Implementation
Yalta and Potsdam Conferences (1945)
The Yalta Conference, held from February 4 to 11, 1945, in Livadia Palace near Yalta, Crimea, involved U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin. Amid discussions on postwar Europe, the leaders addressed Poland's borders, with Stalin insisting on the Curzon Line as the eastern frontier to incorporate Ukrainian and Belarusian-majority areas into the Soviet Union, reflecting the Red Army's occupation of the region following the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact invasions and subsequent advances. The agreement stipulated that "the eastern frontier of Poland should follow the Curzon Line with digressions from it in some regions of five to eight kilometers in favor of Poland," using "Extension A" variant that positioned the line west of Lviv (Lwów), thereby assigning the city and surrounding oil-rich areas to Soviet control despite Polish historical claims and a significant Polish minority there (approximately 1.2 million Poles east of the line per 1931 estimates).[32][33] This concession, paired with promises of "substantial accessions" for Poland from German territories in the north and west, effectively ratified Soviet annexations east of the line, prioritizing Allied unity and Soviet participation in the Pacific War over prewar Polish sovereignty or ethnographic considerations.[32] The Polish-Soviet border decision was formalized without direct Polish exile government input, as Stalin promoted the Soviet-backed Lublin Committee (later Provisional Government of Poland), which endorsed the Yalta terms; the conference also mandated a "Provisional Government of National Unity" incorporating non-communist elements, though Soviet dominance ensured limited implementation.[33] Roosevelt justified the Curzon Line in his March 1, 1945, address to Congress as a "fair boundary" originally proposed in 1919, based on ethnic distributions, despite deviations that favored Soviet territorial gains covering about 180,000 square kilometers of prewar Polish land with mixed populations (roughly 45% Polish, 35% Ukrainian, 15% Belarusian per 1931 census).[34] Critics, including Polish exiles, viewed the outcome as a betrayal, given the line's rejection by Poland in 1920 and the Allies' prior commitments to restore Poland's 1938 borders, but the agreement reflected realist acquiescence to Soviet faits accomplis amid the Red Army's control over eastern Poland.[35] The Potsdam Conference, convened from July 17 to August 2, 1945, in Cecilienhof Palace, Potsdam, Germany, with U.S. President Harry S. Truman, British Prime Minister Clement Attlee (succeeding Churchill mid-conference), and Stalin, reaffirmed the Yalta eastern border without alteration, as the "Crimea Conference settled the problem of Poland's Eastern frontier by adopting a slightly modified Curzon Line."[35] Focus shifted to western compensation, provisionally setting Poland's border at the Oder-Neisse line (pending a final peace treaty), enabling Polish administration of former German territories like Silesia and Pomerania to offset eastern losses, with an estimated 8-10 million Germans slated for expulsion to facilitate Polish resettlement.[36] Truman's August 9, 1945, radio report noted over 3 million Poles east of the Curzon Line requiring relocation westward, underscoring the demographic upheaval, while the agreement authorized "orderly and humane" transfers of German populations from Polish-administered areas, implicitly validating the Curzon Line's finality.[37] This endorsement, amid Soviet consolidation of the Polish Provisional Government, cemented the border shift, with a Soviet-Polish treaty on August 16, 1945, designating a line nearly identical to the modified Curzon Line, incorporating minor frontier rectifications by 1951.[33]Border Adjustments and German Territorial Compensation
At the Yalta Conference in February 1945, the Allied leaders—Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin—agreed that Poland's eastern border would generally follow the Curzon Line, with specified deviations of 5 to 8 kilometers in favor of Poland in certain regions to account for local geographic and administrative considerations.[38] This adjustment aimed to balance Soviet territorial claims while providing Poland minor territorial concessions west of the original line, such as portions around the Białystok salient, though key areas east of the line like Lwów (Lviv) and Wilno (Vilnius) remained under Soviet control.[39] The decision effectively ratified Soviet de facto annexations east of the line, displacing approximately 1.5 million ethnic Poles from those territories.[40] To offset Poland's loss of roughly 180,000 square kilometers of prewar territory east of the adjusted Curzon Line—predominantly inhabited by Ukrainians, Belarusians, and Lithuanians but including substantial Polish minorities—the Yalta Protocol stipulated compensation through the transfer of German lands in the west.[41] These compensatory territories encompassed parts of East Prussia, Pomerania, and Silesia, extending Poland's western border provisionally to the Oder and Lusatian Neisse rivers, an area totaling about 102,000 square kilometers with significant industrial resources like Upper Silesian coal mines.[42] Stalin advocated for the western Neisse rather than the eastern branch to maximize Polish gains, framing it as equitable reparation for eastern losses despite the demographic mismatch, as the acquired lands were overwhelmingly German-populated.[43] The Potsdam Conference in July–August 1945 formalized these arrangements among the Allies, including the newly acceded Harry S. Truman and Clement Attlee. The agreement extended Polish civil administration to the Oder-Neisse line pending a final German peace treaty, which never materialized due to the Cold War division of Germany, effectively making the border permanent.[35] This compensation mechanism, while providing Poland viable economic assets and shortening its borders for defensibility, necessitated the mass expulsion of over 3 million Germans from the new western territories between 1945 and 1947, coordinated under Allied oversight to prevent future ethnic conflicts.[41] Polish authorities, operating under Soviet influence via the provisional government, resettled ethnic Poles from the east into these areas, altering the demographic landscape but sparking debates over the equity of equating historically Polish eastern claims with German-industrial compensation.[40]Demographic and Ethnic Context
Pre-1939 Ethnic Composition East of the Line
The territories east of the Curzon Line, administered by Poland between the Treaty of Riga in 1921 and the Soviet invasion in 1939, encompassed approximately 55,000 square miles with a population of about 6.22 million, excluding Eastern Galicia.[44] Including adjacent regions up to the Riga frontier, the total population exceeded 11 million, of which Poles numbered 2.25 to 2.5 million, comprising roughly 20-23%.[45] In the southern sectors, particularly Wołyń Voivodeship, Ukrainians formed the clear majority at approximately 64% (around 1.5 million people), followed by Poles at 15.6% (about 340,000) and Jews at 10%. Similarly, in Stanisławów Voivodeship, Ukrainians accounted for 67.9% of the population, Poles 22.5%, and Jews 8.9%.[46] These figures reflect rural Ukrainian majorities contrasted with urban Polish and Jewish concentrations, as documented in Polish administrative censuses that categorized inhabitants by mother tongue and religion.[46] Northern areas, such as Polesie and Nowogródek voivodeships, featured Belarusian majorities, often exceeding 40% alongside mixed Polish (around 30%) and Jewish (10%) populations, with smaller Ukrainian and other groups.[46] Overall, Ukrainians and Belarusians dominated the ethnic landscape east of the line, aligning with the boundary's original intent to demarcate non-Polish-majority regions, though Polish holdings extended beyond it via military gains in 1920-1921. Jewish communities, while significant (typically 8-10%), were dispersed and not numerically dominant in any subregion. These compositions derived from interwar Polish censuses, which emphasized declared language and faith over self-identified ethnicity, potentially undercounting assimilation or bilingualism among border populations.[46] Soviet-controlled areas further east, outside Polish administration, exhibited even stronger Ukrainian and Belarusian majorities with minimal Polish presence, per contemporaneous estimates.[2]Pre-1939 Ethnic Composition West of the Line
The territories west of the Curzon Line formed the ethnic Polish heartland of the Second Polish Republic, characterized by overwhelming Polish majorities in rural and urban areas alike.[5] This demarcation aligned with ethnographic realities, as areas to the west exhibited Polish settlement densities far exceeding those of other groups, justifying the line's original proposal as an ethnic boundary.[2] In the 1931 Polish census, which recorded mother tongues as a proxy for ethnicity, Polish speakers predominated across central and western voivodeships such as Warsaw (86.3% Polish), Łódź (82.6%), Kielce (94.1%), and Poznań (96.8%).[44] These regions, encompassing roughly 70% of interwar Poland's territory west of the line, housed approximately 20 million inhabitants, with ethnic Poles comprising over 80% on aggregate.[47] Jews formed the principal minority, accounting for 9-12% nationally but concentrated in cities like Warsaw (where they reached 35% in the capital itself), totaling around 2.5 million across Poland with the majority in western and central zones.[48] Germans, numbering about 740,000 in 1931, were largely confined to northwestern Poznań and Pomeranian voivodeships, where they formed 10-20% in border counties but less than 3% overall west of the Curzon Line.[5] Belarusian and Ukrainian speakers, who dominated east of the line, were negligible west thereof, comprising under 2% combined, primarily in transitional zones near Białystok and Lublin.[49] While the census likely overstated Polish figures due to assimilation pressures and self-identification incentives among minorities, the west's Polish dominance remained undisputed across contemporary analyses.[50]| Voivodeship (Key Western/Central) | Polish (%) | Jews (%) | Germans (%) | Others (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poznań | 96.8 | 0.8 | 2.4 | <1 |
| Łódź | 82.6 | 15.2 | 1.0 | 1.2 |
| Warsaw | 86.3 | 11.5 | 0.2 | 2.0 |
| Kielce | 94.1 | 4.5 | 0.1 | 1.3 |
