- Source: Poles in Romania
According to the 2021 Romanian census, 2,137 Poles live in Romania, mainly in the villages of Suceava County (Polish: Suczawa). There are three exclusively Polish villages, as follows: Nowy Sołoniec (Solonețu Nou), Plesza (Pleșa), and Pojana Mikuli (Poiana Micului), as well a significant Polish presence in Kaczyca (Cacica) and Paltynosa (Păltinoasa). There is also a relatively sizable number of ethnic Poles living in the county seat, Suceava (Polish: Suczawa).
Poles in Romania form an officially recognised national minority, having one seat in the Chamber of Deputies (currently held by the Union of Poles of Romania) and access to Polish elementary schools and cultural centres (known as "Polish Houses" or "Dom Polski" in Polish).
History
The first Poles settled in Moldavia in the times of Casimir III (specifically during the Late Middle Ages). Most of the Poles immigrating after 1774 were looking for work. So it was that Polish miners from Bochnia and Wieliczka were brought to salt mines in Cacica.
Another wave of Polish immigration arrived in Bukovina in the early 19th century, when the region was a crownland of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, as was a significant portion of present-day southern Poland (see: Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria).
Around 1803, Polish highlanders from Čadca (Polish: Czaca, Czadca) settled in Treblecz (Tereblecea, now in Chernivtsi Raion, Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine) by Siret, in Stara Huta Krasna and in Kaliczanka and again in 1814 to 1819, this time settling in Hliboka (Adâncata) and Tereszna. Nowy Sołoniec was settled in 1834, Plesza in 1835, and Pojana Mikuli in 1842.
At that time, it must be mentioned that Bukovina was a very attractive region of the Austrian Empire to live in thanks to Austria's policy not to conscript recruits into its army from there (service in the Austrian army at that time was for a 14-year term).
Furthermore, Bukovina was free from serfdom, primarily attracting immigrants of German (who later formed the basis of the Bukovina German community of the region), Jewish, and also Czecho-Slovak origin but also Polish ethnicity and even Russian and Italian.
There were probably other waves of migration from Poland after the November and Kraków Uprisings, but most Poles were from peasant families relocated there by the Empire's authorities after they participated in the Jakub Szela insurrection.
During World War I, Lucjan Skupiewski, Polish physician born in Warsaw, was the organizer and manager of all hospitals for the wounded in the Bucharest area. After the war, he stayed in Romania, and was the deputy deputy mayor of Bucharest and senator for the Polish minority.
Following the restoration of independent Poland, since 1919, many Poles left Bukovina for Poland. Four Polish newspapers were issued in Romania in the interbellum (Gazeta Polska, Głos Ludu, Głos Prawdy, Kurier Polski w Rumunii). The largest urban concentrations of Poles in Romania were Cernăuți (with 8,986 people), Bucharest (1,650), Chișinău (1,436), Sadagura (1,333), Storojineț (1,017) and Bălți (981), according to the 1930 Romanian census. The Polonia Cernăuți Polish football club was active in Cernăuți, and was one of the top teams in the region of Bukovina, winning several regional championships and reaching the quarterfinals of the national Romanian championships three times.
During World War II, a portion of northern and eastern Romania was annexed by the Soviet Union, including the Cernăuți, Storojineț and Bălți counties, which were home to sizeable Polish populations of 15,243, 7,985 and 3,165 people, respectively, according to the 1930 Romanian census. After the war, many Poles from the sizeable Polish communities in Bukovina and Lupeni were repatriated to Poland.
Communes with the highest Polish population percentage
Suceava County
Cacica — 20.04%
Mănăstirea Humorului — 19.3%
Mușenița — 4.06%
Moara — 3.23%
Păltinoasa — 1.14%
Notable Polish Romanians
Ciprian Porumbescu, composer
Marian Kielec, footballer
Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, politician, founder of the Iron Guard
Ioan Gyuri Pascu (partly Polish), musician, actor, and comedian
Octavian Smigelschi (partly Polish), painter
Stefan Norris (born in Poland; subsequently settled in Romania), art director
Mărgărita Miller-Verghy, author, journalist, critic, and translator
Wojciech Weiss, painter
Leonard Mociulschi, major general
Henri Cihoski, lieutenant-general
Robert Sadowski, international footballer
Michał Belina Czechowski, Seventh-Day Adventist preacher
Ghervazen Longher, politician
Adolf Zytogorski (born in Romania; moved to Poland then England), chess master and translator
Tytus Czerkawski, politician
Izydor Kopernicki, physician
Iosif Malinovski, Roman Catholic vicar and publisher
Gustaw Otręba, physician
Witold Rola Piekarski, cartoonist and academic
Feliks Wierciński, Roman Catholic priest and schoolteacher
Gallery
See also
Polish–Romanian alliance
Romanian Bridgehead
Poland–Romania relations
Polonia Cernăuți
Poles in Bulgaria
Poles in Moldova
Poles in Hungary
Poles in Ukraine
Polish diaspora
References
External links
Map of Polish villages in Romania
(in Polish) Polonia w Rumunii
(in Polish and Romanian) Polscy uchodźcy w Rumunii 1939–1947. Dokumenty z Narodowych Archiwów Rumunii / Refugiații polonezi în România 1939–1947. Documente din Arhivele Naționale ale României, t. 1, cz. 1 i 2*The Polish organization in Romania
Polish minority in Cacica - Romania (archive)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Perang Dunia II
- Britania Raya
- Kematian dan pemakaman kenegaraan Lech Kaczyński dan Maria Kaczyńska
- BTR-60
- Elena Ceaușescu
- Sodalit
- Lech Kaczyński
- László I dari Hungaria
- Poles in Romania
- Union of Poles of Romania
- Social Democratic Pole of Romania
- Minorities in Romania
- Polish diaspora
- Polish people
- Catholic Church in Romania
- Romanian ethnic minority parties
- 2000 Romanian general election
- Poland–Romania relations