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- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange abstract "The 1951 Polish–Soviet territorial exchange or Polish-Soviet border adjustment treaty of 1951 was a border adjustments signed in Moscow between the Republic of Poland and the Soviet Union regarding roughly 480 km2 (185 sq mi) of land, along their mutual border. The exchange was made to the decisive economic benefit of the Soviet Union due to rich deposits of coal given up by Poland; discovered already well before World War II. Within eight years following the agreement, the Soviets built four large coal mines there with the total mining capacity of 15 million ton annually.In exchange, the Soviet Union ceded part of the Ukrainian SSR's Drohobych Oblast (1939–1959): the city of Ustrzyki Dolne and the villages of Czarna (Ukrainian: Чорна Chorna), Shevchenko (whose name was restored back to prewar Polish name Lutowiska in 1957), Krościenko, Bandrów Narodowy, Bystre and Liskowate. All of this territory became part of the Krosno Voivodeship in 1975, and of the Subcarpathian Voivodeship on 1 January 1999. It was a stretch of barren land with low quality soil and without any natural resources.Poland gave up part of the Lublin Voivodship, with the cities of Bełz (Ukrainian: Белз Belz), Uhnów (Угнів Uhniv), Krystynopol (Червоноград Chervonohrad) and Waręż (Варяж, Varyazh). Currently all of this territory is part of the Sokalskyi Raion (Сокальський район), Ukraine.After World War II, the territory of Poland changed dramatically, moving westwards. Poland gained the former German provinces of Silesia and Pomerania, with the eastern part of Brandenburg and the southern part of East Prussia. The eastern border of the country was established roughly along the so-called Curzon line, leaving Białystok in Poland and Lviv in the Soviet Ukraine.The border of Poland and the Soviet Union, delimited on the 1945 agreement remained almost unchanged until the early 1950s (with a minor correction in 1948, when the village of Medyka near Przemyśl was transferred to Poland). Then, rich deposits of coal were confirmed in the so-called Bug River knee – Polish postwar territory between the upper Bug and the Sołokija River. The Soviet government decided to gain control over this land, which possessed not only coal, but also fertile black soil.".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange thumbnail Poland-USSR_1951_territory_exchange.jpg?width=300.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange wikiPageID "15009965".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange wikiPageRevisionID "605278624".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:1951_in_Poland.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:1951_in_Ukraine.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:1951_in_international_relations.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:1951_in_the_Soviet_Union.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Boundary_treaties.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:History_of_Lviv_Oblast.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:History_of_Poland_(1945–89).
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Podkarpackie_Voivodeship.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Poland–Soviet_Union_border.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Poland–Ukraine_border.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Treaties_concluded_in_1951.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Treaties_entered_into_force_in_1951.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Treaties_involving_territorial_changes.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Treaties_of_the_Polish_People's_Republic.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange subject Category:Treaties_of_the_Soviet_Union.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange comment "The 1951 Polish–Soviet territorial exchange or Polish-Soviet border adjustment treaty of 1951 was a border adjustments signed in Moscow between the Republic of Poland and the Soviet Union regarding roughly 480 km2 (185 sq mi) of land, along their mutual border. The exchange was made to the decisive economic benefit of the Soviet Union due to rich deposits of coal given up by Poland; discovered already well before World War II.".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange label "1951 Polish–Soviet territorial exchange".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange label "Polnisch-Sowjetischer Gebietsaustausch".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange label "Umowa o zmianie granic z 15 lutego 1951".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange label "Советско-польский обмен участками территорий 1951 года".
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange sameAs 1951_Polish%E2%80%93Soviet_territorial_exchange.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange sameAs Polnisch-Sowjetischer_Gebietsaustausch.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange sameAs Umowa_o_zmianie_granic_z_15_lutego_1951.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange sameAs Q1571892.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange sameAs Q1571892.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange wasDerivedFrom 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange?oldid=605278624.
- 1951_Polish–Soviet_territorial_exchange depiction Poland-USSR_1951_territory_exchange.jpg.