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EN
During the Soviet occupation of Polish eastern borderlands in 1939–1941 thousands of foresters were arrested and deported to distant regions of Soviet Union. They were forced to work and live in poor conditions. After German invasion on Soviet Union, foresters such as Polish citizens were granted amnesty, which gave them possibility to move from prisons and labor camps. Some of them decided to join Polish Millitary Forces formed on Soviet teritory. The aim of the Oki article is to review documents from archive of Hoover Institution related to Polish foresters serving in Anders Army. Paper consist of analytical part and annex enlisting more than 350 names of soldiers. List additionally contains data of foresters who left their memoires about their stay in Soviet Union.
EN
The article deals with the Lithuanian War Museum in the first period of its functioning as a place which became a central museum institution of the independent Lithuanian state. It concerns the first period of its development, that is before it was named after its patron – Vytautas the Great and before the construction of a new edifice which strengthened the position of the museum in the cultural space of the city and state.
PL
Artykuł traktuje o Litewskim Muzeum Wojska w pierwszym okresie jego funkcjonowania jako placówce, która stała się centralną instytucją muzealną niepodległego państwa litewskiego. Dotyczy pierwszego okresu kształtowania się instytucji, tj. przed nadaniem jej imienia patrona – Witolda Wielkiego oraz przed budową nowego gmachu, który umocnił miejsce muzeum w przestrzeni kulturalnej miasta i państwa.
EN
General Lucjan Żeligowski took control over Vilnius in autumn 1920. At the beginning, the city was controlled by Middle Lithuania and after 1922 it belonged to the Republic of Poland. The Lithuanian government in Kaunas and some Lithuanians did not want to accept this fact. Different attempts to change the existing situation were made while discussing the problem on the international arena. A plan of regaining the town with the support of the border states was made in circles of the paramilitary organization of the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union. The publication contains the unrealized plan along with a historical preface of the publisher.
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