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  1. Obwód lwowski ( ukr. Львівська область) – jeden z 24 obwodów Ukrainy. Leży w zachodniej części Ukrainy, przy granicy z Polską. Stolicą obwodu jest Lwów . Obwód lwowski graniczy: z obwodami wołyńskim, rówieńskim, tarnopolskim, iwanofrankowskim i zakarpackim oraz polskimi województwami, podkarpackim i lubelskim.

  2. Z Wikipedii, wolnej encyclopedia. Obwód lwowski ( ukr. Львівська область) – jeden z 24 obwodów Ukrainy. Leży w zachodniej części Ukrainy, przy granicy z Polską. Stolicą obwodu jest Lwów. Szybkie fakty Państwo, Siedziba ...

    • Population
    • Location and Area
    • Cities and Counties
    • Railroads and Industry
    • Voivodes
    • September 1939 and Its Aftermath
    • References

    Voivodeship's capital, the biggest and its most important city was Lwów. It consisted of 27 powiats (counties), 58 towns and 252 villages. In 1921 it was inhabited by 2,789,000 people. Ten years later, this number rose to 3,126,300 (which made it the most populous of all Polish Voivodeships). In 1931, the population density was 110 per km2. The maj...

    The Voivodeship's area was 28,402 square kilometres (10,966 sq mi). It was located in southern Poland, bordering Czechoslovakia to the south, Kraków Voivodeship to the west, Lublin Voivodeship to the north and Volhynian Voivodeship, Stanisławów Voivodeship and Tarnopol Voivodeship to the east. Landscape was hilly (in the north) and mountainous (in ...

    Lwów, the voivodeship's capital, was by far its biggest city, with the population of 318,000 (as of 1939). It was also the biggest city in south-eastern Poland and the third biggest city in the country (after Warsaw and Łódź), before Kraków (259,000). Other important centers in the voivodeship were: Przemyśl (in 1931 pop. 51,000), Borysław (pop. 41...

    Interwar Poland was unofficially divided into two parts - Poland "A" (better developed) and Poland "B" (less developed). Lwów Voivodeship was located on the boundary line of these, with two main centres - the city of Lwów itself and the rich in oil southern region of Borysław and Drohobycz.[citation needed] Starting in the mid-1930s, the Polish gov...

    Kazimierz Grabowski, 23 April 1921 – 30 June 1924
    Stanisław Zimny, 10 March 1924 – 4 December 1924
    Paweł Garapich, 30 December 1924 – 28 July 1927
    Piotr Dunin-Borkowski, 28 July 1927 – 30 April 1928

    Following the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and the subsequent Russo-German conquest of Poland, the voivodeship was divided by the victors in late September 1939. The western part of the voivodeship was annexed by Germany and added to the General Government, while the eastern part (including the city of Lwów) was incorporated into the Ukrainian Soviet So...

    Maly rocznik statystyczny 1939, Nakladem Glownego Urzedu Statystycznego, Warszawa 1939 (Concise Statistical Year-Book of Poland, Warsaw 1939).