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Czech Republic–Poland border

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Czech–Polish border
Characteristics
Entities Czech Republic  Poland
Length796 km (495 mi)[1]
History
Established1 February 1993
Current shape8 April 2011
Treaty

The Czech-Polish border (Czech: Česko-polská státní hranice) is the inter-state border between the Czech Republic and the Republic of Poland. The Czech Republic is one of the seven countries currently bordering Poland. This condition persists since 1 January 1993, when Czechoslovakia collapsed. The current border with the Czech Republic was part of the border with Czechoslovakia and had the same route.

History

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The Polish-Czech border can also be called the border existing for several months in 1939.

On 16 March 1939, the German Reich, after Slovakia declared independence (in fact it client state of Nazi Germany), created from the occupied territories of Bohemia, Moravia and Czech Silesia, which were not directly attached to Germany as the Sudetenland or to Poland as Trans-Olza, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. It constituted an autonomous German administrative unit that bordered Poland over a distance of 66 kilometres, and the border coincided with a fragment of the former Polish-Czechoslovak border.

This border ceased to exist on 28 September 1939, when, after the aggression of Germany and the USSR against Poland, the armies of both countries fully occupied the territory of the Second Polish Republic, as a result of which the German and Soviet authorities signed a pact on borders and friendship, which marked the German-Soviet border in the occupied territory of Poland.

During the demarcation of the border in 1958, Poland transferred 1205.9 ha to Czechoslovakia, while Czechoslovakia to Poland 837.46 ha. The so-called border debt, the title of which should be transferred to Poland 368.44 ha.[2] Regulation of the so-called debt has been dealt with since 1992 by the Permanent Polish-Czech Border Commission at the Ministry of the Interior in Warsaw, currently ministries at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

On 7 April 2011, the Czech Radio announced that the Ministry of the Interior of the Czech Republic plans to give Poland 365 ha of land, i.e. a part of the Liberec Region, located on the so-called Frýdlant promontory, between Świeradów-Zdrój and Bogatynia. On 8 April Polish minister Jerzy Miller corrected that the planned regulation of the border line is not related to the so-called border debt, and with administrative procedures resulting from changes in riverbeds.[3] Currently, the areas in the vicinity of Vidnava, Jeseník region and the so-called Frýdlant bag.

Overview

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The Polish-Czech ranch runs from the Zittau Basin, south from Bogatynia to Zawidów, through the Jizera Mountains, the Szklarska Pass (Polish: Przełęcz Szklarska), the Giant Mountains, the Lubawska Pass (Polish: Przełęcz Lubawska), the Stołowe Mountains, crosses Kudowa-Zdrój, passes between the Bystrzyckie Mountains and the Orlické Mountains, along the Orlice valley, the Międzyleska Pass (Polish: Przełęcz Międzyleska), the Králický Sněžník Mountains, the Golden Mountains, near Złoty Stok, through Głuchołazy south to Prudnik, the Opawica and Opava valleys, crosses the Odra valley, runs along the Olza valley, through Cieszyn, along the ridge of the Czantoria and Stożek massif in the Silesian Beskids the Olza valley and further to the meeting point of the borders of Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia in Jaworzynka.

Czech-Polish border with cities in red, and border crossings in black

Border cities and towns

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From west to east:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Rocznik Statystyczny Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 2019. Warszawa: Główny Urząd Statystyczny, 2019, p. 80. ISSN 1506-0632.
  2. ^ Piotr Kościński,pap: Czeski dług na granicy. rp.pl
  3. ^ "Zmieni się granica Polski z Czechami. Dostaniemy kawałek ziemi". Gazeta Wyborcza. 2011-04-08. Archived from the original on 2011-08-31.
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Media related to Czech Republic-Poland border at Wikimedia Commons