Volhynian Voivodship
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Volhynian Voivodship (województwo wołyńskie) was one of the 16 voivodships of Poland prior to 1939 in Second Polish Republic and Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Its capital was Łuck. The total area of the voivodship
Województwo wołyńskie | |||
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Missing image Polska22_wolynskie.png Volhynian Voivodship | |||
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Historical region | Volhynia | ||
Capital | Łuck | ||
Population (1931) Density | 2 085 600 58 per km 2 | ||
Area | 35 754 km˛ | ||
Ethnical composition (1931) - Ukrainians - Poles - Jews - others | 1 418 300 (68,0%) 346 600 (16,6%) (9,9%) | ||
Administrative division - towns - powiats - communes - smaller entities | 22 11 103 2743 | ||
Major towns | Łuck, Dubno, Kowel, Krzemeniec, Ostróg, Równe, Sarny, Włodzimierz | ||
Administrative units - preceding - following | Halich ruthenia Volyn Oblast |
Population: the majority were Ukrainians (68%), with a minority of Poles (16,6%) and Jews (9,9%). German (2,3%) and Czech (1,5%) settlers also arrived in the 19th century. The religion practiced in the area was primarily Eastern Orthodox Christian. There were also Roman and Byzantine Rite Catholics as well as adherents of Judiasm and a few Tatars of the Islamic faith.
Volhynian Voivodship (Polish: Województwo Wołyńskie, Latin: Palatinatus Volhynensis) was a unit of administrative division and local government in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania from 14th century till 1569 and in the Kingdom of Poland (the Crown) since 1569 till the partitions of Poland in 1795. It was part of Little Poland province and belonged to its Ruthenian (or Ukrainian regions).
Voivodship Governor (Wojewoda) seat:
Regional council (sejmik generalny) for all Ruthenian lands
Regional council (sejmik poselski i deputacki) seats:
Administrative division:
- Luck County (Powiat Łucki), Łuck
- Wlodzimierz County (Powiat Włodzimirski), Włodzimierz
- Krzemieniec County (Powiat Krzemieniecki), Krzemieniec
Voivodes:
- Janusz Ostrogski (since 1558)
- Aleksander Ostrogski (since 1593)
- Mikołaj Hieronim Sieniawski (since 1679)
- Franciszek Salezy Potocki (since 1755)
See also: