LGBT history in Poland - définition. Qu'est-ce que LGBT history in Poland
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est LGBT history in Poland - définition


LGBT history in Poland         
  • Arms of the Warsaw Gay Movement
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  • Puławska 255/257, location of Café Fiolka
  • 2006 [[Equality Parade]] in Warsaw
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Homosexuality has been legal in Poland since 1932. However, homosexuality has been a taboo subject for most of Poland's history, and that and the lack of legal discrimination have often led to a lack of historical sources on the subject.
History of Poland         
  • General [[Wojciech Jaruzelski]] meeting Soviet security chief [[Yuri Andropov]] during the 1980 crisis. Jaruzelski was about to become the (last) leader of communist Poland.
  • Communist aspirations were symbolized by the [[Palace of Culture and Science]] in Warsaw
  • Saxon]] ruler of Poland. His death sparked the [[War of the Polish Succession]].
  • A representation of the [[Battle of Grunwald]], a great military contest of the [[Late Middle Ages]]
  • Foreign Minister [[Józef Beck]] rejected the proposed risky alliances with [[Nazi Germany]] and with the [[Soviet Union]]<ref name="playground 291–321"/>
  • Auschwitz-Birkenau]] concentration camp, where at least 1.1 million people were murdered by the Nazi regime
  • Apartment blocks]] built in communist Poland (these located in [[Poznań]])
  • Stalinist]] Poland
  • German refugees fleeing from [[East Prussia]], 1945
  • King [[Casimir IV Jagiellon]] was the central figure of the Jagiellonian period
  • Polish traditional dance music]]
  • [[Territorial changes of Poland immediately after World War II]]: the gray territories were transferred from Poland to the Soviet Union, whereas the pink territories were transferred from Germany to Poland. Poland's new eastern border was adjusted in the following years.
  • Sanation regime]].
  • Marshal of the French Empire]], at the [[Battle of Leipzig]]
  • Pilots of [[No. 303 Polish Fighter Squadron]] won fame in the [[Battle of Britain]]
  • Central Industrial Region]]
  • Henry de Valois]], later Henry III of [[France]], was the first elected Polish king in 1573
  • First Secretary [[Edward Gierek]] (second from left) was unable to reverse Poland's economic decline
  • ethnic minority]]
  • October 1956]]
  • [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] establishing the [[Duchy of Warsaw]] under French protection, 1807
  • [[Ignacy Daszyński]]
  • Ignacy Paderewski]] was a pianist and a statesman
  • 2013}}.</ref>
  • [[Lech Wałęsa]] in 1980
  • The capture of the Warsaw arsenal at the beginning of the [[November Uprising]] of 1830
  • radioactive elements]]
  • tried to outvote the communists in 1947]], but the election process was rigged. Mikołajczyk had to flee to the West.
  • [[Bier]] of [[Gabriel Narutowicz]], the first President of Poland, who was assassinated in 1922
  • heliocentric]] model of the solar system that placed the Sun rather than the Earth at its center
  • The [[Great Sejm]] adopted the [[Constitution of 3 May 1791]] at the [[Royal Castle, Warsaw]]
  • Presidential Palace]] where an agreement between the communists and the opposition was signed on 4 April 1989
  • The [[PKWN Manifesto]], officially issued on 22 July 1944 in Soviet-liberated Poland. It heralded the arrival of a communist government imposed by the [[USSR]].
  • Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]] (1772, 1793, and 1795)
  • legionaries]] in 1915
  • May Coup]] of 1926 defined Poland's political reality in the years leading to World War II
  • agreement between leaders of striking workers and government representatives]] in [[Szczecin]] in August 1980
  • The Italian courtyard at [[Wawel Castle]] in [[Kraków]], the former seat of Polish monarchs
  • German and Soviet invasions]] (1939)
  • defenses near Warsaw]], August 1920
  • 1970 protests on the Baltic Coast]]
  • Kingdom of Poland]] in 1918. The "Kingdom" was established to entice Poles to cooperate with the [[Central Powers]].
  • Bolesław I]] (died 1025). The dark pink area in the northwest was lost during the same period.
  • [[Pope John Paul II]] in Poland, 1987
  • Greater Poland Uprising]], a war with Germany, erupted in December 1918
  • Positivism movement]]
  • [[Rosa Luxemburg]], leader of the [[Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania]]
  • National Democracy]] ideology proved highly influential in Polish politics. He favored the dominance of Polish-speaking Catholics in civic life without concern for the rights of ethnic minorities, in particular the Jews, whose emigration he advocated.
  • 1863 Uprising]]
  • President [[Ignacy Mościcki]] and Marshal [[Edward Rydz-Śmigły]] were among top leaders of [[Sanation]] Poland
  • right
  • shells Westerplatte]], 1 September 1939
  • last great military victories]].
  • [[Sigismund III Vasa]] enjoyed a long reign, but his actions against religious minorities, expansionist ideas and involvement in dynastic affairs of Sweden, destabilized the Commonwealth.
  • Polish armed forces]], shortly before his death in 1943
  • A year after Piłsudski's death, his former personal assistant General [[Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski]] became the [[Second Polish Republic]]'s last prime minister
  • national uprising]], [[Kraków]] 1794
  • [[Stanisław August Poniatowski]], the "enlightened" monarch
  • [[Warsaw Ghetto Uprising]]
  • Eastern Front]]
  • Martial law]] enforced in December 1981
  • The [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]] at its greatest extent, after the [[Truce of Deulino]] of 1619
  • [[Warsaw]] was one of Europe's chief cities before the [[Second World War]], pictured in 1939
  • [[Warsaw]] destroyed, photo taken January 1945
  • Surrender of the [[Warsaw Uprising]]
  • fought for a Polish Silesia]] and was the leader of the [[Polish Christian Democratic Party]]
  • Primate]] [[Stefan Wyszyński]]'s leadership led to the exceptional strength of the Polish [[Catholic Church]]
  • mark]]
  • [[Władysław I the Elbow-high]]
ACCOUNT OF PAST EVENTS IN POLAND SINCE 966
Poland/History; History of poland; Polish history; Archaeology of Poland
The history of Poland spans over a thousand years, from medieval tribes, Christianization and monarchy; through Poland's Golden Age, expansionism and becoming one of the largest European powers; to its collapse and partitions, two world wars, communism, and the restoration of democracy.
LGBT history in India         
  • work=The New Indian Express}}</ref>
  • Hijra and companions in Eastern Bengal in 1860
  • Two women using carrots as dildos, 20th century [[gouache]] painting.
ASPECT OF HISTORY
LGBT history of India
LGBT people and relationships in India have been documented in different times. In recent times, the unbanning of homosexuality and promotion of LGBT rights has prompted research and opinions regarding LGBT people in India.