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Podlaskie Voivodeship
Województwo podlaskie
—  Voivodeship  —

Flag

Coat of arms
Location within Poland
Coordinates (Białystok): 53°7′N 23°10′E / 53.117°N 23.167°E / 53.117; 23.167
Country  Poland
Capital Białystok
Counties
Area
 - Total 20,180 km2 (7,791.5 sq mi)
Population (2006)
 - Total 1,197,610
 - Density 59.3/km2 (153.7/sq mi)
 - Urban 712,675
 - Rural 484,935
Car plates B
Website http://www.bialystok.uw.gov.pl
* further divided into 118 gminas

Podlaskie Voivodeship (also known as Podlasie Province, Polish: województwo podlaskie [vɔjɛˈvut​͡stfɔ pɔdˈlaskjɛ] or simply Podlaskie) is a voivodeship (province) in north-eastern Poland. It was created on January 1, 1999, out of the former Białystok and Łomża Voivodeships and the eastern half of the former Suwałki Voivodeship, pursuant to the Polish local government reforms adopted in 1998. Its capital is Białystok.

Contents

[edit] Etymology

The voivodeship takes its name from the historical region of Podlasie. This name originates from the period when the territory was within the Trakai Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, along the borderline with the Mazovia province, primarily a fief of the Poland of the Piasts and later on part of the Kingdom of Poland of the Jagiellons. Hence pod Lachem would mean "near the Poles", "along the border with Poland".

[edit] Geography

[edit] Natural assets

Podlaskie has the lowest population density of the sixteen Polish voivodeships, and its largely unspoilt nature is one of its chief assets. Around 30% of the area of the voivodeship is under legal protection. The Polish part of the Białowieża Forest biosphere reserve (also a World Heritage Site) is in Podlaskie. There are four National Parks (Białowieża, Biebrza, Narew and Wigry), three Landscape Parks (Knyszyn Forest, Łomża and Suwałki), 88 nature reserves, and 15 protected landscape areas. The voivodeship constitutes a part of the ecologically clean area known as "the Green Lungs of Poland".

[edit] Climate

Podlaskie is the coldest region of Poland, located in the very northeast of the country near the border with Belarus and Lithuania. The region has a continental climate which is characterized by high temperatures during summer and long and frosty winters . The climate is affected by the cold fronts which come from Scandinavia and Siberia. The average temperature in the winter ranges from -15°C (5°F) to -4°C (24.8°F).


Weather data for Białystok
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) -3
(29)
-3
(31)
4
(40)
11
(52)
17
(63)
20
(68)
21
(70)
21
(70)
16
(61)
11
(51)
4
(39)
1
(33)
11
(51)
Average low °C (°F) -6
(21)
-6
(21)
-2
(28)
2
(35)
7
(45)
10
(50)
12
(54)
11
(52)
8
(46)
4
(39)
0
(32)
-4
(25)
3
(37)
Source: Weatherbase[1] 2008-07-05

[edit] Historical units

For details about the history of the region, see Podlachia.

The following is a partial list of political subdivisions in which part or all of current day Podlaskie Voivodeship was wholly or partially contained within:

[edit] 20th century

People's Republic of Poland / Third Polish Republic

World War II
Second Polish Republic
World War I

[edit] 19th century

Russian Empire
Kingdom of Poland (Congress Poland)

Kingdom of Prussia

[edit] 16th-18th century

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

[edit] 12th-15th century

Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Kingdom of Poland

[edit] 9th-11th century

Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia
Kievan Rus

[edit] Early Middle Ages

[edit] Culture

Podlaskie is the most diverse of all Polish voivodships. The area has been inhabited for centuries by members of different nations and religions: Belarusians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Russyns, Gypsies, Tatars, Jews and Filipons.

Many places of religious worship remain:

  • An eighteenth-century former Carmelite monastery on Wigry Lake
  • A former jesuit monastery complex in Drohiczyn
  • Christ’s Transfiguration Orthodox church on the Holy Mount of Grabarka
  • Saint Nicolaus the Miracle Worker Orthodox church in Białystok
  • A seventeenth-century synagogue in Tykocin
  • The oldest Polish mosque in Kruszyniany

[edit] Sites of historical significance

Major monuments of the administrative region:

  • Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel and John the Baptist in Lomza (1504–1526)
  • The ruins of a castle in Tykocin (XV century)
  • Jewish cemetery in Tykocin (XVI century)
  • Orthodox Annunciation of Our Lady in Supraślu (sixteenth to the eighteenth century)
  • Dominican Monastery of the Visitation Church of the Assumption in Sejny (1610–1619)
  • Old Parish Church in Bialystok (1617–1626)
  • Synagogue (1642) and Dom Talmudyczny in Tykocin (eighteenth century)
  • Carmelites Monastery with the church of Our Lady of Mount Caramel in Bielsk Podlaski (seventeenth century)
  • Branicki Palace in Bialystok (the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries)
  • Branicki summer residence in Choroszczy (1752–1759)
  • Holy Trinity Church in Tykocin (1742–1750)
  • Church of the Assumption in Siemiatyczach (1719–1727)
  • Dominican Monastery of St. John the Baptist. & St. Stephen Martyr in Choroszczy (eighteenth century)
  • Capuchin Monastery in Lomza (1770–1798)
  • Old City Hall in Bielsk Podlaski
  • Sokółki Palace in Pawłowiczch near Sokółka
  • Orli Synagogue
  • Bernardine monastery in Tykocin (1771–1791)
  • Catholic Church. of the Nativity and St. Mary. and St. Nicholas in Bielsk Podlaski (1780)
  • The Church of St. Nicholas in Bialystok (1843–1846)
  • The Church of St. Anna in Kolnie (1834–1839)
  • Cathedral of St. Aleksandra in Suwalki (1825)
  • The Church of St. Anthony in Sokółka (1848)
  • Cathedral Cemetery in Lomza
  • Lubomirski Palace in Bialystok (the second half. Nineteenth century)
  • Hasbacha Palace in Bialystok (end of the nineteenth century)
  • The Palace and park in Buchholtzów Supraślu (1892–1903)
  • Zespół fabryczny Beckera w Białymstoku (XIX/XX) Team name Becker in Bialystok (XIX / XX)
  • Benedictine Monastery in Lomza (1863)
  • Church of the Assumption in Lomza (1877)
  • Holy Trinity Church in Zambrowie (1879)
  • Holy Trinity Church in Grajewie (1882)
  • The Church of St. John the Baptist in Wysokiem Mazowiecki (1888)
  • Seminary in Lomza (1866)
  • City Hall in Lomza (1822–1823)
  • Numerous monuments Street Dwornej in Lomza
  • Manor in Wojnówce
  • Basilica of the Assumption in Bialystok (1900–1905, neo-Gothic)
  • The Church of St.Adalbert in Bialystok (1906–1912)
  • The Church of St. Rocha in Bialystok (1926–1947, modernist)
  • Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Augustow (1905–1911 eclectic)
  • The Church of Our Lady of Czestochowa and St. Casimir in Mońkach (1921–1935)
  • Saints' Church of the Apostles Peter and Paul in Łapach (1918–1927)
  • Fortress in Osowcu
  • A Polish Tatars' (Islam in Poland) wooden mosque and a Muslim cemetery in the village of Bohoniki

[edit] Economy

According to REGON register in the year 2002 there were around 95 thousand companies registered in Podlasie region (97 % of them in private sector), dealing with;

  • Trade and servicing – 33.2 %
  • Providing services to real estates and companies – 11.8 %
  • Construction – 10.5%
  • Industrial processing – 9.7 %
  • Transport 8.3%
  • Agriculture, hunting and forestry 4.5%

[edit] Agriculture

Arable land constitutes around 60% of the total area of the region – most of which is ploughland (around 40%), forests, meadows and pastures. Over 120 000 farms are registered, roughly half of which are small farms of 1–5 ha and medium-sized farms of 5–10 ha. The smaller farms prefer intensive production (gardening, orcharding), whereas the larger ones engage in cattle and crop production. The cattle-raising farms are mainly oriented towards milk production.

The natural conditions of the region are conducive to the development of organic growing, which at present is practised by around 100 farms. Over 600 farms in the region offer agritourist services.[2]

[edit] Government

The voivodeship's seat is the city of Białystok. Like all voivodeships, it has a government-appointed Provincial Governor[3] (Polish: wojewoda), as well as an elected Regional Assembly (sejmik) and of the executive elected by that assembly, headed by the voivodeship marshal (marszałek województwa). Administrative powers and competences are statutorily divided between these authorities.

[edit] Cities and towns

The voivodeship contains 38 cities and towns. These are listed below in descending order of population (according to official figures for 2006[4] ):

  1. Białystok (295,210)
  2. Suwałki (69,234)
  3. Łomża (63,572)
  4. Augustów (30,054)
  5. Bielsk Podlaski (26,876)
  6. Zambrów (22,700)
  7. Grajewo (22,651)
  8. Hajnówka (22,072)
  9. Sokółka (18,888)
  10. Łapy (16,583)
  11. Siemiatycze (15,169)
  12. Kolno (10,751)
  13. Mońki (10,455)
  1. Czarna Białostocka (9,596)
  2. Wysokie Mazowieckie (9,257)
  3. Wasilków (8,967)
  4. Dąbrowa Białostocka (6,147)
  5. Sejny (5,934)
  6. Choroszcz (5,416)
  7. Ciechanowiec (4,898)
  8. Supraśl (4,578)
  9. Brańsk (3,794)
  10. Szczuczyn (3,564)
  11. Michałowo (3,343)
  12. Knyszyn (2,835)
  13. Krynki (2,709)
  1. Lipsk (2,498)
  2. Stawiski (2,442)
  3. Zabłudów (2,400)
  4. Suchowola (2,243)
  5. Drohiczyn (2,086)
  6. Nowogród (2,014)
  7. Goniądz (1,910)
  8. Jedwabne (1,901)
  9. Tykocin (1,893)
  10. Rajgród (1,673)
  11. Kleszczele (1,432)
  12. Suraż (982)

[edit] Administrative division

Podlaskie Voivodeship is divided into 17 counties (powiats): 3 city counties and 14 land counties. These are further divided into 118 gminas.

The counties are shown on the numbered map and detailed in the table beside it.

English and
Polish names
Area
(km²)
Population
(2006)[4]
Seat Other towns Total
gminas
City counties
POL Białystok formal COA.svg Białystok 102 295,210 1
POL Suwałki COA.svg Suwałki 65 69,234 1
POL Łomża COA.svg Łomża 33 63,572 1
Land counties
Białystok County
powiat białostocki
2,985 136,797 Białystok * Łapy, Czarna Białostocka, Wasilków, Choroszcz, Supraśl, Michałowo, Zabłudów, Tykocin, Suraż 15
Sokółka County
powiat sokólski
2,054 72,424 Sokółka Dąbrowa Białostocka, Krynki, Suchowola 10
Bielsk County
powiat bielski
1,385 60,047 Bielsk Podlaski Brańsk 8
Wysokie Mazowieckie County
powiat wysokomazowiecki
1,288 59,719 Wysokie Mazowieckie Ciechanowiec 10
Augustów County
powiat augustowski
1,658 58,966 Augustów Lipsk 7
Łomża County
powiat łomżyński
1,354 50,887 Łomża * Nowogród, Jedwabne 9
Grajewo County
powiat grajewski
967 50,120 Grajewo Szczuczyn, Rajgród 6
Siemiatycze County
powiat siemiatycki
1,460 48,603 Siemiatycze Drohiczyn 9
Hajnówka County
powiat hajnowski
1,624 48,130 Hajnówka Kleszczele 9
Zambrów County
powiat zambrowski
733 44,798 Zambrów 5
Mońki County
powiat moniecki
1,382 42,960 Mońki Knyszyn, Goniądz 7
Kolno County
powiat kolneński
940 39,676 Kolno Stawiski 6
Suwałki County
powiat suwalski
1,307 35,136 Suwałki * 9
Sejny County
powiat sejneński
856 21,331 Sejny 5
* seat not part of the county

[edit] External links

[edit] References




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