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Galicia is the given name to that partition of Poland
which was occupied by the Austro-Hungarian Empire between 1772-1918.
Consequently, as a foreign provincial name, imposed upon the Polish
subjects of many different areas, Galicia is no longer recognized
on the administrative maps of the Polish Republic as a county, province
nor region. However, since the major migration to America occurred
during the period of Germanic occupation, family records may often
mislead the novice researcher by listing an ancestor's place of origin
as "Austria" or the elusive "Galicia". Galicia,
in particular, is recognized and referred to extensively in the Immigration
Passenger Lists as Austrian Poland.
The full name of the province was "Galizien und
Lodomerien" in German, or "Galicia et Lodomeria" in
the Latinized form. The name is derived from two ancient duchies,
Halychyna and Volhynia, which served as buffer states between the
southeastern Polish frontier and the Kievan State, until their absorption
by Poland in the 14th century.
The province stretched like a crescent moon from Krakow
in the west, to the Romanian border in the southeast, following the
northern slopes of the Carpathian Mountains. It had a population
of over 7 million people in 1900, consisting mainly of Catholic Poles
in the western third; Orthodox Ruthenians in the eastern third; and
a mixture in the middle; and large German and Jewish communities
scattered throughout. After World War I and the Russo Polish War
1920-21, the province returned to Polish administration. However,
after World War II, the Soviet Union forced the annexation into the
Ukraine of all but the overwhelmingly Polish areas. Many Poles were
expelled, and the traditional, the mainly Polish, capital of Lwow
(Lemberg) was brutally Russianized.
At the present time, there are available through Mormon
branch libraries, microfilm copies of so-called Polish Civil records
for Galicia. In reality, these transcripts of parish records collected
in regional archives were for the purposes of military conscription.
They usually commence around 1784 and continue into the 1850's, although
many of the collections are incomplete, and in other cases, no longer
extant for many villages.
However, because of the previously discussed political
situation the records for Galicia are grouped in two different areas.
Those for the areas in the west, still within the borders of the
Polish Republic, are listed under the pre-1965 provinces (Wojewodstwa)
of Krakow and Rzeszow, and thereunder within the appropriate county
(Powiat). Those records for areas beyond the Soviet Border, are grouped
under Ukrainian Records, and thereunder within the general
district.
Nevertheless, the point exemplified by the introduction
to this article is that genealogical research cannot be divorced
from a geographical and historical study of the area under investigation.
Not only will a knowledge of the local history provide enriched backgrounds
and outline the factors impacting our ancestors' lives and fortunes,
but such knowledge is a necessity in order to understand the research
material relating to our genealogical investigations. To that end,
the following is a general outline of the history of Galicia, which
in its own way is uniquely different from the other regions of Poland.
Each topic is itself worthy of an in-depth study to shed light on
its effect upon our ancestral heritage.
Framework of Galician History
|
Pre History |
Spread of Lusation Culture |
Prior
500 A D |
Development of the Wiskabue Tribe/Lugian
Union |
| 500- 700 |
Domination by Croats |
| 700- 880 |
Expansion of the Wislanian Territorial
State |
| 880- 910 |
Overlordship by Moravia |
| 966 |
Poland founded and converted to Christianity
by Mieszko I |
| 990 |
The Wislanie annexed to the new Polish
State |
| 1000- 1241 |
Regionalism, as the Kingdom of Little
Poland, and Palatinate of Sandomir. The Polish capital moved
to Krakow. |
| 1241- 1288 |
Three Mongolian invasions by the armies
of the Ghengis Khan and his successors |
| 1288- 1330 |
Galicia as the Polish frontier and
main area for eastward expansion |
| 1330- 1370 |
The reign of King Casimir the Great.
The annexation of Halychyna and Volhynia. Border rivalry with
Lithuania. |
| 1330- 1570 |
Jagiellonian Poland. Establishment
of Galician towns and the spread of Magdeburgian town law. |
| 1502- 1510 |
Invasion by the Turks from the East |
| 1500- 1700 |
The imposition of serfdom |
| 1600- 1650 |
Tartar incursions |
| 1650- 1660 |
The Swedish Deluge |
| 1700- 1702 |
The Northern War |
| 1700- 1772 |
The dissolution of the State |
| 1768- 1772 |
Confederation of Bar |
| 1772 |
Occupation by the Austro-Hungarian
Empire, the First Partition |
| 1781- 1849 |
The struggle against serfdom |
| 1786 |
The land Katester |
| 1793- 1795 |
The Kosciuszko War for Independence |
| 1805- 1812 |
Impact of Napoleonic hegemony |
| 1831 |
Asiatic Cholera epidemic |
| 1846 |
The Galician Peasant Uprising |
| 1847 |
Typhus and Cholera outbreaks |
| 1848- 1849 |
The emancipation of the Galician peasants |
| 1853- 1855 |
The great famine. The "Great
Cholera", 1854, "Little Cholera", 1873 |
| 1850- 1900 |
The struggle for democracy and overpopulation
effects |
| 1880- 1914 |
The breaking up of the estates |
| 1905 |
Year of Strikes |
| 1914- 1921 |
World War I. The passing of the Eastern
Front through Galicia several times. The collapse of Austria.
The Polish - Russian War. |
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