Polish government-in-exile
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Polish government-in-exile
Summary
Polish government-in-exile is a government-in-exile[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of government_in_exile entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,340 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Polish government-in-exile is in the country of Poland[3].
- Polish government-in-exile's instance of is recorded as government-in-exile[4].
- Polish government-in-exile's capital is recorded as Angers[5].
- Polish government-in-exile's official language is recorded as Polish[6].
- Polish government-in-exile's anthem is recorded as Poland Is Not Yet Lost[7].
- Polish government-in-exile followed Second Polish Republic[8].
- Polish government-in-exile's headquarters location is recorded as Paris[9].
- Polish government-in-exile's headquarters location is recorded as Angers[10].
- Polish government-in-exile's headquarters location is recorded as London[11].
- Polish government-in-exile's Commons category is recorded as Polish Government in exile[12].
- 1939 marks the founding of Polish government-in-exile[13].
- Polish government-in-exile was dissolved in 1990[14].
- Polish government-in-exile's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Polish Government in exile[15].
Body
Founding
1939 marks the founding of Polish government-in-exile[13].
Identity
Polish government-in-exile followed Second Polish Republic[8].
Operations
Headquarters locations include Paris[9], a commune of France[16], in France[17], founded in -0300[18]; Angers[10], a commune of France[19], in France[20]; and London[11], a metropolis[21], in Roman Empire[22], founded in 0047[23].
Dissolution
Polish government-in-exile was dissolved in 1990[14].
Why It Matters
Polish government-in-exile ranks in the top 8% of government_in_exile entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,340 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 32 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]
Works attributed to it include The Mass Extermination of Jews in German Occupied Poland[26], a document[27].