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Silesian uprisings

First Silesian Uprising
Date 16–26 August 1919
Location Parts of Upper Silesia
Result German forces crush uprising
Belligerents
Grenzschutz
Oberschlesisches Freiwilligen-Korps
Reichswehr
Polish Military Organisation
Commanders and leaders
Alfons Zgrzebniok
Second Silesian Uprising
Date 19–25 August 1920
Location Upper Silesia
Result Foreign-enforced cease-fire
Belligerents
Polish Military Organization German civil government and police of Upper Silesia Allied Plebiscite Commission Military Forces
Third Silesian Uprising
Date 2 May – 21 July 1921
Location Upper Silesia
Result League of Nations forces a ceasefire.
Belligerents
Grenzschutz
Freikorps
Selbstschutz
Polish Military Organisation
Greater Polish Army
Inter-Allied Commission
Commanders and leaders
Friedrich Wilhelm von Schwartzkoppen
Karl Höfer
Wojciech Korfanty
Maciej Hrabia Mielzynski
Jules Gratier
Filippo Salvioni
William Heneker
Strength
40,000

The Silesian Uprisings (German: Aufstände in Oberschlesien; Polish: Powstania śląskie) were a series of three armed uprisings of the Poles and Polish Silesians of Upper Silesia, from 1919 to 1921, against German rule; the resistance hoped to break away from Germany in order to join the Second Polish Republic, which had been established in the wake of World War I. In the latter-day history of Poland after World War II, the insurrections were celebrated as centrepieces of national pride.

Much of Silesia had belonged to the Polish Crown in medieval times, but it passed to the Kings of Bohemia in the 14th century, then to the Austrian Habsburgs. Frederick the Great of Prussia seized Silesia from Maria Theresa of Austria in 1742 in the War of Austrian Succession, after which it became a part of Prussia and in 1871 the German Empire. Although the province had by now become overwhelmingly German speaking, a large Polish minority remained in Upper Silesia.

Upper Silesia was bountiful in mineral resources and heavy industry, with mines and iron and steel mills. The Silesian mines were responsible for almost a quarter of Germany's annual output of coal, 81 percent of its zinc and 34 percent of its lead. After World War I, during the negotiations of the Treaty of Versailles, the German government claimed that, without Upper Silesia, it would not be able to fulfill its obligations with regard to reparations to the Allies.


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