Balder Ex-Libris - Kowalski Stanislaw JanReview of books rare and missing2024-03-16T01:56:42+00:00urn:md5:aa728a70505b2fae05796923271581c2DotclearKowalski Stanislaw Jan - Kolymaurn:md5:c079fe98bc443b1b78c8c50bfe5b128d2015-02-23T01:51:00+00:002015-02-23T01:51:00+00:00balderKowalski Stanislaw JanBolchevikCommunismConspiracyConspirationJewRussiaVeniseÉconomie <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Kolyma.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Kowalski Stanislaw Jan</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Kolyma</strong><br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Kolyma.zip">Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Kolyma.zip</a><br />
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Stalin's prisoners, or "lagerniks" as they were commonly called, referred to the frozen land of Kolyma as a planet, although it physically remained part of Mother Earth. This vast piece of Arctic and sub-Arctic territory, with its undefined political and geographical borders, was located in the furthest North-East corner of Siberia. Kolyma differed from the remaining Asian land mass in so many ways that it could be considered, metaphorically at least, as an entity unto itself. The remoteness and isolation, the severity of the climate, and the harsh living conditions made this frozen hell stand apart from the rest of Siberia. The people of the Soviet Union feared Kolyma more than any other region of the Gulag Empire. "Kolyma znaczit smert" was the common phrase whispered at the time, and translates, without loss, to "Kolyma means death." <strong>...</strong></p>Kowalski Stanislaw Jan - Jazlowiecurn:md5:7ca03c997f59303f617195abd797b4382015-02-23T01:45:00+00:002015-02-23T01:45:00+00:00balderKowalski Stanislaw JanAustriaChristianityCommunismPolandSecond World WarUkraine <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Jazlowiec.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Kowalski Stanislaw Jan</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Jazlowiec The town lost in history</strong><br />
Year : *<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Jazlowiec.zip">Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Jazlowiec.zip</a><br />
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Preface. The history of an ancient, but forgotten town can be as simple as a paragraph or two, or as broad and complex as the scope of research allows. In such a case, the extent of the information would exceed the availability of written documentation. The recovery of sought-after data would therefore follow some indirect leads; including archeological artifacts, accidental evidence of past civilizations and the traditions of local folklore. To formulate a monograph of such a town's history, where written information is scarce, it is necessary to complement factual knowledge with assumptions, deductions and conclusions to produce a reasonably accurate portrait of the past. This approach out of necessity must be applied to the small pre-war Podolian town of Jazlowiec. The Post-World War Two history, and the will of victorious powers caused this once-prosperous community in the southeast of Poland to disappear from contemporary maps, its name no longer to be found anywhere in the world. As part of the territory ceded to the Soviet Union, it became a pawn of that great power, and subject to its whims. Like many long-forgotten places, this Podolian town experienced many stages of change and development throughout eastern European history. Beginning as a small Slavic settlement, it grew to become an important post on the East-West trade route and a strong military outpost in Poland's defensive system of its pre-partition days. The town's final degradation immediately followed World War Two, when the Soviet government, after incorporating the Eastern territories of Poland into their vast empire, for reason of pleasing their Ukrainian allies, named the halfdeserted, half-destroyed Jazlowiec with the meaningless name Jabloniwka, "Appletown" in Russian and Ukrainian. The obliteration of its name is reason enough to record Jazlowiec's great past and document its historic and sometime glorious existence. Prior to the partition of Poland in the 18th century, the name Jazlowiec was well known to Poles, and their leaders and kings. The extent of its recognition varied with its importance to the Polish crown. It decreased to some degree in the 18th century, but reached its nadir during the time of Austrian occupation. During this time the town transformed into a small provincial community, struggling to stay alive and hang on to its ancient name. This changed briefly in the short period between world wars (1919-1939), when Jazlowiec made slow, steady economic progress and its name again gained some recognition within the Polish nation. One of the causes of its revival was the female Order of the Immaculate Conception, which in the middle of the 19th century took residence in the former palace of King Stanislaw August Poniatowski, which became a vital factor in the improvement of the town's economy and prestige. Another contributor to the revival was the 14th Lancers regiment, which adopted for its own the name Jazlowiec after fighting a victorious battle with Ukrainian forces at the town's doorstep. In the short period of Polish independence, the name gained sufficient popularity to be well known by the majority of Poles. Even during World War Two, its name was carried to countries like France and Great Britain, where the regiment that was destroyed by German tanks at the gates of Warsaw was revived to fight again. <strong>...</strong></p>Kowalski Stanislaw Jan - Autobiographyurn:md5:327adcaa8e3c4b24fad43543d8d673a12015-02-23T01:38:00+00:002015-02-23T01:40:25+00:00balderKowalski Stanislaw JanBolchevikChristChristianityCommunismMagicPolandRussiaSatanism <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Autobiography.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Kowalski Stanislaw Jan</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Autobiography</strong><br />
Year : *<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Autobiography.zip">Kowalski_Stanislaw_Jan_-_Autobiography.zip</a><br />
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The small Polish town of Jazlowiec, where I was born at almost the same time as the big guns of World War One fired their last shells in Eastern Europe, never made it into the history books. At times its general regions were deeply engulfed in fighting through many violent centuries, but men of writing skills were never around to give a full and accurate account of every event and military conflict. Written episodes of the history of my hometown Jazlowiec were rare and hard to find. The only real source was to look at the ruins of the great castle, once the mightiest in the region -- the palace of the last king of Poland, later converted to a convent. Other sources of local history included the town hall's scant records, the medieval churches of Roman Catholic, Greek Catholic, and Armenian faiths, and the old synagogue that proudly stood on the top of the hill to dominate the homes of its faithful. There were many lesser relics of the past that made me seek history in every sight that came to my young and eager eyes, but the real truth was left for me to discover by reasoning and guesswork. <strong>...</strong></p>