Border Poland-Belarus, Grudki, Bialowieza, Podlaskie, Poland, Europe
Polish-Belarusian border is the state border between
Poland and the
Republic of Belarus. It has a total length of 398.6 km (247.7 mi), 418 km (260 mi) or 416 km (258 mi) It starts from the triple junction of the borders with
Lithuania in the north and stretches to the triple junction borders with
Ukraine to the south. Is also part of the EU border with
Belarus. After
September 1939 the
BSSR were included in
Western Belarus. Have established five new areas:
Baranavichy, Belostokskaya,
Brest,
Pinsk and
Vialejka. In accordance with the treaty signed August 16,
1945 between the
USSR and Poland on the state border of Poland passed 17 districts
Bialystok Region BSSR with 3 Bialystok and Brest region, where a significant amount of
Poles lived. In 1946, during the refinement of the state border of the USSR and Poland from the
Grodno Region in favor of the
NDP were transferred to the village Klimovka, Minkovtsy,
Nomiki,
Taki, crush, Šimák Members of Sapotskinsky area - the village and Todorkavtsy Hvorostyan. Thereafter, and until now the border between Poland and Belarus has not changed.
River borders (from north to south) are
Black Gancia, Volkushanka,
Svislach Narew and
Western Bug.
The Border Agreement between Poland and the USSR of 16
August 1945 established the borders between the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the
Republic of Poland. It was signed by the
Provisional Government of National Unity (
Tymczasowy Rząd Jedności Narodowej) formed by the
Polish communists. According to the treaty, Poland officially accepted the ceding its pre-war Eastern territory to the USSR (Kresy) which was decided earlier in
Yalta already. Some of the territory along the
Curzon line, established by
Stalin during the course of the war, was returned to
Poland. The treaty also recognised the division of the former
German East Prussia and ultimately approved the finalised delimitation line between the
Soviet Union and Poland: from the
Baltic sea, to the border tripoint with
Czechoslovakia in the
Carpathians.
The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of
August 1939 provided for the partition of the
Second Polish Republic between the USSR and
Nazi Germany.
Following the corresponding invasions, a new border was drawn up, though based on the
Curzon Line, deviated west of it in several regions. Most notably, was the
Belastok Voblast, that was added to the
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, although most of the region was populated by Poles. After
Germany's invasion of the USSR, the territory in question was also re-partitioned by the Nazis. Ukraine and Belarus were administered by the occupation
Ostland and
Reichskommissariat Ukraine Reichskommissariats.
Galician territory east of the
1939 border and the Belastok Voblast plus adjacent territory to the east of this were transformed respectively into the
Distrikt Galizien and
Bezirk Bialystok, and subjugated directly to the
Reich. Following the Soviet Union's liberation of Ukraine and Belarus, in 1943/
1944 the
Tehran and Yalta discussed upon the future of the Polish-Soviet borders, and the
Allied leaders recognised the
Soviet right to the territory east of the 1939 border. However, after the liberation of
Western Ukraine and Belarus in summer of 1944, a
Polish committee formed in the town of
Sapotskin sent a letter to
Moscow asking that they remain part of Poland. Stalin agreed, and on 29th of September, administration of 17 (of the 23) districts of Belastok Voblast (including the city of
Białystok) and an additional three (
Siemiatycze,
Hajnówka and
Kleszczele) of the
Brest Voblast was passed to the
Polish Committee of National Liberation from the BSSR. In
October 1944 these were joined by a further transfer of
Lubaczów, Horyniec,
Laszki,
Uhnów and
Sieniawa raions of the
Lviv Oblast from the
Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. In
March 1945, an additional batch of land, the Bieszczady,
Lesko, and most of
Przemyśl raions(including Przemyśl city) were transferred to Poland from the
Drohobych Oblast of Ukraine to the now
Provisional Government of the Republic of Poland.
Soon afterwards
World War II finished, and as the Provisional Government continued to transfer administration from military to civil bodies, it also finalised its new borders with its neighbours, and in particular, the Soviet Union. On
16th of August 1945, the border agreement was officially signed by
Edward Osóbka-Morawski, on behalf of the Provisional Government of National Unity and
Vyacheslav Molotov, the Soviet
Minister of
Foreign affairs.
The exchange of ratified documents occurred on
5 February 1946 in
Warsaw, and from that date the agreement was in force.