Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
Unveiling of a plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi in 2021., photo 2021, all rights reserved
Źródło: https://www.gov.pl/
Fotografia przedstawiająca Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi
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ID: POL-001731-P

Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi

ID: POL-001731-P

Commemorative plaque on the building of the former Polish Consulate in Chernivtsi

On June 16, 2021, a commemorative plaque was unveiled on the building at ul. Ormiańska 14 in Chernivtsi, which was the seat of the Consulate of the Republic of Poland in 1939-1940.

The Polish Consulate in Czernowitz was initially located in the private apartment of Dr. Stanisław Kwiatkowski. In the 1920s, the facility rented offices in a tenement house at today's ul. Lermontowa 6. Later, the Consulate moved to a villa away from the city center, located near the residence of the Metropolitan of Bukovina (today ul. Josefa Hlávka 12). It is worth mentioning that in 1933, a young official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Jan Kozielewski (Jan Karski), had his first foreign internship. Both buildings have survived to this day.

Another change of headquarters, to a much more representative one, took place just three months before the outbreak of the war. In June 1939, the Consulate took over an impressive palace at ul. Ormiańska 14, just a few steps away from ul. Pańska (the most representative street of the city, currently ul. Olhi Kobylanska) and the Armenian-Catholic church. It operated here for a year, until Bukovina was occupied by the Soviets in June 1940.

More about the history of the consulate in Chernivtsi - https://baza.polonika.pl/pl/obiekty/102115

The ceremony of unveiling the plaque was attended by the Consul General of the Republic of Poland in Vinnytsia Damian Ciarciński, deputy director of the National Institute of Polish Cultural Heritage Abroad POLONIKA Agnieszka Tymińska and secretary of the Chernivtsi City Council Maryna Kyryliuk, deputy chairman of the Chernivtsi Regional Administration Iryna Isopenko, deputy chairman of the Chernivtsi Regional Council Mykhailo Pavliuk, honorary consul Latvia in Chernivtsi Illia Cho, coordinator of the OSCE observer mission in Ukraine Dept. in Chernivtsi Oriano Micaletti, rector of Chernivtsi National University named after Yuri Fedkovych prof. Roman Petryszyn, president of the District Polish Culture Society. Adam Mickiewicz in Czerniowce Władysław Strutyński, clergy, representatives of national minorities living in Bukowina and local Poles.

Time of origin:
2021
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