Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q20035482> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 39 of
39
with 100 triples per page.
- Q20035482 subject Q15309206.
- Q20035482 subject Q8519016.
- Q20035482 subject Q8579653.
- Q20035482 subject Q8757774.
- Q20035482 abstract "Workers’ Councils in Poland or Councils of Workers' Delegates in Poland (Polish: Rady Delegatów Robotniczych w Polsce) were representative organs of workers and peasants, set up towards the end of the First World War on Polish territories.The main organisations behind the initiative were the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania and the Polish Socialist Party – Left, which soon merged to form the Communist Workers Party of Poland. Other workers' organisations and parties competed for influence within the councils as well, including the Polish Socialist Party, the Bund in Poland and the National Workers' Union.Due to significant disputes over the political and economic future of the newly independent Poland, the councils failed to create an executive committee. Nevertheless, over 100 workers' councils operated in Poland in years 1918-1919, assembling around 500 000 workers and peasants. The most numerous and radical councils were located in Kraśnik, Lublin, Płock, Warsaw, Zamość and Zagłębie Dąbrowskie; some set up their own military self-defence units, the Red Guards. A short-lived Republic of Tarnobrzeg was proclaimed on 6 November 1918.The councils were dismantled around July 1919, following the withdrawal of the Polish Socialist Party (which in many cases had a council majority), and suppression by the Polish government, which saw the councils as a barrier to the formation of a Polish state.Apart from the 1918-1919 period, workers' councils in Poland had also been set up in Congress Poland during the Revolution of 1905 and in the Polish People's Republic during the Polish October of 1956.".
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q104725.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q1117368.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q11789732.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q140480.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q1418376.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q145972.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q15309206.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q1547540.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q207272.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q210431.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q211201.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q211274.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q21765377.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q221457.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q2249009.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q2673073.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q270.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q303836.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q361.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q37333.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q5531969.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q605468.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q606361.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q627093.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q7318712.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519016.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q8579653.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q8729.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q8757774.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q9292715.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q967759.
- Q20035482 wikiPageWikiLink Q983723.
- Q20035482 comment "Workers’ Councils in Poland or Councils of Workers' Delegates in Poland (Polish: Rady Delegatów Robotniczych w Polsce) were representative organs of workers and peasants, set up towards the end of the First World War on Polish territories.The main organisations behind the initiative were the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania and the Polish Socialist Party – Left, which soon merged to form the Communist Workers Party of Poland.".
- Q20035482 label "Workers’ Councils in Poland".