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- Q2658487 subject Q7778222.
- Q2658487 subject Q7778228.
- Q2658487 subject Q8129360.
- Q2658487 subject Q8255527.
- Q2658487 subject Q8412709.
- Q2658487 subject Q8518595.
- Q2658487 subject Q8611067.
- Q2658487 abstract "The Lviv (Lwów) pogrom (also called the Lemberg pogrom) of the Jewish population of Lviv took place on November 21–23, 1918 during the Polish-Ukrainian War of independence in the last days of World War One. The Ukrainian National Council proclaimed the formation of the Ukrainian Republic on November 1, 1918 with Lviv as its capital. The Polish Regency Council declared Poland's independence a week later and formed the government on 14 November 1918. The battle for Lviv lasted until 21 November 1918. In the course of the following three days of unrest in the city, an estimated 52–150 Jewish residents were killed and hundreds injured, with widespread looting carried out by Polish soldiers, and those only pretending to be so, as well as lawless civilians, and local criminals. According to Norman Davies, two hundred and seventy more Ukrainians were killed during this time as well; historian Christoph Mick stated that not a single Ukrainian was murdered. The Poles did not stop the pogrom until two days after it began. Over a thousand people, including some soldiers, were arrested by Polish authorities during and after the pogrom. Some early accounts of the pogrom, listing multiple thousands of casualties, were likely exaggerated.The events, widely publicized in the international press, led to US President Woodrow Wilson appointing a commission, led by Henry Morgenthau, Sr., tasked with investigating excesses against the Jewish population in newly established sovereign Poland after 123 years of partitions by neighbouring empires. The report was published on October 3, 1919. Historian William Hagen noted, that in the chaos of war, the Polish army allowed for the recruitment of common criminals released from local prisons along with deserters from the Habsburg, German and Russian armies, which turned disastrous.".
- Q2658487 thumbnail The_Jewish_quarter_after_the_November_1918_Pogrom_in_Lviv.jpg?width=300.
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- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q7325.
- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q7778222.
- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q7778228.
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- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q8129360.
- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q8255527.
- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q8412709.
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- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q8518595.
- Q2658487 wikiPageWikiLink Q8611067.
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- Q2658487 comment "The Lviv (Lwów) pogrom (also called the Lemberg pogrom) of the Jewish population of Lviv took place on November 21–23, 1918 during the Polish-Ukrainian War of independence in the last days of World War One. The Ukrainian National Council proclaimed the formation of the Ukrainian Republic on November 1, 1918 with Lviv as its capital. The Polish Regency Council declared Poland's independence a week later and formed the government on 14 November 1918.".
- Q2658487 label "Lwów pogrom (1918)".
- Q2658487 depiction The_Jewish_quarter_after_the_November_1918_Pogrom_in_Lviv.jpg.