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  1. Lucjan Żeligowski (Nyasvizh, 17 de outubro de 1865 – Londres, 9 de julho de 1947), foi um general polaco, político, comandante militar e veterano da Primeira Guerra Mundial, da Guerra polaco-soviética e Segunda Guerra Mundial.

  2. Lucjan Żeligowski (Polish pronunciation: [ˈlut͡sjan ʐɛliˈɡɔfskʲi]; 17 October 1865 – 9 July 1947) was a Polish-Lithuanian general, politician, military commander and veteran of World War I, the Polish-Soviet War and World War II.

  3. Lucjan Żeligowski (ur. 17 października 1865 w Oszmianie, zm. 9 lipca 1947 w Londynie) – pułkownik piechoty Armii Imperium Rosyjskiego oraz generał broni Wojska Polskiego, znany z tzw. buntu Żeligowskiego, podczas którego zajął Wilno i jego okolice, proklamując powstanie tzw. Litwy Środkowej, kawaler Orderu Virtuti Militari.

  4. Lucjan Żeligowski , foi um general polaco, político, comandante militar e veterano da Primeira Guerra Mundial, da Guerra polaco-soviética e Segunda Guerra Mundial. Ele é mais lembrado por seu papel no Motim de Żeligowski e como chefe de uma República de curta duração a Lituânia Central.

  5. walkaogranice.ipn.gov.pl › en › zeligowski’s-mutinyIstytut Pamięci Narodowej

    In early October 1920 Piłsudski prepared a plan to return the Vilna region to Poland. In line with that plan the detachments, composed mostly of Poles coming from the disputed territories, led by General Lucjan Żeligowski, conducted a ‘mutiny’ and on 9 October 1920 took Vilna from the Lithuanians.

  6. 11 de nov. de 2015 · On 20th September 1920, i.e. on the first day of the Operation Neman General Lucjan Żeligowski was ordered to appear in person in the Commander-in-Chief’s headquarters. Piłsudski appointed him as leader of a military action which, if successful, would lead to conquering Vilnius.

  7. Lucian Żeligowski. Żeligowski was a Lithuanian general in the Polish army who commanded the 1st Lithuanian-Belarusian Infantry Division – made up of former prisoners-of-war, volunteers, and partisans from the territory of modern Belarus and Lithuania. He was certainly no fan of the Suwałki Agreement which he described as: