CROWN OF THE POLISH KINGDOM

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::''For alternative meaning of the term see: Polish Crown Jewels''
'Crown of the Polish Kingdom', or just colloquially the 'Crown' (Polish:''Korona'') is the archaic name, used in the times of Kingdom of Poland until the end of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, for the territories under Polish direct administration, distinguishing them from federated territories of Grand Duchy of Lithuania or vassal territories like Duchy of Prussia or Duchy of Courland, which had varying degrees of .
Before the 1569 Union of Lublin, territories of the Crown can be understood as the territories of Poland proper, inhabited by Poles and under Polish administration. However after the Union of Lublin, most of the present-day Ukraine (which had a negligible Polish population) and was until then controlled by Lithuania, passed under Polish administration, becoming the territory of the Polish Crown as well.
One of the contemporary terms for Poles was the term ''koroniarz'' (plural: ''koroniarze''), derived from the term ''Korona''.
Depending on context, this term can also refer to The Crown, the term used to separate the government authority and property of the government from the personal influence and private assets held by the current monarch of the Commonwealth. In the Commonwealth, that often meant to distinguish between people loyal to the elected king (royalists) and people loyal to powerful magnates.

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Voivodeships of the Crown

Voivodeships of the Crown


Crown was divided into two provinces: Lesser Poland (Polish: Małopolska) and Greater Poland (Polish: Wielkopolska) which were further divided into administrative units known as voivodeships.
=== Voivodeships of Greater Poland ===
Map showing voivodeships of the Commonwealth of the Two Nations around 1620s. Territories of the Crown are marked in yellow.


Poznań Voivodeship (województwo poznańskie, Poznań)

Kalisz Voivodeship (województwo kaliskie, Kalisz)

Gniezno Voivodeship (województwo gnieźnieńskie, Gniezno) from 1768

Sieradz Voivodeship (województwo sieradzkie, Sieradz)

Łęczyca Voivodeship (województwo łęczyckie, Łęczyca)

Brześć Kujawski Voivodeship (województwo brzesko-kujawskie, Brześć Kujawski)

Inowrocław Voivodeship (województwo inowrocławskie, Inowrocław)

Chełmno Voivodeship (województwo chełmińskie, Chełmno)

Malbork Voivodeship (województwo malborskie, Malbork)

Pomeranian Voivodeship (województwo pomorskie, Gdańsk)

Duchy of Warmia (Księstwo Warmińskie, Lidzbark Warmiński)

Duchy of Prussia (Księstwo Pruskie, Lidzbark Warmiński)

Płock Voivodeship (województwo płockie, Płock)

Rawa Voivodeship (województwo rawskie, Rawa Mazowiecka)

Mazovian Voivodeship (województwo mazowieckie, Warsaw)

Voivodeships of Lesser Poland



Kraków Voivodeship (województwo krakowskie, Kraków)

Sandomierz Voivodeship (województwo sandomierskie, Sandomierz)

Lublin Voivodeship (województwo lubelskie, Lublin)

Podlasie Voivodeship (województwo podlaskie, Drohiczyn)

Ruthenian Voivodeship (województwo ruskie, Lwów)

Bełz Voivodeship (województwo bełzkie, Bełz)

Wolhynian Voivodeship (województwo wołyńskie, Łuck)

Podole Voivodeship (województwo podolskie, Kamieniec Podolski)

Bracław Voivodeship (województwo bracławskie, Bracław)

Kijów Voivodeship (województwo kijowskie, Kijów)

Czernichów Voivodeship (województwo czernichowskie, Czernichów)
See administrative division of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth for more details on the historical administrative division of Poland.

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