Roman Catholic
St Sigismund parish
05-507 Słomczyn
85 Wiślana Str.
Konstancin deanery
Warsaw archdiocese, Poland
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Martyrology of the clergy — Poland
XX century (1914 – 1989)
personal data
surname
URBAN
forename(s)
Vladislav Michael (pl. Władysław Michał)
function
diocesan priest
creed
Latin (Roman Catholic) Church RCmore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2014.09.21]
diocese / province
Przemyśl diocesemore on
www.przemyska.pl
[access: 2013.02.15]
Lviv archdiocesemore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2013.05.19]
RC Military Ordinariate of Polandmore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2014.12.20]
honorary titles
War Order of Virtuti Militari — Silver (5th Class)more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2019.10.13]
September Campaign Crossmore on
pl.wikipedia.org
[access: 2023.11.24]
Gold „Cross of Merit”more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2019.04.16]
Commemorative Medal for War of 1918–21more on
pl.wikipedia.org
[access: 2019.10.13]
Ten Years of Independence Medalmore on
pl.wikipedia.org
[access: 2019.10.13]
Medal „For Long Service”more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2020.05.25]
date and place
of death
11.04.1940
Katyntoday: Smolensk reg., Smolensk oblast, Russia
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2020.09.24]
alt. dates and places
of death
12.04.1940, 13.04.1940
details of death
From 20.06.1919, chaplain–volunteer of the 18th Infantry Regiment of the Polish Army. When took up the function, the Regiment was retreating from Chortkiv — through Buchach, parallel to the Dniester River — under the pressure of the Ukrainian counteroffensive, the so‐called Berezyany offensive of the Ukrainian Galician Army UHA, during the Polish–Ukrainian War of 1919‐1921. The Regiment withdrew c. 100 km to the west, and on 24‐25.06.1919 near Novyi Martyniv, at the mouth of the Svizh River to the Dniester, it fought a victorious skirmish with the Ukrainians. On 28.06.1919, it resumed the offensive — part of the so‐called Chortkiv offensive — to the east and already on 04.07.1919 retook Buchach, and on 15.07.1919 Chortkiv. The Ukrainians — UAH and the entire administration — crossed the Zbruch River, the former border river between Russia and Austria–Hungary. In 07.1919 the Regiment was transferred to the front of the battles with Bolshevik Russia — through Brody to the upper Ubort River, near the town of Horodnytsa in the Zhytomyr region, c. 30 km north of Zviahel. There the Regiment remained until 19.03.1920, through the winter, interrupted only by several trips beyond the front line. Earlier, on 19.02.1920, left the Regiment and became a chaplain of the field hospital in Lutsk. On 22.04.1920 was made chaplain of the Cavalry Division. The Division was being formed, specifically in preparation for the so‐called Kiev expedition, the Polish offensive in western Ukraine, beyond the Zbruch River. Ukraine was established as an independent state as a result of the Treaty of Brest–Litovsk of 03.03.1918, signed by the Central Powers (Germany and Austria–Hungary) and Bolshevik Russia belligerents during World War I. Initially, it was occupied by German troops, but after the defeat of the Central Powers, Germans withdrew and were replaced by Russians — both the Bolsheviks and the counter–revolutionary troops fighting against them (the Armed Forces of the South of Russia, transformed into the Russian Army on 10.05.1920). In order to strengthen the Ukrainian state and improve its strategic position, Poland entered Ukraine. On 25.04.1920, the Division crossed the Sluch River and reached the Zhytomyr–Berdychiv railway line. From there it headed south, capturing the important railway junction in Kozyatyn on 27.04.1920. Then it headed east, reaching Kaniv on the Dnieper River on 10.05.1920. Other units entered Kiev. On 26.05.1920 a major Russian offensive began in the south. The Division began to retreat, fighting constant skirmishes with the Russians. Perhaps the largest of these was a cavalry battle with the spearhead of the Rus. Первая Конная армия (Eng..
1st Cavalry Army) near Novofastiv.
On 19.06.1920 The Division retreated and reached back the line of the Sluch River, where it fought a victorious skirmish the next day at Kropyvna near Zviahel.
Fell ill then and was transported first to Lutsk (Polish troops left the city on 02‐03.08.1920), then to Lida (according to sources: why there is unknown, as Lida fell under the pressure of the Russian offensive earlier, on 17‐18.07.1920), to end up in Poznań. Was supposedly treated in „epidemic” hospitals, although apparently there the only one was in Lutsk (in the 1920s called the Public City Hospital for Infectious Diseases). In such a hospital in Poznań, stayed until 14.09.1920, when returned — after the Polish triumph in the Battle of Warsaw on c. 15.08.1920 (known as the „Miracle on the Vistula”) — to the Polish Army, as a chaplain of the military hospital in Poznań.
During the Second Polish Republic, a military chaplain in active service.
After the German and Russian invasion of Poland in 09.1939 and the beginning of World War II, the head of the chaplaincy of the Borderlands (Kresowa) Cavalry Brigade, a part of the „Łódź” Army — the Brigade took part in the battle with the Germans on the Warta River, later dispersed and retreated behind the Vistula line, its units took part among others in the battles of Tomaszów Lubelski on 18‐27.09.1939 and Sudova Vyshnya on 26.09.1939.
Arrested by the Russians — as a result of hostilities, found himself in the areas that were to be occupied by the Russians on the basis of the Ribbentrop–Molotov Pact.
Held in the NKVD PFL Shepetivka transit camp and then in the NKVD KLW Starobilsk concentration camp.
According to some source before Christmas 1939, excluded from the group of prisoners of war in the camp. Further fate unclear. Till 02.03.1940 however prob. was held still in KLW Starobilsk, in a special camp cell or outside the camp, in one of the places subordinated to the camp command.
On 02.03.1940 transported to Moscow, to the NKVD headquarters and Butyrki prison.
Prob. on 17.03.1940 or 27.03.1940, moved to the KLW Kozelsk concentration camp in Kozelsk. Held prob. in the camp's solitary confinement, in one of the specially protected towers of the monastery in which the Russians organized KLW Kozelsk camp.
From KLW Kozelsk — his name is on the NKVD deportation list No. 022/3, item 63 (case No. 4912), prepared in Moscow NKVD HQ on 09.04.1940, with an order to be placed at the disposal of the head of the NKVD Directorate in Smolensk — deported in 04.1940 (the date is unknown, but judging by the date of preparation of the deportation list, deportation took place — as in other known cases — shortly thereafter) to the execution site in the Katyn forest or in the basement of the internal prison of the Regional Directorate of the NKVD in Smolensk, and murdered there.
By Polish Minister of Defence’s decision No. 439/MON of 05.10.2007 posthumously promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel.
prisoner camp's numbers
4912 (KLW KozelskClick to display the description)
cause of death
mass murder
perpetrators
Russians
sites and events
Katyn (NKWD murders 1940)Click to display the description, «Katyn genocide 1940»Click to display the description, KLW KozelskClick to display the description, Moscow (Butyrki)Click to display the description, KLW StarobilskClick to display the description, Ribbentrop‐MolotovClick to display the description, Pius XI's encyclicalsClick to display the description, Polish‐Russian war of 1919‐1921Click to display the description
date and place
of birth
09.02.1891
Pacławtoday: Fredropol gm., Przemyśl pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.10.09]
presbyter (holy orders)
ordination
30.04.1916 (Przemyśl cathedralmore on
pl.wikipedia.org
[access: 2014.11.14])
positions held
25.06.1936 – 1939
RC senior military chaplain — KremenetsBilokrynytsya district
today: Bilokrynytsya village, Kremenets urban hrom., Kremenets rai., Ternopil obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2020.10.18] ⋄ garrison, Corps District OK No. II Lublin, Polish Armed Forces ⋄ RC military parish ⋄ St Stanislav Kostka the Confessor RC garrison church — promotion with seniority from 19.03.1937 among Roman Catholic military chaplains, in the rank of major; also: administrator of the military parish; chaplain of the 12th Podolye Uhlan Regiment
01.03.1925 – 24.06.1936
RC military chaplain — Zolochivtoday: Zolochiv urban hrom., Zolochiv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.12.19] ⋄ garrison, Corps District OK No. VI Lviv, Polish Armed Forces ⋄ St Michael the Archangel RC military parish — also: administrator of the military parish
20.03.1921 – 28.02.1925
RC military chaplain — Ostrohtoday: Ostroh urban hrom., Rivne rai., Rivne obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.09.17] ⋄ garrison, Corps District OK No. II Lublin, Polish Armed Forces — commissioned; by decree of the Chief of State of ‐03.05.1922, confirmed with seniority from 01.06.1919 and 34th place on the list of Roman Catholic military chaplains, in the rank of captain; by decree No. L. 3448 of the Commander‐in‐Chief of 16.12.1921, verified with seniority from 01.04.1920 and 32nd place on the list of Roman Catholic military chaplains, in the rank of captain; also: chaplain of the 19th Volhynian Lancers Regiment
1920 – 19.03.1921
RC military chaplain — Poznańtoday: Poznań city pov., Greater Poland voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.07.18] ⋄ District Hospital, General District OG „Poznań”, Polish Armed Forces — initially prob. as a patient; earlier been treated in „epidemic” hospitals in Lutsk, Lida and Poznań
22.04.1920 – 24.06.1920
RC military chaplain — Cavalry Division, Polish Armed Forces
19.02.1920 – 22.04.1920
RC military chaplain — Lutsktoday: Lutsk city rai., Volyn obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.09.17] ⋄ military hospital, Polish Armed Forces
20.06.1919 – 19.02.1920
RC military chaplain — 18th Infantry Regiment, Polish Armed Forces
1918 – 1919
vicar — Łańcuttoday: Łańcut urban gm., Łańcut pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.10.09] ⋄ St Stanislav the Bishop and Martyr RC parish ⋄ Łańcuttoday: Łańcut urban gm., Łańcut pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.10.09] RC deanery
1916 – 1918
vicar — Krasnetoday: Krasne gm., Rzeszów pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.10.09] ⋄ Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary RC parish ⋄ Rzeszówtoday: Rzeszów city pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.06.07] RC deanery
1911 – 1916
student — Przemyśltoday: Przemyśl city pov., Subcarpathia voiv., Poland
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.04.01] ⋄ philosophy and theology, Theological Seminary
others related
in death
ALEKSANDROWICZClick to display biography Anthony, CHOMAClick to display biography Edward Anthony, CICHOWICZClick to display biography Nicholas, DRABCZYŃSKIClick to display biography Ignatius Marian (Cl. Dominic), FEDOROŃKOClick to display biography Simon, ILKÓWClick to display biography Nicholas, KONTEKClick to display biography Stanislav, POHORECKIClick to display biography John, POTOCKIClick to display biography John Josaphat, SUCHCICKIClick to display biography Casimir, ZIÓŁKOWSKIClick to display biography John Leo, SZEPTYCKIClick to display biography Andrew Mary Stanislav
sites and events
descriptions
Katyn (NKWD murders 1940): From 03.04.1940 till 12.05.1940 Russians in a planned genocide executed in Katyń c. 4,400 Polish POWs kept in Kozielsk concentration camp. The victims were brought by train through Smolensk to the Gnezdowo station in convoys, in groups of 50 to 344 people. From the station to the crime scene, in the so‐called the Kozye Hory area —NKVD recreation center — the victims were transported in a prison bus (known as „chornyi voron”, i.e. black crow). At the site the younger and stronger had military coats put over their heads and their hands were tied behind their backs with a Russian‐made hemp rope, after which they were all killed at short distance with a shot from a 7.65 mm Walther pistol, usually one to the back of the head. Some victims were pierced with a square Russian bayonet. A number of the victims were prob. murdered in the basements of the so‐called internal prison of the NKVD Regional Directorate in Smolensk, where the victims were placed in a sewer manhole, their heads were placed on the bank, and then they were shot in the back of the head. The murdered were buried in eight pits ‐ mass graves. The victims included, among others: Rear Admiral Xavier Czernicki, Generals Bronislav Bohatyrewicz, Henry Minkiewicz and Mechislav Smorawiński, the Chief Orthodox Chaplain of the Polish Army, Lieutenant Colonel Simon Fedorońko, the Chief Rabbi of the Polish Army, Major Baruch Steinberg, 9 Roman Catholic priests, one Greek Catholic and one Evangelical priest, as well as one woman — a pilot Second Lieutenant Janine Lewandowska. The murders were part of an organized Russian genocidal operation against Polish prisoners of war, bearing all the hallmarks of genocide, known as the «Katyn genocide». (more on: pl.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2012.11.23], en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.09.21])
«Katyn genocide 1940»: On 05.03.1940, the Russian Commie‐Nazi authorities — the Politburo of the Russian Communist Party — made a formal decision to exterminate tens of thousands of Polish intelligentsia and military personnel held in Russian camps as a consequence of the German‐Russian Ribbentrop‐Molotov Agreement, the invasion of Poland and the annexation of half of Poland in 09.1939, and the beginning of World War II. The implementing act was order No. 00350 of the head of the NKVD, Mr Lavrentyi Beria, on the „discharge of NKVD prisons” in Ukraine and Belarus. On 03.03.1959, Alexander Shelepin, head of the Russian KGB, described it in a handwritten note: „Since 1940, the Committee for State Security under the Council of Ministers of Russia, has been keeping records and other materials relating to the prisoners of war and interned officers, gendarmes, policemen, etc., people from former bourgeois Poland shot that year. In total, based on the decision of the special troika of the NKVD of the USSR, 21,857 people were shot, of whom: 4,421 people in the Katyn Forest (Smolensk Oblast), 3,820 people from the Starobelsk camp near Kharkov, 6,311 people from the Ostashkov camp (Kalinin Oblast), and 7,305 people in other camps and prisons in Western Ukraine and Western Belarus. The entire operation of liquidation of the above–mentioned was carried out on the basis of the Resolution of the Central Committee of the CPSU of 05.03.1940”. The operation — the murders were committed, among others, in Katyn, Kharkov, Tver, Bykovnia and Kuropaty — was coordinated centrally from the NKVD headquarters in Moscow. This is evidenced by the so‐called deportation lists of subsequent groups of Polish prisoners (usually about 100 people) from NKVD camps sent to places of execution, prepared and distributed a few days before the executions from Moscow. It is also evidenced by the earlier deportations of Polish priests from the Kozelsk, Ostashkov and Starobilsk NKVD camps to NKVD prison in Moscow, or their isolation, just before Christmas on 25.12.1939, prob. in order to deprive Polish prisoners of spiritual care at that time — clearly actions controlled from the NKVD HQ in Moscow. There are indications — i.e. four so‐called „NKVD‐Gestapo Methodical Conferences” of 1939‐1940: in Brest on Bug, Przemyśl, Zakopane and Cracow — of close collaboration between Germans and Russians in realization of plans of total extermination of Polish nation, its elites in particular — decision that prob. was confirmed during meeting of socialist leaders of Germany: Mr Heinrich Himmler, and Russia: Mr Lavrentyi Beria, in another German leader, Mr Hermann Göring, hunting lodge in Rominty in Romincka Forest in East Prussia. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.12.15])
KLW Kozelsk: Russian Rus. Концентрационный Лагерь для Военнопленных (Eng. POW Concentration Camp) KLW, run by genocidal Russian NKVD organization, for Poles arrested after the invasion in 1939, operating in 1939‐1940 in Kozelsk — on the premises of the 18th century Orthodox Stauropygial Introduction of the Mother of God into the Temple Optyn Monastery, shut down and robbed by the Russian Bolsheviks in 1923. In 04‐05.1940, c. 4,594 people were detained there, who were then — as part of the implementation of the decision of the Russian authorities to exterminate dozens thousands of Polish intelligentsia and military personnel — murdered in Katyn. The prisoners included one rear admiral of the Polish Navy, four generals, c. 100 colonels and lieutenant colonels, c. 300 majors and c. 1,000 captains and captains of the Polish Army. Around half of them were reserve officers, including: 21 professors, associate professors and lecturers at universities, over 300 doctors, several hundred lawyers, several hundred engineers, several hundred teachers and many writers, journalists and publicists. There was also one woman, 2nd Leutenant pilot Janine Lewandowska. (more on: pl.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2012.11.23])
Moscow (Butyrki): Harsh transit and interrogation prison in Moscow — for political prisoners — where Russians held and murdered thousands of Poles. Founded prob. in XVII century. In XIX century many Polish insurgents (Polish uprisings of 1831 and 1863) were held there. During Communist regime a place of internment for political prisoners prior to a transfer to Russian slave labour complex Gulag. During the Great Purge c. 20,000 inmates were held there at any time (c. 170 in every cell). Thousands were murdered. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2020.05.01])
KLW Starobilsk: Russian Rus. Концентрационный Лагерь для Военнопленных (Eng. POW Concentration Camp) KLW, run by genocidal Russian NKVD organization, for Poles arrested after the invasion in 1939, operating in 1939‐1940 in Starobilsk — on the premises of the „All Afflicted Joy” Icon of Our Lady Orthodox monastery, looted and closed by Russian Bolsheviks in 1923. In 04.1940 c. 3,800 were kept there (in 11.1939 — 11,262) — per captive there was c. 1.25 m2 of bunk space on which they had to sleep, eat and keep their belongings, initially the receiving only one meal a day. Subsequently— as the fulfillment of Russian government decision to exterminate Polish intelligentsia and prisoners of war camps (Polish holocaust) — were executed in Kharkiv. Among the victims were 8 generals, 55 colonels, 127 lieutenant colonels, 230 majors, c. 1,000 captains, and c. 2,450 lieutenants and second lieutenants of the Polish Army. Almost half were reserve officers: over 20 professors of universities, all without exception scientific staff of the Anti‐Gas Institute of the Polish Army and almost the entire staff of the Institute of Armament of the Polish Army, c. 400 doctors, several hundred lawyers, several hundred engineers, c. 100 teachers, c. 600 pilots , many social activists, several dozen writers and journalists. Used as a concentration camp for Poles later as well. (more on: pl.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2012.11.23])
Ribbentrop‐Molotov: Genocidal Russian‐German alliance pact between Russian leader Joseph Stalin and German leader Adolf Hitler signed on 23.08.1939 in Moscow by respective foreign ministers, Mr. Vyacheslav Molotov for Russia and Joachim von Ribbentrop for Germany. The pact sanctioned and was the direct cause of joint Russian and German invasion of Poland and the outbreak of the World War II in 09.1939. In a political sense, the pact was an attempt to restore the status quo ante before 1914, with one exception, namely the „commercial” exchange of the so‐called „Kingdom of Poland”, which in 1914 was part of the Russian Empire, fore Eastern Galicia (today's western Ukraine), in 1914 belonging to the Austro‐Hungarian Empire. Galicia, including Lviv, was to be taken over by the Russians, the „Kingdom of Poland” — under the name of the General Governorate — Germany. The resultant „war was one of the greatest calamities and dramas of humanity in history, for two atheistic and anti‐Christian ideologies — national and international socialism — rejected God and His fifth Decalogue commandment: Thou shall not kill!” (Abp Stanislav Gądecki, 01.09.2019). The decisions taken — backed up by the betrayal of the formal allies of Poland, France and Germany, which on 12.09.1939, at a joint conference in Abbeville, decided not to provide aid to attacked Poland and not to take military action against Germany (a clear breach of treaty obligations with Poland) — were on 28.09.1939 slightly altered and made more precise when a treaty on „German‐Russian boundaries and friendship” was agreed by the same murderous signatories. One of its findings was establishment of spheres of influence in Central and Eastern Europe and in consequence IV partition of Poland. In one of its secret annexes agreed, that: „the Signatories will not tolerate on its respective territories any Polish propaganda that affects the territory of the other Side. On their respective territories they will suppress all such propaganda and inform each other of the measures taken to accomplish it”. The agreements resulted in a series of meeting between two genocidal organization representing both sides — German Gestapo and Russian NKVD when coordination of efforts to exterminate Polish intelligentsia and Polish leading classes (in Germany called «Intelligenzaktion», in Russia took the form of Katyń massacres) where discussed. Resulted in deaths of hundreds of thousands of Polish intelligentsia, including thousands of priests presented here, and tens of millions of ordinary people,. The results of this Russian‐German pact lasted till 1989 and are still in evidence even today. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2015.09.30])
Pius XI's encyclicals: Facing the creation of two totalitarian systems in Europe, which seemed to compete with each other, though there were more similarities than contradictions between them, Pope Pius XI issued in 03.1937 (within 5 days) two encyclicals. In the „Mit brennender Sorge” (Eng. „With Burning Concern”) published on 14.03.1938, condemned the national socialism prevailing in Germany. The Pope wrote: „Whoever, following the old Germanic‐pre‐Christian beliefs, puts various impersonal fate in the place of a personal God, denies the wisdom of God and Providence […], whoever exalts earthly values: race or nation, or state, or state system, representatives of state power or other fundamental values of human society, […] and makes them the highest standard of all values, including religious ones, and idolizes them, this one […] is far from true faith in God and from a worldview corresponding to such faith”. On 19.03.1937, published „Divini Redemptoris” (Eng. „Divine Redeemer”), in which criticized Russian communism, dialectical materialism and the class struggle theory. The Pope wrote: „Communism deprives man of freedom, and therefore the spiritual basis of all life norms. It deprives the human person of all his dignity and any moral support with which he could resist the onslaught of blind passions […] This is the new gospel that Bolshevik and godless communism preaches as a message of salvation and redemption of humanity”… Pius XI demanded that the established human law be subjected to the natural law of God , recommended the implementation of the ideal of a Christian state and society, and called on Catholics to resist. Two years later, National Socialist Germany and Communist Russia came together and started World War II. (more on: www.vatican.vaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.05.28], www.vatican.vaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.05.28])
Polish‐Russian war of 1919‐1921: War for independence of Poland and its borders. Poland regained independence in 1918 but had to fight for its borders with former imperial powers, in particular Russia. Russia planned to incite Bolshevik‐like revolutions in the Western Europe and thus invaded Poland. Russian invaders were defeated in 08.1920 in a battle called Warsaw battle („Vistula river miracle”, one of the 10 most important battles in history, according to some historians). Thanks to this victory Poland recaptured part of the lands lost during partitions of Poland in XVIII century, and Europe was saved from the genocidal Communism. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.12.20])
sources
personal:
www.ordynariat.wp.mil.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2012.11.23], cracovia-leopolis.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2013.01.26], episkopat.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2019.10.13], kapelanikatynscy.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.12.15], biographies.library.nd.eduClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.11.14], ordynariat.wp.mil.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2024.12.13]
bibliographical:
„Register of Latin rite Lviv metropolis clergy’s losses in 1939‐45”, Józef Krętosz, Maria Pawłowiczowa, editors, Opole, 2005
„Biographical lexicon of Lviv Roman Catholic Metropoly clergy victims of the II World War 1939‐1945”, Mary Pawłowiczowa (ed.), Fr Joseph Krętosz (ed.), Holy Cross Publishing, Opole, 2007
„Schematismus Venerabilis Cleri Dioecesis PremisliensisClick to display source page”, Przemyśl diocesa Curia, from 1866 to 1938
original images:
ordynariat.wp.mil.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2024.12.13], www.russiacristiana.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.12.20], episkopat.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2019.10.13], www.powiatlancut.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.12.15], ipn.gov.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.12.15], pamietajskadjestes.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.12.10], radio.lublin.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2022.05.23], ofm.krakow.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2022.05.23], www.katedrapolowa.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.01.16], ipn.gov.plClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2019.02.02]
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MARTYROLOGY: URBAN Vladislav Michael
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