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image by Chrystian Kretowicz, 11 Feb 2009
adopted Jan 2008; design: Henryk Seroka
"The area of Bilgoraj District was a borderland over which there were
wars between Poland and Kiev Russia and Halicz-Wlodzimierz Russia.
In 1366 King Kazimierz the Great attached the land permanently. The
oldest places in the district are: Turobin, Goraj, Obsza and Zamch. In
the Middle Ages the terrain of the present district was invaded by Tatars,
in XVIIth c. by Bohdan Chmielnicki's Cossack-Tatar army, Karol X Gustaw's
Swedish army and Jerzy II Rakoczy's army. At the beginning of XVIII c.
the march pasts of the armies during the Northern War caused a lot of damage.
During the partitions of Poland the area of Bilgoraj District first was
in Austrian partition, next in Ksiestwo Warszawskie (the Duchy of Warsaw)
and since 1815 in Congress Kingdom being part of Russian partition.
During the January Uprising in the terrain of the district there were
a number of battles and skirmishes: of Kobylanka, Józefów, Tarnogród, Jedlinki,
Ciosmy, Panasówka.
During World War I the district became located in the terrain of an
operation called the battle of Galicya. There were some bigger battles
in the vicinity of Frampol. In 1939 during the September Campaign Gen.
Antoni Szylling's "Cracow" Army, Gen. Tadeusz Piskor's "Lublin"
Army, Gen. Stefan Dab Biernacki's Northern Front fought here. Since the
second half of September, 1939 Biłgoraj District was under Soviet occupation.
Bilgoraj ground suffered a great loss during World War II. The inhabitants
were taken away to extermination camps, to forced labor in Germany, to
Germanization centers. A lot of places were pacified, e.g. Panasówka, Szarajówka.
In the district a strong resistance of Armia Krajowa's and Bataliony
Chlopskie's guerrilla units was born. Within the confines of the operation
"Wicher II" one of the biggest guerrilla battles in Europe took
place, of Osuchy, where 3 thousand guerrillas commanded by Edward Markiewicz
pseudonym "Kalina", and next by Konrad Bartoszewski "Wir"
fought against 10 times more numerous German forces.
Until the Jagiellonian times Równina Bilgorajska had been a wild area
covered by a primeval forest.
Both disadvantageous terrain conditions (wide swamps) and political
situation (Polish - Russian warfare and Tatar invasions) were not conducive
to the development of settlement.
The rise of a huge complex of podskarbi koronny /in former Poland a
clerk managing the treasury/, Dymitr from Goraj, had an important meaning
on the development of settlement. In the edges of the western part of the
primeval forest a lot of villages developed thanks to Dymitr's and his
sons' actions. On one side of the considered terrain Polish population
from Mazury, Mazowsze and Malopolska settled and on the other Russian population
and groups of woloski (Vlachs) /an ethnic group / shepherds. The settlement
was the most intensive in XV and XVI c. With woloski settlement the most
connected is the surname Woloszyn or the elements of Bilgoraj - Tarnogród
dress like clogs, a wooden hoop worn on the head called chamelka and the
leather belt as well. Until the Lublin Union through the region of Bilgoraj
ran the Polish and Russian border, which was reflected in the name of the
rivers Biala Lada called Polska Lada (Polish Lada) and Czarna Lada called
Ruska Lada (Russian Lada). The Catholics lived in the north and the Orthodox
and unitas /members of an eastern religion / in the south.
The factor accelerating permanent settlement was the more intense need for crops, of which surpluses were transported by navigable rivers to Gdansk, to which forest products also went. The Ordination of the Zamojskis was another large latyfundium / in former Poland big estates/ next to Gorajski.
The names of the villages located around Bilgoraj refer to the forest
itself and forest industry like e.g. Dabrowica, Bukowa, Bukownica, Bukowina,
Budziarze, Ciosmy, Smólsko, Korytków /all the names are connected with
the forest/.
The development of rural settlement entailed the uprise of towns."
(website)
In January 2008, the County Council submitted for approval a set of
new symbols to the Heraldic Commission and relevant Ministry.
As these new symbols were consulted with the Commission prior to submission,
it is a forgone conclusion they would be accepted.
The old Arms were showing the crown on the necks of the animals - half
bear and half eagle, above the three silver bars.
New Arms have the crown lifted above the heads of the animals and the
Latin cross added to the crown to signify the Christian past of the area.
The flag changes follow the redesigning of the Arms.
Author of the new concept is Dr.Henryk Seroka from the Lublin branch of the Polish Heraldic Society.
There are some worries that the Orthodox Christians and Jews would demand
the additions of their religious symbols to the new Arms as they were an
important ingredients of the ethnic make-up of the county.
Chrystian Kretowicz, 11 Feb 2009
Flag adopted 27 June 2000.
Source: FLAGA - Biuletyn Polskiego Towarzystwa Weksylologicznego
Nr.13/14 (2001)
Jens Pattke, 29 Oct 2001