Poland
(Polish: Polska), officially the
Republic of Poland (Polish:
Rzeczpospolita Polska), is a
country in Central Europe.
Poland is bordered by Germany to
the west; the Czech Republic and
Slovakia to the south; Ukraine,
Belarus and Lithuania to the
east; and the Baltic Sea and
Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian
exclave, to the north. The total
area of Poland is 312,679 km²
(120,728 sq mi),[2] making it
the 69th largest country in the
world and 9th in Europe. Poland
has a population of over 38.5
million people, which makes it
the 33rd most populous country
in the world.
The establishment of a Polish
state is often identified with
the adoption of Christianity by
its ruler Mieszko I in 966 (see
Baptism of Poland), when the
state covered territory similar
to that of present-day Poland.
Poland became a kingdom in 1025,
and in 1569 it cemented a long
association with the Grand Duchy
of Lithuania by uniting to form
the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth. The Commonwealth
collapsed in 1795, and its
territory was partitioned among
Prussia, Russia, and Austria.
Poland regained its independence
in 1918 after World War I but
lost it again in World War II,
occupied by Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union. Poland lost over
six million citizens in World
War II, and emerged several
years later as a socialist
republic within the Eastern Bloc
under strong Soviet influence.
In 1989 communist rule was
overthrown and Poland became
what is constitutionally known
as the "Third Polish Republic".
Poland is a unitary state made
up of sixteen voivodeships
(Polish: województwo). Poland is
also a member of the European
Union, NATO and OECD.