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The seat of the Polish Highlanders Alliance of North America along Archer avenue just northeast of its intersection with Pulaski (picture taken before remodeling project has begun) The Polish Highlanders Alliance of America ( pl. Związek Podhalan w Ameryce Północnej ) was founded in 1929 in Chicago as an organization that unites all other ...
A Goral with bagpipes from the region of Podhale in Poland. The Gorals (Polish: Górale; Goral ethnolect: Górole; Slovak: Gorali; Cieszyn Silesian: Gorole), also anglicized as the Highlanders (in Poland, as the Polish Highlanders, a subethnic group of the Polish nation) with historical origins in the Vlach ethnic group (the medieval exonym for Romanians) [1] [2] [3] are an ethnographic group ...
Polish Combatants' Association (United States) Polish Falcons of America; Polish Highlanders Alliance of North America; Polish Home Hall; Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America; Polish Legion of American Veterans; Polish National Alliance; Polish Roman Catholic Union of America; Polish Women's Alliance of America
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The Polish diaspora comprises Poles and people of Polish heritage or origin who live outside Poland. The Polish diaspora is also known in modern Polish as Polonia , the name for Poland in Latin and many Romance languages .
Polish American Association; Polish Arts Club of Chicago; Polish Downtown (Chicago) Polish Highlanders Alliance of North America; Polish Museum of America; Polish National Alliance; Polish National Alliance Headquarters; Polish Roman Catholic Union of America; Polish Village; Polish Women's Alliance of America; Polonia Triangle; Portage Park ...
The Lesser Poland people are divided into three subgroups. They are: Cracovian group, Sandomierz group, and Polish Highlanders. [1] [2] The Cracovian group include: Cracovians, Vistulans, and Polish Uplanders. The Sandomierz group include Lasovians, Lublinians, Posaniaks, Rzeszovians, Sandomierz Borowiaks, and Sandomierzans.
The Germans postulated a separate nationality for people of that region in an effort to extract them from the Polish citizenry during their occupation of Poland's highlands. The term Goralenvolk was a neologism derived from the Polish word Górale (the Highlanders) commonly referring to the ethnic group living in the Beskid and Tatra mountains.