Opole Voivodeship (Polish: województwo opolskie) is one of the 16 voivodeships (administrative provinces) of Poland. It is in the south of the country. Its name derived from its capital city, Opole. The region has been a part of Poland since the beginning of the Polish statehood, with many remains of the ancient Polish Piast dynasty to be found to this day, but has found itself at the crossroads of history becoming incorporated to erstwhile Czech Kingdom, Austria, Prussia and Germany. Reincorporated to Poland after Second World War, the region remains the only one in the country with significant (and legally recognized) German minority, with bilingual signage and German in everyday use in some municipalities.
Cities
Other destinations
- 1 Moszna Castle (Pałac w Mosznej) in Moszna
- 2 Jurapark Krasiejów in Krasiejów – Dinosaur-themed park built next to active excavations and palaeontological museums.
Understand
In the early Middle Ages the present voivodeship was part of Silesia, which was a part of Poland since the 10th century. When in 1138 the Seniorat of Poland was formed, Silesia was one of the Polish duchies and several Silesian duchess were Seniors of Poland until the late 13th century. In the 12th and 13th century, Silesia fall apart into several duchies, of which Opole and Nysa are in the present Polish voivodeship. In the 14th century, they came under Czech rule. At time the majority of the population was germanized. Bohemia was ruled at this time by the German Luxembourg, later the Polish Jagiellonians and finally by the Austrian Habsburgs. In 1741 Prussia annexed the region from Austria. After World War I and the Silesian Uprisings the inhabitants voted to remain largely a part of Germany but still had a significantly large Polish minority. After World War II the region became part of Poland and most of its German population was expelled. Nowadays it is in the south-west of the country and home to many ethnic minorities including most of Poland's Germans and the Silesians.
Talk
Polish is the first language, as in all of Poland. Therefore, everyone speaks it. German plays a historic role in the region and some towns and cities are bi-lingual because of the German-speaking minority. There are even German-language newspapers and schools. Silesian, a Slavic minority language is also spoken in most of the Opole/Upper Silesia region. English and German may be spoken by the young.
Get in
By plane
Opole Voivodeship has no international airport. The nearest international airports are Katowice's Katowice-Pyrzowice Airport (KTW IATA), Poznań's Poznań-Ławica Airport (POZ IATA), Wrocław's Copernicus Airport (WRO IATA) and Łódź's Łódź-Lublinek Airport (LCJ IATA).
Get around
See
The Moszna Castle was built during different time periods and provides an example of numerous architectural styles. It is now used as a hospice house, hotel, and restaurant. Tourists can walk its grounds free of charge.
Do
Visit Nysa, Opole and the surrounding lakes.
Eat
Drink
Stay safe
Go next
Opole Voivodeship borders four other Polish voivodeships:
- Dolnośląskie,
- Wielkopolskie,
- Łódzkie,
- and Śląskie,
as well as the Czech Republic.