{{Short description|None}} {{Administrative division of Poland sidebar}}

The '''administrative division of Poland''' since 1999 has been based on three levels of subdivision. The territory of Poland is divided into ''voivodeships'' (provinces); these are further divided into ''powiats'' (counties or districts), and these in turn are divided into ''gminas'' (communes or municipalities). Major cities normally have the status of both gmina and powiat. Poland currently has 16 voivodeships, 380 powiats (including 66 cities with powiat status), and 2,479 gminas.<ref name=GUS>{{cite web|url=https://stat.gov.pl/download/gfx/portalinformacyjny/en/defaultaktualnosci/3286/3/23/1/population_size_and_structure_and_vital_statistics_in_poland_31-12-2017.pdf|title=Population. Size and structure and vital statistics in Poland by territorial division in 2017. As of December, 31|publisher=Główny Urząd Statystyczny (Central Statistical Office)|access-date=27 June 2018|language=pl}}</ref>

The current system was introduced pursuant to a series of acts passed by the Polish parliament in 1998, and came into effect on 1 January 1999. Between 1975 and 1998 there had been 49 smaller "voivodeships" and no powiats (see subdivisions of the Polish People's Republic). The reform created 16 larger voivodeships (largely based on and named after historical regions) and reintroduced powiats.

The boundaries of the voivodeships do not always reflect the historical borders of Polish regions. Around half of the Silesian Voivodeship belongs to the historical province of Lesser Poland. Similarly, the area around Radom, which historically is part of Lesser Poland, is located in the Masovian Voivodeship. Also, the Pomeranian Voivodeship includes only the eastern extreme of historical Pomerania, as the western part is in Germany and the eastern border has shifted again and again.<br> upright=1.5|thumb|alt=Map of Poland|Division of Poland into voivodeships and powiats (2007)

== Voivodeships== {{main|Voivodeships of Poland}} Poland is currently divided into 16 provinces known as voivodeships ({{langx|pl|województwa}}, singular ''województwo''). Legally they are called "I tier units" (''jednostki I stopnia''). Administrative authority at voivodeship level is shared between a central government-appointed governor, called the voivode (usually a political appointee), an elected assembly called the sejmik, and an executive board (''zarząd województwa'') chosen by that assembly. The leader of that executive is called the ''marszałek''.

{{Image label begin|image=Poland adm location map.svg|width=400|float=right|padding=15px}} <!-- ===== Polish Regions ===== -->{{Image label small|x=0.37|y=0.161|scale=400|text ={{flag icon|Pomeranian Voivodeship}}<br />Pomerania}} {{Image label small|x=0.13|y=0.25|scale=400| text= {{flag icon|West Pomeranian Voivodeship}}<br />West<br /> Pomerania}} {{Image label small|x=0.61|y=0.22|scale=400|text={{flag icon|Warmian–Masurian Voivodeship}}<br />Warmia–Masuria}} {{Image label small|x=0.83|y=0.32|scale=400| text={{flag icon|Podlaskie Voivodeship}}<br />Podlaskie}} {{Image label small|x=0.668|y=0.43|scale=400|text={{flag icon|Masovian Voivodeship}}<br />Masovia}} {{Image label small|x=0.41|y=0.33|scale=400|text={{flag icon|Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship}}<br />Kuyavian–<br />Pomerania}} {{Image label small|x=0.28|y=0.47|scale=400|text ={{flag icon|Greater Poland Voivodeship}}<br />Greater Poland}} {{Image label small|x=0.15|y=0.48|scale=400|text ={{flag icon|Lubusz Voivodeship}}<br />Lubusz}} {{Image label small|x=0.20|y=0.62|scale=400|text ={{flag icon|Lower Silesian Voivodeship}}<br />Lower Silesian}} {{Image label small|x=0.55|y=0.562|scale=400|text={{flag icon|Łódź Voivodeship}}<br />Łódź}} {{Image label small|x=0.40|y=0.70|scale=400|text ={{flag icon|Opolskie Voivodeship}}<br />Opole}} {{Image label small|x=0.86|y=0.60|scale=400|text={{flag icon|Lublin Voivodeship}}<br />Lublin}} {{Image label small|x=0.62|y=0.82| scale=400|text={{flag icon|Lesser Poland Voivodeship}}<br />Lesser<br />Poland}} {{Image label small|x=0.75|y=0.80| scale=400|text={{flag icon|Subcarpathian Voivodeship}}<br />Podkarpackie}} {{Image label small|x=0.64|y=0.69| scale=400|text={{flag icon|Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship}}<br />Świętokrzyska}} {{Image label small|x=0.48|y=0.75| scale=400|text={{flag icon|Silesian Voivodeship}}<br />Silesia}}<!--

===== Other countries ===== -->{{Image label small|x=0.69| y=0.11|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5">Kaliningrad<br />(Russia)</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.915|y=0.100|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5">Lithuania</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.94|y=0.47|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5">Belarus</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.93|y=0.88|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5">Ukraine</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.52| y=0.975|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5;">Slovakia</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.12| y=0.86|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5;">Czech Republic</i> }} {{Image label small|x=0.05| y=0.57|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5;">Germany</i> }}<!-- ===== Seas – Oceans – Etc ===== -->{{Image label small|x=0.20|y=0.10|scale=400| text=<i style="color:#48A3B5">Baltic Sea</i> }} {{Image label end}}

{| | {| class="wikitable sortable" ! # !Flag !! Emblem !! Voivodeship !! Polish name !! Capital city (cities) |- | valign="center" | 1 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Greater Poland || wielkopolskie || Poznań |- | valign="center" | 2 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Kuyavia–Pomerania || kujawsko-pomorskie || Bydgoszcz and Toruń |- | valign="center" | 3 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Lesser Poland || małopolskie || Kraków |- | valign="center" | 4 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Łódź || łódzkie || Łódź |- | valign="center" | 5 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Lower Silesia || dolnośląskie || Wrocław |- | valign="center" | 6 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Lublin || lubelskie || Lublin |- | valign="center" | 7 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Lubusz || lubuskie || Gorzów Wielkopolski and Zielona Góra |- | valign="center" | 8 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Masovia || mazowieckie || Warsaw |- | valign="center" | 9 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Opole || opolskie || Opole |- | valign="center" | 10 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Podlaskie || podlaskie || Białystok |- | valign="center" | 11 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Pomerania || pomorskie || Gdańsk |- | valign="center" | 12 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Silesia || śląskie || Katowice |- | valign="center" | 13 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Podkarpackie || podkarpackie || Rzeszów |- | valign="center" | 14 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Świętokrzyskie || świętokrzyskie || Kielce |- | valign="center" | 15 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || Warmia–Masuria || warmińsko-mazurskie || Olsztyn |- | valign="center" | 16 | center|60x60px || center|60x60px || West Pomerania || zachodniopomorskie || Szczecin |} |}

==Powiats== {{main|Powiat}} Each voivodeship is divided into a number of smaller entities known as powiats (counties), which are legally "II tier units" (''jednostki II stopnia''). The number of powiats per voivodeship ranges from 12 (Opole Voivodeship) to 42 (Masovian Voivodeship). They include two types of administrative divisions:

* 314 powiats proper (known as ''land counties'', Polish ''powiaty ziemskie''). Land counties have an elected council (''rada powiatu''), which elects an executive board (''zarząd powiatu'') headed by the ''starosta''. * 66 cities with powiat status (''city counties'', Polish ''powiaty grodzkie'' or more formally ''miasta na prawach powiatu''). In city counties the functions of these institutions are performed by the city's own council (''rada miejska'', ''rada miasta'') and directly elected mayor (''prezydent''). The administration of such a city functions both as a powiat and a municipality. thumb|294x294px|Tier units of the administrative division in Poland.

==Gminas== {{main|Gmina}} The "III tier units" (''jednostki III stopnia'') are 2477 gminas (also called commune or municipality). A powiat is typically divided into a number of gminas (between 3 and 19), although the city counties constitute single gminas. A gmina has an elected council as well as a directly elected mayor (known as ''prezydent'' in large towns, ''burmistrz'' in most urban and urban-rural gminas, and ''wójt'' in rural gminas). A gmina may be classed as:

* 302 urban municipalities (''gmina miejska'', consisting of a town (''miasto'')), * 642 urban-rural municipalities (''gmina miejsko-wiejska'', consisting of a town (''miasto'') together with its surrounding villages (''wieś'') and the surrounding countryside), * 1533 village or rural municipalities (''gmina wiejska'', not containing a town). 158 of them are called related or connected municipalities (''gmina obwarzankowa''). In this case the rural municipality does not contain a town, but its administration itself is located in a city or a town outside of its territory. 14 of these gminas have their administration located in a city with powiat status, the rest are in urban municipalities. The administrative category of ''gmina obwarzankowa'' was introduced in 2013 to deal with the budgetary disparity in the cases, in which the majority of the inhabitants of a rural municipality work in and use the social services of a city or a town nearby, but due to their registered address their taxes are allocated to their rural municipality of residence. In essence the ''gmina obwarzankowa'' is a rural territory closely connected to an urban territory and as such the two municipal administrations work in close administrative and budgetary coordination.<ref>{{Cite web|last=www.ideo.pl|first=ideo-|date=2019-04-27|title=Gminy wiejskie chcą lepszej ochrony swych granic|url=https://www.prawo.pl/samorzad/gminy-wiejskie-chca-lepszej-ochrony-swych-granic,402541.html|access-date=2021-02-15|website=Prawo.pl|language=pl}}</ref>

==Smaller units== Gminas are generally sub-divided into smaller units, called {{Lang|pl|osiedle}} or {{Lang|pl|dzielnica}} in towns, and sołectwo in rural areas. However, these units are of lesser importance and are subordinate in status to the gmina.

== Historical subdivisions== Polish territory has been subject to significant changes over the course of Polish history. Therefore, the modern Polish administrative division, while on some levels similar to some historical ones, is quite different from others. Historical Polish administrative divisions can be divided into the following periods: * before 1569: Subdivisions of the Kingdom of Poland * 1569–1795: Subdivisions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth * 1795–1807: Subdivisions of the Polish–Lithuanian territories following the partitions :* 1795–1919: Subdivisions of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria :* 1807–1815: Subdivisions of the Duchy of Warsaw :* 1815–1914: Subdivisions of Congress Poland :* 1815–1848: Grand Duchy of Posen :* 1848–1919: Province of Posen * 1914–1919: Subdivisions of Polish territories during World War I :* 1922–1938: Posen–West Prussia * 1918–1939: Subdivisions of the Second Polish Republic * 1939–1945: Subdivisions of Polish territories during World War II * 1945–1999: Subdivisions of the Polish People's Republic * since 1999: see main article above

{{Gallery|title=|width=135|height=120|align=center |File:Działania podczas wojny polsko niemieckiej 1002-1005.png|Kingdom of Poland (1025–1385) |File:Rzeczpospolita voivodships.png|Map showing voivodeships of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth of the Two Nations (1569–1795) |File:Polska 1907 adm.png|Administrative division of Congress Poland, 1907 |File:Poland administrative division 1922 literki.svg|Polish voivodeships, 1922–1939. |File:Poland administrative division 1975 literki.png|Polish voivodeships, 1975–1998 |File:POLSKA woj pow gminy 2013.png|Map of Poland Division into voivodeships, ''powiats'' and ''gminas'' (2013) }}

==See also== * Administrative division of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland * Electoral districts of Poland * Military districts of Poland * Territorial evolution of Poland * NUTS of Poland

'''Cultural and economic:''' * Poland A and B

== References == {{Reflist}}

==External links== * [https://web.archive.org/web/20080803042613/http://www.tepis.org.pl/biuletyn/41/sam_anglia.htm Administrative division of Poland and Self Government Bodies - resolution of Marshals' Covenant of the Republic of Poland]

{{Polish terms for country subdivisions}} {{Administrative division of Poland}} {{Poland topics}} {{Europe topic|Administrative divisions of}} Category:Administrative divisions of Poland Poland