Lwów District League
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Lwów District League
Lwów district football competitions () were a regional association football competitions on territory of Lwów Voivodeship, Tarnopol Voivodeship, and Stanisławów Voivodeship (1920-1934), Poland (then Second Polish Republic) in 1920–1939. The competitions were organized by the Lwówskie Okręgowych Związków Piłki Nożnej, Lwówskie OZPN. The league was created in 1920, as the original four district leagues of the Polish Football Union and is considered a continuation of the Austrian Football Championship of Galicia in 1913–1914. The competitions were conducted on territory of modern West Ukraine which during the World War II was annexed by the Soviet Union and added to the Soviet Ukraine (Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic). The Lwów District League is considered to be a football precursor of the Lviv Oblast Football Federation championship in the modern Ukraine and the Subcarpathia Regional Division of the Polish Fifth League. Winners of the league qualified to all- ...
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PL Aklasa 1938 39
PL, P.L., Pl, or .pl may refer to: Businesses and organizations Government and political * Partit Laburista, a Maltese political party * Liberal Party (Brazil, 2006), a Brazilian political party * Liberal Party (Moldova), a Moldovan political party * Liberal Party (Rwanda), a Rwandan political party * Parlamentarische Linke, a parliamentary caucus in Germany * Patriotic League (Bosnia and Herzegovina) (Bosnian: ''Patriotska Liga''), a military organisation of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina * Philippine Legislature, a legislature that existed in the Philippines from 1907 to 1935 * Progressive Labor Party (United States), a United States communist party Sports leagues * Palestine League, the top Palestinian football league * Premier League, the top English football league * Pacific League, one of the two leagues in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball * Pioneer Baseball League, a Rookie league in American Minor League Baseball * Pioneer Football League, NCAA FCS conferenc ...
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Czarni Lwów
Czarni Lwów was one of the first Polish professional sports clubs with a well-developed football section as well as ice hockey, among several other sports. The football club was started in the late 19th century in Lwów as a school football section called Sława Lwów. In 1903 the name was changed and the club became professional. History In 1911, together with KS Cracovia and two other teams, Czarni created the Polish Football Association, the predecessor of the modern PZPN national football association. The first football club in Poland, the Czarni (Black, name coined after their black shirts; because of their colours the team was commonly dubbed ''Powidlaki'' – an allusion to the ''plum marmalade'' colour of their logo) were the best known and most popular sports club in Lwów (together with Pogoń Lwów formed soon afterwards). The official name translates as the First Military-Civil Sport Club Blacks Lwów. Although the main interest of the fans lay in football, ...
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WKS Kowel
WKS may refer to: * Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome * ''Wetterkurzschlüssel'', German for Short Weather Cipher, a WWII codebook of the German Navy * .wks (WorKSheet), a filename extension used by early Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Works * ''Well Known Services'' Domain name system record type; see List of DNS record types * Wanamaker, Kempton and Southern Railroad, WK&S, a US railroad * Fictional television station on the US ''Family Ties'' sitcom * Wrocławski Klub Sportowy (Wrocław Sports Club) Śląsk Wrocław * Wu Kai Sha station Wu Kai Sha is the northeastern terminus of the of the MTR rail transit system in Hong Kong. It is located between Sai Sha Road and Sha On Street in , also identified with Wu Kai Sha to its west and northwest, serving the many housing estate ...
, Hong Kong; MTR station code {{Disambiguation ...
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Sokół Równe
Sokol, Sokół or SOKOL may refer to: Sports * Sokol movement, a Pan-Slavic physical education movement, and its various incarnations: ** Czech Sokol movement, the original one ** Polish Sokół movement ** Russian Sokol movement ** Sokol movement in Yugoslavia ** Slovenian Sokol movement ** Serbian Sokol movement ** Croatian Sokol movement ** Ukrainian Sokol movement ** Muslim Sokol movement ** Sokol movement in the United States ** Polish Falcons of America Other sports clubs Czech Republic * DHC Sokol Poruba, a women's handball club in Ostrava * Sokol Cholupice, a football club in Prague * TJ Sokol Mariánské Hory, a rugby club in Ostrava * TJ Sokol Ovčáry, a football club in Ovčáry * TJ Sokol Protivanov, a football club in Protivanov * TJ Sokol Tasovice, a football club in Tasovice * TJ Sokol Živanice, a football club in Živanice Slovakia * TJ Sokol Dolná Ždaňa, a football club in Dolná Ždaňa Poland * Sokół Nisko, a football club in Nisko Russia * Sokol Kra ...
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Lublin District League
Lublin District League was a regional association football championship in Lublin Voivodeship, Poland (then Second Polish Republic) in 1922–1939. The league was created in 1922. Following 1927, the Wołyń District League was created and after 1928, Kielce District League was created. After 1929, the district split again and Polesie District League was formed. The competitions were previously conducted on territory that is now part of three countries Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine. Winners of the league qualified to regional play-offs and the winner then advanced to the newly formed National League. League's laureates List of the top tier's winners of the district league Winners * 9 – Unia Lublin (including Lublinianka Lublin) * 3 – 22 PP Siedlce (including 22 PP Strzelec Siedlce) * 2 – WKS Lublin * 1 – 9 PAC Siedlce * 1 – Strzelec Siedlce * 1 – 7 PP LEG Chełm See also * IV liga Lublin IV liga Lublin group (grupa lubelska) is one of the groups of IV li ...
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Junak Drohobycz
Junak Drohobycz was a Polish Association football, football team, located in Drohobycz in the historic territory of the Kresy Wschodnie, Polish Eastern Borderlands, what is now Drohobych, Ukraine. The club was disbanded by the Soviet Union, Soviet occupying authorities in the autumn of 1939, following the Soviet invasion of Poland at the start of World War II. In early months of the war, members of Junak created the White Couriers, a boyscouting organization, which smuggled hundreds of persons from the area of Soviet-occupied Lwów (now Lviv) to Hungary, across the Soviet-Hungarian border in the Carpathians. History In 1922, a sports club Czarni was founded in Drohobych. In 1930 it changed name to Strzelec, and later, in 1931 – to Junak. For the first few years, the new team did not achieve anything significant in Polish football, lagging far behind top teams from Lwów. Crucial was the year 1937 – in March, Captain Mieczysław Młotek from Drohobycz's Polish Ar ...
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Czuwaj Przemyśl
Klub Sportowy Czuwaj is a sports club from the Polish city of Przemyśl, founded by the scouting movement. Originally a multi-sports club with many sections, only the football and handball sections have survived to date. History Origins The club was founded on 30 March 1918 as a sports club of the scouting movement. The name "Czuwaj" means "Be Vigilant", a scout greeting and motto of the Polish Scouting and Guiding Association. Originally it was a multi-sports club with many sections however few of them have survived very long. In 1922 the club held its first AGM, and the boxing section of the club was founded. In 1931, the handball section was founded, the longest continuously functioning section of the club. Communist era The handball section played 11-a-side handball until 1961, until the teams were re-organised and they switched to 7-a-side. In 1947, with the arrival of communism in Poland, the club was under the patronage of the Polish State Railways. This is when the club ...
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CWKS Resovia (football)
Resovia Rzeszów, commonly referred to as Resovia, is a Polish professional association football club from Rzeszów, Subcarpathian Voivodeship. It is part of the multi-sports club CWKS Resovia, and is one of the oldest football clubs in Poland. As of the 2025–26 season, they compete in the II liga. Among the achievements of Resovia's football team are: Championship of Lwów League in 1937, semifinals of the Polish Cup in 1981, and runners-up in the Second Division in 1983. History Resovia was officially registered in 1905 in the then Austrian Poland, but the history of the club dates back to several football teams, formed by students of local high schools in 1905–1907. As a result, in different sources the date of the foundation of Resovia is presented as 1905, 1907, and 1910. During World War I, when most of Austrian Galicia was occupied by the Russian Empire, the activities of Resovia were suspended. The organization was recreated in 1919, and in June 1920, first stad ...
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Ukraina Lwów
Ukraina Lviv (full name: ''Sports Society Ukraina Lviv'') was a Galician and then Polish association football team of the ''ST Ukraina'' (Sports Society), located in the city of Lviv. At that time the ''ST Ukraina'' was a sports society of ethnic Ukrainians in Poland and earlier Austria-Hungary. The football team existed in 1911–14, 1921–39 and 1942–44. The club was liquidated twice by the Soviet regime. The society had an alternate name of ''Tryzub'' (Trident) which after World War II was used by Ukrainian emigrants to Canada such as the Toronto Tridents. History The club was founded in 1911 based on the Ukrainian Sports Club (USK, which existed since 1904) on the initiative of professor Ivan Bobersky, who had previously been a teacher of physical education in a Ukrainian junior high school in Przemyśl. During their first three years of existence, Ukraina mostly played against other ethnic Ukrainian sides from Galicia, but in 1914, with the outbreak of World War I, the ...
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Rewera Stanisławów
WCKS Rewera Stanisławów was a Polish football team, located in Stanisławów (now Ivano-Frankivsk), in the historic territory of Galicia. History The club's hues were red and blue, same as the hues of one of the most popular Polish teams, Pogoń Lwów. Apart from football, Rewera, a member of the WCKS society, had other departments as well – volleyball Volleyball is a team sport in which two teams of six players are separated by a net. Each team tries to score points by grounding a ball on the other team's court under organized rules. It has been a part of the official program of the Summ ..., boxing, ice hockey, cycle sport, cycling, and track and field. All home games were held at a municipal stadium in Potocki Park, funded by the local savings bank. Among the activists of Rewera, was the father of Maryla Rodowicz, one of the most popular Polish singers. The club was founded in 1908, when the city of Stanisławów (Stanyslaviv) belonged to the Austrian provin ...
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Hasmonea Lwów
Hasmonea Lwów was a Poland, Polish-Jewish sports club based in the city of Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine). Created in 1908 in Austria-Hungary, it was the first sports club exclusively for Jewish members. It was named after the Hasmonean royal dynasty. The full Polish name was Żydowski Klub Sportowy Hasmonea Lwów (''Jewish Sports Club Hasmonea Club''). In the interbellum the Hasmonea was one of four Lwów-based clubs playing in the Polish First League and arguably the most popular Jewish football club in Poland. In 1928 it was ranked 13th in the league and relegated. There was a conflict between the club and PZPN officially due to failing to pay its dues. In 1929 the club paid its owed dues and next year revived its football team which competed in regional competition of Lwow Voivodeship. In 1932 the original stadium of the club was deliberately burnt down. The most popular football player primarily associated with the club was Zygmunt Steuermann. Hasmonea was also famous for its exce ...
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