Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Finland
ANSWER Starting from the early 18th century until the end of WW1, Poland was divided in three parts each one annexed by Prussia (then German Empire), Russia and Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Poland doesn't actually exist as a nation in ww1. It was created after the end of the war by the Peace treaties. The ruler of where the Poles lived then was the Czar of Russia, it was part of the Russian Empire.
Roman Geographers mapped geography and the ethnography much of Europe north of the Roman Empire: Northern Gremany, the southern part of Scandinavia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Belarus and part of Russia. Of course they also mapped the territories of the empire.
They border each other in the eastern part of Poland and the western part of Ukraine.
Was the Ottoman Empire!!
The nation of Poland did not actually exist during World War I. It was part of the Austria-Hungarian Empire of which Germany was a part.
Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Finland
Most of Eastern Europe, including Poland (:
Poland is one of such.
ANSWER Starting from the early 18th century until the end of WW1, Poland was divided in three parts each one annexed by Prussia (then German Empire), Russia and Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Poland
AUSTRIAHUNGARY
David Ben-Gurion was born in Płońsk, Congress Poland which was then part of the Russian Empire.
Marie Curie discovered polonium and named it after Poland, the country of her birth, to publicise the fact that Poland was not free at that time, but part of the Russian Empire.
Probably the Polish Commonwealth
At its greatest extent, the Holy Roman Empire included Germany, Austria, Italy, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, part of Poland, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, north-eastern France Savoy and part of Province.