Siōng Silesia

Wikipedia (chū-iû ê pek-kho-choân-su) beh kā lí kóng...
Thiàu khì: Se̍h chām, chhiau-chhoē

Siong Silesia ( Silesia-gí: Gůrny Ślůnsk[1]) sī tī Silesia khu-he̍k ê tang-lâm-pō͘; 9 sè-kí í-lâi, Siong Silesia chan-keng sio̍k-î Tōa Moravia, Bohemia Ông-kok, Pho-lân, Sîn-sèng Lô-má Té-kok, Ò-tē-lī Hapsburg Ông-kok, Prussia Ông-kok. Bo̍k-chêng Siong Silesia sio̍k-î Pho-lân. Siong Silesia ūi-tī Silesia ko-tē, chóng-jîn-kháu sī 3,487,000 lâng.


Bo̍k-lo̍k

[siu-kái] Le̍k-sú

[siu-kái] Chú-iàu siâⁿ-tìn

[siu-kái] Bûn-ha̍k

  • H. Förster, B. Kortus (1989) ("Social-Geographical Problems of the Cracow and Upper Silesia Agglomerations"), Paderborn. (Bochumer Geographische Arbeiten No. 51)
  • Krzysztof Gwozdz (2000 ("The Image of Upper Silesia in geography textbooks 1921-1998"), in: Boleslaw Domanski (Ed.), Prace Geograficzne, No. 106, Institute of Geography of the Jagiellonian University Kraków. pp. 55-68
  • Rudolf Carl Virchow. "Report on the Typhus Epidemic in Upper Silesia." (1848年) Am J Public Health 2006;96 2102-2105.

Excerpted from: Virchow RC. (Collected Essays on Public Health and Epidemiology). Vol 1. Rather LJ, ed. Boston, Mass: Science History Publications; 1985:204–319.

[siu-kái] Chù-kha

  1. chit-ê miâ tī Silesia Wikipedia: http://www.gornyslonsk.republika.pl/, http://ponaszymu.com

[siu-kái] Gōa-pō͘ liân-chiap

Kò-jîn kang-khū
Miâ-khong-kan

piàn-thé
Tōng-chok
Se̍h chām
Pian-chi̍p
Ke-si kheh-á
Kî-thaⁿ ê gí-giân