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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Walddeutsche Germans (German: Walddeutsche, or Taubdeutsche, Polish: G uchoniemcy; meaning "speechless people" (from Polish g uchy - deaf, i.e. unable to communicate or g usz from wood), sometimes simply called Polish Germans, the name for a group of people, mostly of German origin, who settled during the 14th - 17th c. on the territory of present-day Sanockie Pits, in Poland.The term was coined by the Polish historians Marcin Bielski, 1531, Szymon Starowolski 1632,…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Walddeutsche Germans (German: Walddeutsche, or Taubdeutsche, Polish: G uchoniemcy; meaning "speechless people" (from Polish g uchy - deaf, i.e. unable to communicate or g usz from wood), sometimes simply called Polish Germans, the name for a group of people, mostly of German origin, who settled during the 14th - 17th c. on the territory of present-day Sanockie Pits, in Poland.The term was coined by the Polish historians Marcin Bielski, 1531, Szymon Starowolski 1632, bp. Ignacy Krasicki and Wincenty Pol, and is also sometimes used to refer to Germans between Wis oka and San River part of West Carpathians Plateau and Central Beskidian Piedmont in Poland.