Greece–Poland relations

Greek-Polish relations are relations between Greece and Poland. Both countries are full members of the European Union, OECD, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and NATO. There are circa 4,000 people of Greek descent living in Poland, and over 20,000 people of Polish descent living in Greece.[1]

Greek-Polish relations

Greece

Poland

History

Since antiquity there have been direct and indirect contact between Greece and Poland. Historic Greek cities in the Ukraine had contacts with the people of Poland.[2] During the Middle Ages Polish authors, politicians and philosophers were influenced by Greek literature, democracy and sense of freedom.[3]

In 1919 Greece and Poland officially established diplomatic relations. Both nations exchanged ambassadors in 1922.[4] In 1946, Greece entered into a civil war which saw over 14,000 Greeks migrate and find refuge in Poland after the communists in Greece were defeated in 1949. Many of the Greeks settled in the Polish city of Wrocław.[5]

In 1981, Greece joined the European Union. Poland joined the union in 2004. Since Polish ascension into the union, over 20,000 Poles have migrated to Greece for employment, however, since the Greek government-debt crisis beginning in 2009, many Poles have returned and many Greeks have migrated to Poland in search of employment.[6]

High-level visits

High-level visits from Greece to Poland

High-level visits from Poland to Greece[7]

Bilateral Treaties[8]

  • Memorandum of Mutual Understanding on Cooperation in the Defence Industry (Warsaw, June 29, 2004),
  • Agreement on economic, scientific, and technical cooperation in Agriculture and Food Economics (Athens, September 7, 1995),
  • Agreement on Cooperation in Science and Technology (Warsaw, November 9, 1998)
  • Agreement on the avoidance of double taxation (May 28, 1987).

Transportation

There are direct flights between Greece and Poland with the following airlines: Aegean Airlines, Ryan Air, Ellinair, LOT Polish Airlines, Small Planet Airlines, SmartWings and Wizz Air.

Resident diplomatic missions

See also

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.