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・ Austrian Regional League Central
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Austrian Silesia
・ Austrian Silver Vienna Philharmonic
・ Austrian social scientists in exile (1933–45)
・ Austrian Social Service
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Austrian Silesia : ウィキペディア英語版
Austrian Silesia
:''Not to be confused with the Duchy of Silesia.''
Austrian Silesia ((ドイツ語:Österreichisch Schlesien); (チェコ語:Rakouské Slezsko); (ポーランド語:Śląsk Austriacki)), officially the Duchy of Upper and Lower Silesia ((ドイツ語:Herzogtum Ober- und Niederschlesien); (チェコ語:Vévodství Horní a Dolní Slezsko)), was an autonomous region of the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Austrian Empire, from 1867 a Cisleithanian crown land of Austria-Hungary. It is largely coterminous with the present-day region of Czech Silesia, and was, historically, part of the larger Silesia region.
==Geography==

Austrian Silesia consisted of two territories, separated by the Moravian land strip of Moravská Ostrava between the Ostravice and Oder rivers.
The area east of the Ostravice around Cieszyn reached from the heights of the Western Carpathians (Silesian Beskids) in the south, where it bordered with the Kingdom of Hungary, along the Olza and upper Vistula rivers to the border with Prussian Silesia in the north. In the east the Biała river at Bielsko separated it from the Lesser Polish lands of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, incorporated into the Austrian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria upon the First Partition of Poland in 1772.
The territory west of the Oder river stretching from the town of Opava up to Bílá Voda was confined by the Jeseníky mountain range of the eastern Sudetes in the south, separating it from Moravia, and the Opava river in the north. In the west the Golden Mountains formed the border with the County of Kladsko.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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