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・ Babka (cake)
・ Babka (surname)
・ Babka River
・ Babkarabad
・ Babken Arakelyan
・ Babken Ararktsyan
・ Babken I of Cilicia
・ Babilonas (shopping mall)
・ Babilonia
・ Babilonia (disambiguation)
・ Babilonie
・ Babilônia
・ Babilônia (album)
・ Babilônia (telenovela)
・ Babilônia River
Babimost
・ Babin
・ Babin Kal
・ Babin Potok
・ Babin Potok (Prokuplje)
・ Babin Potok, Donji Vakuf
・ Babin Potok, Prokuplje
・ Babin Potok, Višegrad
・ Babin Republic
・ Babin, Gryfino County
・ Babin, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
・ Babin, Lublin Voivodeship
・ Babin, Masovian Voivodeship
・ Babin, Pyrzyce County
・ Babin, Szczecin


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Babimost : ウィキペディア英語版
Babimost

Babimost ((ドイツ語:Bomst)) is a small town in Poland in the Lubusz Voivodeship, Zielona Gora County.
Area: 3,6 km², Population: 4,300 (2001), City rights: 1397
Until 1945 Babimost ((ドイツ語:Bomst)) was part of Germany. In 1871 the town had 2272 inhabitants, of whom 1042 were Catholics (mostly Poles), 1070 were Evangelical Lutherans (mostly Germans) and 160 Jewish. After the territorial changes following World War I, the town lay on the border with Poland; although remaining with Germany, up to a third of its residents were Poles. The inhabitants were shoe manufacturers, linen producers and hop (beer) and wine producers. Between 1818 and 1938 Babimost was administrative centre of the Kreis Bomst. In 1939 1950 inhabitants were registered as citizens of the town, of whom 600 were ethnic Polish.
In 1946 all German inhabitants had been expelled by force; the Potsdam Conference had given the town to the People's Republic of Poland.
== External links ==

* (Jewish Community in Babimost ) on Virtual Shtetl



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