Poznaà  Voivodeship 14th century to 1793 (, ) was a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland from the 14th century to the Second Partition of Poland in 1793. It was part of the Greater Poland Province.
The voivodeship comprised the western part of the former Duchy of Greater Poland with its historic capital Poznaà Â. As the westernmost part of the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth it bordered on the Neumark region of the Imperial Margraviate of Brandenburg in the west, the Bohemian crown land of Silesia in the south and the Duchy of Pomerania in the north. The adjacent Greater Polish area in the east belonged to the Kalisz Voivodeship.
The Northern outpost of Drahim was pawned to Brandenburg-Prussia according to the 1657 Treaty of Bromberg. In the course of the First Partition of Poland in 1772, the voivodeship lost the northern area around Waà Âcz to the Prussian Netze District, the remains were annexed in 1793 and incorporated into the province of South Prussia.
Zygmunt Gloger in his monumental book Historical Geography of the Lands of Old Poland provides this description of Poznaà  Voivodeship:<blockquote>Poznaà  Voivodeship, together with Kalisz and Kuyavia, was in the ancient times inhabited by the Polans. As early as the times of Bolesà Âaw Chrobry, the Land of Poznaà  had its own voivodes, while the city of Poznaà  itself was main gord of the ancient Lechia (...) When, following the Testament of Bolesà Âaw III Krzywousty Poland was divided among his sons, for more than 150 years Greater Poland was a separate duchy. In 1305 it was united with the Kingdom of Poland, by Wladyslaw Lokietek, who turned it into a voivodeship (...) In 1346, King Casimir the Great took control of the Wschowa Land, uniting it with Poznaà  Voivodeship.</blockquote>
<blockquote>The voivodeship, split by the Warta river into two almost equal halves, made western part of Greater Poland. Its area was 294 sq. miles, divided into Poznaà  County (162 sq. miles), Koà Âcian County (92 sq. miles), Waà Âcz County behind the Noteàriver (30 sq. miles), and the Land of Wschowa (9 sq. miles). In the mid-16th century, it had 259 Roman-Catholic parishes. Most densely populated was the Land of Wschowa, while Waà Âcz County was covered by vast forests.</blockquote>
<blockquote>Poznaà  Voivodeship had nine senators. These were: the Bishop of Poznaà Â, the Voivode of Poznaà  and the Castellan of Poznaà Â, as well as six minor castellans â those of Miedzyrzecz, Rogoà ºno, Srem, Przemecz, Krzywin and Santok. The Land of Wschowa had its own starosta, as well as its separate civil servants (...) The sejmiks for both Poznaà  and Kalisz Voivodeships took place in à Âroda Wielkopolska, where the two voivodeships elected 12 deputies to the Sejm, and 4 deputies to the Greater Poland Tribunal at Piotrków Trybunalski.</blockquote>
The largest city of the voivodeship was the royal city of Poznaà Â, which as one of the largest and most influential cities of entire Poland enjoyed voting rights during the Royal free elections. (in alphabetical order):
Greater Poland general governor (Starosta Generalny) seat:
Voivodeship governor (Wojewoda) seat:
Voivodes:
General council (Sejmik Generalny) for Greater Poland seat:
Regional council (Sejmik) seat:
Administrative division: