Lusatian Neisse (Polish Nysa Łużycka, German Lausitzer Neiße, Czech Lužická Nisa) - length: ca. 252 km or 157 miles on the Polish - German border. Rising in the NW of the Czech Republic it flows into the Oder near Gubin in Poland.
Nysa Kłodzka - length: ca. 182 km or 113 miles. It rises in SW Poland to join the Oder near Brzeg.
Nysa Szalona - length ca. 51 km, flows into Kaczawa river, which in turns flows into Oder.
Nysa (GermanNeiße) is also a town in Poland, on the Nysa Klodzka river.
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
(3) The Wiitende Neisse is a tributary of the Katzbach.
NEISSE, a town and fortress of Germany, in the province of Prussian Silesia, at the junction of the Neisse and the Biela, 32 m.
Neisse, one of the oldest towns in Silesia, is said to have been founded in the loth century, and afterwards became the capital of a principality of its own name, which was incorporated with the bishopric of Breslau about 1200.
The precise location of the border was left open; the western Allies also accepted in general the principle of the Oder-Neisse line as the future western border of Poland and of population transfer as the way to prevent future border disputes.
The open question was whether the border should follow the eastern or western Neisse, and whether it should include Szczecin/Stettin in Poland.
Churchill said a Soviet concession on that point would be admired as "a gesture of magnanimity" and declared that, with respect to Poland's post-war government, the British would "never be content with a solution which did not leave Poland a free and independent state." (Ibid., Bohlen Minutes, p.