VETERINARY LEGISLATION AND THE ORGANISATION OF VETERINARY SUPERVISION IN THE POLISH LANDS, 1774–1918
Authors/Creators
Description
The first Polish legal regulations concerning veterinary medicine date from the second half of the eighteenth century. In 1774, a parliamentary constitution was adopted that obliged physicians to supervise hospital districts in order to prevent the spread of cattle and sheep plague. In 1780, the Royal Commission of Good Order issued 46 regulations governing animal slaughter and the meat trade. During the Duchy of Warsaw, the first normative act devoted exclusively to animal health protection was introduced: the ‘Regulations for the Rescue of Horned Cattle in Present Diseases, together with Measures Sufficient to Safeguard them from the Immediate Spread of Mortality’. In 1844, the ‘Veterinary Police Act’ was issued in Warsaw, becoming the first piece of legislation to define in detail the tasks of state administrative bodies responsible for veterinary matters. During the period of partition, the laws of the partitioning powers remained in force. At the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, veterinary services in the Polish lands developed differently in each partition, as did the relevant legal regulations. The restoration of independence in 1918 led to the unification of veterinary administration and the introduction of new legal solutions.
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legislation.pdf
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Additional details
Dates
- Accepted
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2026-03-20