March Constitution (Poland)

The Second Polish Republic adopted the March Constitution on 17 March 1921, after ousting the occupation of the German/Prussian forces in the 1918 Greater Poland Uprising, and avoiding conquest by the Soviets in the 1920 Polish-Soviet War.

Among others, it expressly ruled out discrimination on racial or religious grounds.

[1] It also abolished all royal titles and state privileges, and banned the use of blazons.

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