

Polskie Radio also operates 17 regional radio stations (operating on FM, also on DAB+), located in:Īll city stations but Radio Szczecin Extra are being broadcast on FM and in Internet, while Radio Szczecin Extra is available only in Internet and via DAB+. Program 4 and Polskie Radio 24 also carried as a live video feed in the internet.
#Polskieradio pl player stacja 3 trojka full#
becoming politically dependent corporations, each of which was admitted to full active membership of the European Broadcasting Union on 1 January 1993 with the merger of EBU and OIRT. This body was dissolved in 1992, Polskie Radio S.A. It came under the tutelage of the state public broadcasting body Komitet do Spraw Radiofonii "Polskie Radio" (later "Polskie Radio i Telewizja" – PRT, Polish Radio and Television). Īfter the war, Polskie Radio was reconstructed with the assistance of the Soviet Red Army, which valued radio as a propaganda medium. Years later, Szpilman played the same piece for the reopening of the station.

The invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union led to the destruction of the network in September 1939, with its final broadcast being a performance of Nocturne in C-sharp minor, Op. Warszawa from 1 March 1937 – known as Warszawa II, the national channel becoming Warszawa I from this dateĪ tenth regional station was planned for Łuck, but the outbreak of war meant that it never opened.

īefore the Second World War, Polish Radio operated one national channel – broadcast from 1931 from one of Europe's most powerful longwave transmitters, situated at Raszyn just outside Warsaw and destroyed in 1939 due to invasion of German Army – and nine regional stations: Polskie Radio was founded on 18 August 1925 and began making regular broadcasts from Warsaw on 18 April 1926.Ĭzesław Miłosz, recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Literature, worked as a literary programmer at Polish Radio Wilno in 1936.
