16th Land of Tarnow Infantry Regiment

16th Infantry Regiment of the Land of Tarnow (Polish language: 16 Pulk Piechoty Ziemi Tarnowskiej, 16 pp) was an infantry regiment of the Polish Army. It existed from late 1918 until September 1939. Garrisoned in Tarnow, the unit belonged to the 6th Infantry Division from Krakow.

The history of the regiment dates back to the final weeks of World War One, when ethnic Polish soldiers, serving in the Austrian 57th Infantry Regiment, abandoned their positions on the Italian Front, and returned to Tarnow. In November 1918, Polish 57th Infantry Regiment was formed. In February 1919, its name was changed into the 16th Infantry Regiment of the Land of Tarnow.

Commandants

 * Major Maksymilian Hoborski (1918),
 * Colonel Aleksander Boruszczak (1918–1919),
 * Colonel Kazimierz Piotrkowski (1919),
 * Colonel Zdzislaw Zaluski (1919),
 * Colonel Wiktor Rustocki (1919–1920),
 * Major Jan Luszczki (1920),
 * Major Karol Weiss de Helmenau (1920),
 * Colonel Tadeusz Klimecki (1920),
 * Colonel Tadeusz Hojnowski (1920),
 * Major Henryk Wieckowski (1920),
 * Captain Tadeusz Muszynski (1920),
 * Colonel Marian Steczkowski (1920–1923),
 * Colonel Karol Weiss de Helmenau (1923),
 * Colonel Aleksander Myszkowski (1923 -1931),
 * Colonel Stefan Broniowski (1931–1936),
 * Colonel Stefan Leukos-Kowalski (1936–1939),
 * Colonel Rudolf Matuszek (1939)

Symbols
The flag of the regiment was funded by the residents of the counties of Tarnow, Dabrowa Tarnowska and Brzesko. It was presented to the unit by President Ignacy Moscicki in Tarnow, on May 29, 1927.

The badge, approved in August 1930, was in the shape of the cross, with the coat of arms of Tarnow in the middle, and the number 16, together with the names of the Polish-Soviet War battles: DAWIDOW KRASNE MUROWA.