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A BRIEF HISTORY OF POLAND

Copyright 1994 - AngloPol Corporation -- Distributed by the Polonia Media Network

Part 7

END OF EXPANSION --
CRISIS OF THE SYSTEM

As early as the end of the 16th century perils appeared for the Republic, which continued to grow throughout the 17th century.

Regional Coats of ArmsThe international balance of forces was not favorable for Poland and Lithuania. Sweden, whose power was growing, began struggling to rule the Baltic and its coast. That led to a clash with Poland.
Russia planned to conquer all lands inhabited by peoples professing the Orthodox faith. That placed her in conflict with Lithuania and the Crown. Having subjugated Hungary, Turkey faced, among others, the southern territories of the Republic, which also fell victim to the Tartar's plundering incursions. The Hapsburgs, vying with the Republic for domination over central Europe, but weakened by the 30-year war, were not credible allies.

At the turn of the 17th century the prosperous Republic still had enough resources and strength to stave off those dangers and even to try and continue expansion.

During the long rule of Sigismund III (1587-1632) of the Swedish Vasa dynasty, the growth in economy and reform-oriented aspirations of the gentry was diminishing. On the other hand, fears on the part of the gentry of the royal absolutism were growing. The monarch's attempts in that direction were blocked by an armed mutiny of the noblemen, called the Zebrzydowski rebellion.

16th Century HetmanA group of magnates, interested in expansion in the East, tried to take advantage of the chaos in the Grand Duchy of Moscow that ensued from the extinction of the Rurykhovich dynasty. That drew Poland into a war with Russia. Following a crucial victory scored by Hetman Stanislaw Zolkiewski at Kluszyn (1610), the Polish army entered Moscow. That, however, was a short-lived success, as opposition to foreign rule increased in Russia. Mikhail Romanov was elected tsar, giving rise to a new dynasty in Russia. The truce of 1619 left Poland with Smolensk, which was reaffirmed by the peace treaty of 1634 concluded in Polanowo.

In the war against Turkey (1620-1621), troops of Cossacks distinguished themselves on the Polish side. They were people who founded a sort of a republic of warriors in the lower stretch of the Dnieper River (Zaporozhe). The far-off borderland of the Ukraine, the so-called Wild Fields, attracted fugitive peasants and pauperized noblemen. They were courageous people, independent and very often adventurers. They made excellent soldiers. A large part of their incomes were war spoils. The state authority was not in a position to control the Cossacks.

17th Century CourtyardThe year 1648 saw a serious mutiny by the Cossacks, led by Bohdan Chmielnicki. That mutiny was joined by Ukrainian peasants and quickly transformed into a social and national uprising against Polish rule. The uprising rocked the foundations of the Republic, whose ruling circles did not manage to resolve the problem in the spirit of the Polish-Lithuanian solutions, refusing to grant the Ukraine the rights of a third member of the Republic. The interests of the magnates stood in the way, as their spheres of influence and wealth laid directly in Ukraine. Religious and ethnic conflicts compounded the problem.

King John Casimir (1648-1668) tied to negotiate with Bohdan Chmielnicki, whose army approached Lwow, having devastated the conquered lands and killed noblemen in its path. In towns, the rebel army was murdering Jews. The Cossacks wavered about their policy. They concluded alliances with Turkey, Poland or Russia, depending on the situation.

In 1654, during the so-called Pereyaslav Council, the Cossacks committed themselves to accept the protection of Moscow. Two Russian armies then cut deep into the weakened Republic. In that extremely dangerous situation, the Republic was invaded by the Swedes (1655). Within several months, Swedish troops occupied the majority of Polish territory (apart from that which was already occupied by the Russian troops.) Warsaw fell, as did Krakow, which had been defended by Stefan Czarniecki. Only Gdansk held out against the Swedes. King John Casimir fled to Silesia.

War With SwedenThe sudden defeat of the Republic so much infringed upon the balance of forces in central-eastern and in northern Europe that Poland received the assistance of the Empire, and Russia ended its hostilities.

In the Republic itself, which the Swedes were treating like a spoil of war, plundering it cruelly, armed resistance was growing. Noblemen, burghers and, for the first time on such a scale, peasants, organized guerrilla units. In November and December, the Swedes besieged Jasna Gora, the Pauline Monastery at Czestochowa and national Shrine of the Holy Virgin Mary. The successful defense of the Shrine was a call to mount an even greater resistance. King John Casimir returned to Poland, but the greatest fame as military commander was won by Stefan Czarniecki.

The Swedes were driven from Poland. In May 1660, the Republic and Sweden signed a peace treaty at Oliwa, restoring the prewar statu quo. The Cossacks were also defeated. By virtue of the truce of Andruszow (1667), Russia won Smolensk, the Ukraine (left-bank) and, for two years, Kiev. Those terms were re-affirmed by a peace treaty of 1686 which left Kiev to Russia.

Polish HussarThe Republic also had to fight Turkey (1672-1673) and concluded an alliance with the Habsburgs. When in 1683 a powerful Turkish army lay siege to Vienna, the imperial capital was relieved, thanks to Polish assistance. The united allied armies were under the command of King John III Sobieski (1674-1696).

The majority of wars in the latter part of the 17th century was fought on Poland's and Lithuania's territory. The Republic repelled the invasions with utmost effort. It emerged from those wars, however, horribly ruined and depopulated. The wars were accompanied by plagues and famine. In effect, the population, which before 1645 amounted to some 10,000,000 dwindled to 6,000,000 at the end of the century. Exports shrank, currency lost in value and economic reconstruction was slow.

The following video is without narration, but it
briefly depicts Poland's famed winged hussars
at the Battle of Vienna

 

Dragging Cannon to WarThe crisis also swept through the political organization of the state. The position of the gentry was weakened, as a result of its impoverishment and loss of independence. Magnates gained an edge by turning many noblemen into their clientele. The Sejm was weakened through the application of liberum veto. Generally, the Sejm Constitutions had been adopted with the consent of all deputies, but until the middle of the 17th century the minority yielded to the majority. In 1652, for the first time ever, it was declared that the imposition of will of the majority upon even one dissenting deputy would be tantamount to the violation of freedoms. So, the Sejm could be rendered powerless to act by the opposition of only one deputy. Quickly, the liberum veto became an instrument of the competing groups of magnates, and later for foreign influence. As the Sejm was hamstrung that way, its role was taken
over by local sejms. That resulted in the decentralization of the state.

Polish tolerance, one of the pillars of the noble's democracy, declined. Counter-Reformation had already been supported by Sigismund III Vasa. As an ardent Catholic he had striven to subordinate the Orthodoxies living in the Republic to Rome. In 1696, the so-called Union of Brest was concluded, which founded the Eastern Rite of the Catholic Church (Uniate), recognizing papal authority. That divided the faithful in Ukraine into two camps.

The wars of the 17th century enhanced the religious feelings of the Catholic majority in the Republic. Those wars were waged against the neighbors of different religious rites--against Orthodox Russia, Protestant Sweden and Muslim Turkey. The opinion about Poland being the bulwark [antemurale] of Christianity became widely popular. Tolerance was still valid in the domain of the law, but it was trimmed down in daily life and customs.

A Magnate's CourtThe 17th century was the heyday of Baroque and of the specifically Polish culture of Sarmatism. A number of valuable and original works were created at that time, for instance the Baroque royal residence at Wilanow, the magnate residences at Lancut, Wisnicz, Zolkiew, Podhorce and the bishopric residence at Kielce. A unique style and type of Baroque developed in Wilno [now called Vilnius]. The Vasa's court in Warsaw was the center of painting (Dolabella), theater and opera (patronage of Ladislaus IV) and of science (patronage of Queen Louise Maria Gonzaga). The garments, weapons, decorations, way of life and views of Polish noblemen represented a unique synthesis of Baroque and eastern influence. The dramatic years of the wars produced many a diarist and memoirist (both noblemen and burghers.)

The 17th century also saw the bloom of poetry, both epic and patriotic, as well as lyrical and amatory. On the other hand, however, chaos and a poor economy brought a crisis in schooling and education at all levels.

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