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Polska
medycyna integracyjna
Fundamentalnie
zakorzeniona w polskiej
kulturze, sztuka i nauka
utrzymywania i przywracania zdrowia przez zapobieganie chorobie i jej
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Polish
Integrative Medicine
Fundamentally
rooted in Polish culture, the art and science of maintaining and
restoring
health by prevention and treatment of illness, with respect for
physical, moral
and psychological integrity of the human person.
Wiedza
naukowa zajmująca się
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oddziaływania czynnika szkodliwego na człowieka, do których należy
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szkodliwy występujący w pojedynkę lub wespół z innymi, wzajemnie
potęgującymi niepożądane oddziaływanie na zdrowie. W noksologii za
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"nic nie dzieje się bez przyczyny".
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Epidemiologia
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systemem
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It is Europe that is sick, all
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POLAND, PART 2
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND
BY NEAL ASCHERSON
PART 2
PART
1
PART
3
PART
4
|
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND
BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.,
New York 1988
http://www.halat.pl/poland.html
|
 |
 |
This web page is to be viewed in
Central European Windows-1250
Character Set |
The Polish state was founded in 966. It was in the tenth
century that tribal groups all over eastern Europe began to settle and
consolidate into relatively stable kingdoms. One of these groups, the Polane,
established its area of control in 'Great Poland' (the lands around Poznań),
and under King Mieszko I extended its inf1uence as far as the mouths of
the Vistula on the Baltic Sea, where the city of Gdańsk now stands. Mieszko's
acceptance of the western form of Christianity in 966 is held to mark the
origins of the Polish state. The Piast dynasty, which he founded, ruled
until 1138.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
 |
Mieszko I (c. 922-992)
the first historic ruler of Poland,
founder of the Piast dynasty. He united several western Slavonic tribes
under his sway and consolidated his power by marrying the Bohemian princess,
Dobrava, and converting to Christianity in 966. As a result, the Polish
state was brought into the European political system and established relations
with the greatest powers of that period, the papacy and the empire. After
Dobrava's death, Mieszko married Oda, the daughter of Margrave Dietrich.
He conducted wars with the Eastern March and Bohemia. On his death, he
divided his state among his first born, Boleslaus, and his sons by Oda. |
|
GREATEST
VICTORIES
Cedynia, June 24, 972 (During
the first Polish-German war)
Gero's successor, Margrave Hodo
crosses Oder to battle Mieszko. Poles had between 3,000-4,000 men, mostly
infantry and pancerni cavalry. Germans had mostly heavy cavalry forces.
In the first phase elements of the Polish cavalry attacked lead formations
of German cavalry, the Germans slowly taking the advantage. This forced
the Poles to retreat closer to a little town called Cedynia. The actual
'retreat', wasn't at all surprising, it was a calculated move. The Polish
cavalry lead the charging German forces into a trap, under the command
of the brother of Mieszko - Czcibor. The German column was then attacked
from almost all sides. The Germans were forced to retreat in the only direction
they could - right into a swamp. Here they were cornered and cut to pieces.
German losses were significant. Thietmar claims that most of the best knights
were killed, apart from Hodo and Zygrfyd. The success of this battle allowed
the continued maintaining of Polish control of eastern Pommerania. Otto
I after hearing of the unprovoked attack on the Poles seriously reprimanded
Hodo. Otto II however had stronger claims on Poland, in 979 another German
invasion of Poland was organized. Again the Germans were defeated. Poles
again drive out the Germans, taking a number of missionary fortresses
and destroying Hamburg.
|
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Boleslaus the Brave (c.
967-1025)
the first son of Mieszko I and the
Bohemian princess Dobrava. After his father's death, he banished Mieszko's
second wife Oda and her sons, and reunited the state. In his attempts at
winning the royal crown for himself, he developed contacts with papacy
and the empire. Thanks to his efforts, Bishop Adalbert, murdered by the
pagan Prussians, was canonised in 999 and the first Polish metropolis (archbishopric)
was established at Gniezno, the capital of the country, in 1000. The same
year he welcomed in Gniezno the emperor Otto III, an event of considerable
political importance. In the wars he fought in the west and the east, he
extended his rule to Milsko and Lusatia along the Elbe and the group of
strongholds called Grody Czerwienskie in Rus. He had himself crowned king
of Poland in 1025, shortly before his death |
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GREATEST
VICTORIES
Bug River, July 22, 1018
Chrobry defeats Jaroslav at the
Bug river. Pursues Jaroslav to Kiev, besieges, and wins. Establishes
border at the Bug River. Legendary event - Notching of the Szczerbiec (Coronation
Sword of Poland) on the Golden Gate of Kiev. August 14- Places son-in-law
Sviatopolk on throne. Boleslaw sends 'Proclamation of Triumphant Peace
and Friendship' to Roman and Byzantine emperors. Chrobry dismisses German,
Hungarian, and Pecheneg allies, but stays in Kiev too long and makes Sviatopolk
nervous. Chrobry withdraws in good order, retaking Grody Czerwienskie on
the way home. |
 |
Mieszko II (990-1034)
became king under the will of his
father, Boleslaus the Brave, who also arranged his marriage to Richeza
(Ryksa) of Lorraine, the emperor Otto III's niece, in 1013. His brothers,
the elder Bezprym and the younger Otto, opposed the father's decision and
in their struggle against Mieszko sought support of a German-Rus coalition.
Under Mieszko II's rule, Bohemia captured Moravia, Germany occupied Lusatia,
Denmark entered Pomerania, and Rus recovered Grody Czerwienskie. Richeza
secretly left Poland, taking with her to Germany the royal insignia. The
young Polish state was collapsing. In 1033, Mieszko recognised the suzerainty
of the emperor and resigned from the crown and the royal title. His death
was followed by a civil war. Mieszko had one son, Casimir, and two daughters |
 |
Casimir the Restorer (1016-1058)
failed to take full control of the
country which had slipped towards anarchy after the death of Mieszko II,
and in 1037 was exiled by the rebellious nobles. Soon after, Prince Bretislav
of Bohemia invaded Poland, sacked Poznan and Gniezno, stole the relics
of Adalbert, the patron saint of Poland, and then captured Silesia. In
these dramatic circumstances, Casimir's return encountered no opposition
from the local nobles, and the prince proceeded to reconstruct the state
and restore its economy and civilization. He regained Silesia and incorporated
Mazovia. Since Great Poland and its oldest towns, Poznan and Gniezno, were
in ruins, he moved his capital to Cracow. |
 |
Boleslaus the Bold (1039-1081)
the eldest son of Casimir the Restorer,
obtained the royal title in 1076, after 18 years of rule as a prince, thanks
to his support of the pope in the latter's dispute with the emperor Henry
IV. Papal legates restored the metropolis of Gniezno and established a
new bishopric (next to the old ones of Poznan, Wroclaw and Cracow) in Plock.
Boleslaus conducted many wars and intervened in dynastic conflicts in Hungary
and Rus. His strong-arm rule provoked opposition among the nobles, including
the bishop of Cracow, Stanislaw of Szczepanow. The bishop was put to death
for treason, which caused a revolt by the nobles. Boleslaus was excommunicated
and in 1079 he had to abandon the throne and seek refuge in Hungary, where
he died several years later |
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Ladislaus Herman (1079-1102)
son of Casimir the Restorer, was
asked by the nobles to ascend the throne in Cracow after Boleslaus the
Bold's flight. He married the emperor's daughter. His policy was based
on alliances with the Germans and Bohemians, and the recognition of the
latter's claims to Silesia. A weak ruler, he let the real power slip into
the hands of the voivode Sieciech. The latter's growing influence was opposed
by the nobles, who supported Ladislaus Herman's sons, first Zbigniew, and
then Boleslaus. In 1097, internal disorders resulted in the division of
the country between Zbigniew and his younger brother, Boleslaus the Wrymouthed.
Ladislaus Herman recognised the suzerainty of the empire and therefore
never crowned himself king. |
 |
Boleslaus the Wrymouthed
(1085-1138)
after his father's death, drove
his elder brother, Zbigniew, out of the country. His influence grew as
he made new conquests and expanded the territory of his realm. The dramatic
war against the emperor Henry V ended in the latter's defeat at the battle
of Psie Pole near Wroclaw. Boleslaus' conquest of Pomerania was accompanied
by missionary work. He captured Gdansk Pomerania and won suzerainty over
Szczecin Pomerania. Unfortunately, he undid his enormous successes when
in his political testament he divided the state among his three adult sons,
although he also established the institution of the sovereign, or senior,
prince. This was the beginning of the period of feudal disintegration,
which lasted almost two hundred years. |
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GREATEST
VICTORIES
Glogow & Psie Pole (Dogs'
Field) 1109 (During the 3rd Polish-German war)
Germans again invade under the command
of Henry V, in 1109 with around 10,000 men. Henry V moves into Poland but
is unable to take Bytom, a massive Polish fortress. He then moves onto
Glogow where another large Polish garrison awaited him. He demanded the
capitulation of the garrison but it was refused. Boleslaw at the time was
200 km from Glogow during this time battling the Pommerians, it was imperative
that he be given enough time to come to the aid of Glowgow. In 14 days
he managed to arrive in the vicinity of the siege. Continued German assaults
on the fortress came to no good, giving the Germans high casualties. Henryk
V was forced to retreat with his army back west after this unsuccessful
siege. After Henry V left Glogow he moved south onto Wroclaw. In an open
field battle, Boleslaw defeated him again. The battle has a legendary name.
The corpses of the dead Germans were left on the field of battle and therefore
the wild dogs of the region took advantage of a free feed, hence the name
'Dog's field'
|
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce I.
Zaprowadzenie chrześcijaństwa R.P. 965.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce II.
Koronacja pierwszego króla R.P. 1001.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce II. Fragment.
Na pierwszym planie: Radzim-Gaudenty, brat św. Wojciecha,
pierwszy arcybiskup gnieźnieński od roku 1000; Bolesław Chrobry (klęczy);
Otto III, król niemiecki 983, cesarz rzymski 996. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce III.
Przyjęcie Żydów R.P. 1096.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce III. Fragment.
Scena pod katedrą płocką. Z prawej strony Bolesław III
Krzywousty, za nim najstarszy jego brat Zbigniew. Ich ojciec, książę Władysław
Herman, jest niewidoczny na tym fragmencie obrazu. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce IV. W Łęczycy
pierwszy sejm. Spisanie praw. Ukrócenie rozbojów. R.P. 1182.
1888. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Wojciech Gerson: Kazimierz Odnowiciel wracający do Polski.
1887. Olej na płótnie. 231 x 290 cm.
Muzeum Narodowe, Wrocław. |
Jan Matejko: Zabójstwo św. Stanisława.
1892. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Pomorza Środkowego w Słupsku. |
In the thirteenth century, Poland began to suffer the
foreign invasions and encroachments which have plagued the nation ever
since. Two Mongol hosts swept in from the east, devastating the land and
slaughtering the Polish armies which tried to halt them. Near the end of
the century, the German crusading order of the Teutonic Knights conquered
eastern Prussia, a region inhabited at the time by pagan peoples of Baltic
origin, which was beyond the limits of Polish control. This was an aspect
of the great colonising movement of Germans towards the east; Poland benefited
in many ways from this movement, which brought her immigrant craftsmen
and scholars and led to the foundation of new villages and town settlements
under German law. There was nothing peaceful about the Teutonic Knights,
who were soon in conf1ict with the Poles along the Baltic coast. But Poland
continued to develop as a remarkably multinational structure, especially
in the towns, a trend which was further advanced in the brilliant reign
of Casimir the Great (1333-70). Casimir gave Poland its first written laws,
rebuilt Kraków into a magnificent capital and - an act with great consequences
- welcomed into Poland thousands of Jews fleeing from persecution in the
Rhineland.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
 |
Ladislaus the Exile (1105-1159)
the eldest son of Boleslaus the
Wrymouthed and under the latter's will the first sovereign prince. In addition
to his hereditary province of Silesia, he took over the senior's province,
together with Cracow and Gniezno. He sought allies in his efforts to reunify
the country. In 1146, he won the support of the emperor Conrad III and
turned against his brothers, but was defeated and banished. He sought refuge
in Germany. In 1157, he supported the emperor Frederick Barbarossa's expedition
against Poland, but he never recovered the throne of the senior prince.
He was the first of the Silesian Piast rulers |
 |
Boleslaus the Curly (1125-1173)
received, under Boleslaus the Wrymouthed's
will, the principalities of Mazovia and Kuyavia and following the banishment
of his elder brother, Ladislaus, ascended the Cracow throne as the senior
prince. He had to fight to keep this position since Ladislaus made efforts
to win back the throne with the support of the papacy and the German states.
In 1148, the papal legate Guido came to Poland with the mission of persuading
the provincial princes to recognise the suzerainty of the exiled Ladislaus.
In 1157, Boleslaus was defeated by the emperor Frederick Barbarossa and
forced to pay homage and a high contribution. In the event, Ladislaus did
not return to Cracow, but Boleslaus had to hand over Silesia to his sons
in 1163. Under his rule, Poland lost Pomerania |
 |
Mieszko the Old (1126-1202)
the prince of Great Poland under
his father's will, became senior prince and ascended the Cracow throne
after the death of his brother, Boleslaus the Curly. His attempts at strengthening
his authority provoked dissatisfaction among the nobles, and then an open
revolt, as a result of which in 1177 the Cracow province was seized by
Casimir the Just. Mieszko did not give up his position easily and strove
to regain the throne. His efforts succeeded when for several he was allowed
to rule on behalf of the minor Leszek the White, the son of Casimir the
Just |
 |
Casimir the Just (1138-1194)
the youngest son of Boleslaus the
Wrymouthed, born probably after his father's death, which is why he was
not assigned a hereditary province in the will. He succeeded to the province
of Sandomierz only after the death of his brother, Henry. In 1177, in the
wake of a revolt by the nobles, he became senior prince in Cracow, and
in 1186, he took over the principalities of Mazovia and Kuyavia. He sought
Church support and therefore at the congress at Leczyca in 1180, he bestowed
various privileges on the Polish Church. In exchange, he was promised the
Cracow province as his hereditary principality. Following his sudden death,
war broke out for the Cracow throne and lasted eight years. |
 |
Ladislaus Spindleshanks
(c. 1165-1231)
the son of Mieszko the Old, who
was the prince of Gniezno and Poznan, ascended the throne after his father's
death. However the majority of the nobles supported the prince of Sandomierz,
Leszek the White, the son of Casimir the Just. Ladislaus was exiled from
Cracow, and Leszek assumed power in the senior principality. Ladislaus
did not give up his efforts to regain the throne and sought support in
Great Poland. He achieved his aim shortly after Leszek's death, but was
again exiled, this time by Prince Conrad of Mazovia, who claimed the throne
as the brother of Leszek the White. After this defeat, Ladislaus also lost
Great Poland. He sought refuge in Silesia, where in his last will he bequeathed
his province to his host, Prince Henry the Bearded |
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Leszek the White (c. 1186-1227)
the prince of Sandomierz, and the
son of Casimir the Just. After his father's death, Leszek claimed the senior
province of Cracow, having as his main rival at first Mieszko the Old,
Casimir's brother. He eventually ascended the throne in 1202. He made efforts
to capture Halich Rus, also claimed by Hungary, but failed. He died in
tragic circumstances at Gasawa in Pomerania, where he held a meeting with
Ladislaus Spindleshanks and Henry the Bearded, when they were unexpectedly
attacked by Swietopelk, prince of Gdansk Pomerania |
 |
Henry the Bearded (1163-1238)
the first representative of the
line of the Silesian Piasts on the Cracow throne. He paid much attention
to the country's economic expansion, supported the foundation of new towns
and villages, the development of mining, and monetary reform. he was the
prince of Wroclaw, and in 1228-29 and from 1234 till his death the ruler
of the senior province. He worked towards the reunification of Poland,
which provoked a sharp conflict with Conrad of Mazovia, who had earlier
banished Ladislaus Spindleshanks from Cracow. Under the will of the latter,
Henry the Bearded took over part of Great Poland, but he never attained
his main aim of unifying the Polish state. His son, Henry the Pious, was
killed in 1241 in the battle of Legnica during the first Mongol invasion
which threatened the West. |
 |
Boleslaus the Bashful,
also called the Chaste (1226-1279)
prince of Sandomierz, the son of
Leszek the White, he assumed the throne in the Cracow province in 1243,
having defeated Conrad of Mazovia. He failed to achieve his aims since
the Sandomierz and Cracow provinces were invaded by the Mongols and attacked
by Rus. In his foreign policy he relied on an alliance with Hungary, strengthened
by his marriage with Kinga (Kunegunda), the daughter of the Hungarian king,
Bela IV. He died leaving no heir |
 |
Leszek the Black (1241-1288)
the son of the prince of Kuyavia
and Sieradz, and the brother of Ladislaus the Short, he inherited the Cracow
throne from Boleslaus the Bashful. He took power in peaceful circumstances,
with no opposition. In his efforts to reunify the country, Leszek the Black
looked to the towns for support and quelled a revolt by the lords. A year
before his death, the Mongols invaded Poland for the third time and Leszek
fled to Hungary. The Mongols approached the walls of Cracow but failed
to capture the city. Leszek's death opened a long period of struggle for
the Cracow throne
|
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Przemysl II (1257-1296)
the prince of Poznan, he followed
in the footsteps of many of his predecessors in efforts to reunify the
Polish state. In 1290, he conducted a treaty with the dying prince of Cracow,
Henry Probus, who had tried to get the crown from the pope. Under this
treaty, he took over the Cracow province, but was defeated by Wenceslas
II of Bohemia. He therefore concentrated his efforts on Great Poland, and
was supported by an outstanding politician, the archbishop of Gniezno,
Jakub Swinka. In 1294, Przemysl incorporated Gdansk Pomerania, and in 1295
had himself crowned king of Poland in the former Polish capital, Gniezno.
This first coronation after almost 200 years had a considerable significance
for the unification of the Polish state. A year later Przemysl was murdered,
probably by hostile agents of the March of Brandenburg |
 |
Wenceslas II (1271-1305)
the son of King Premysl Otokar II
of the Bohemian Premyslid dynasty. Crowned king of Bohemia in 1283, he
banished Przemysl II and became prince of Cracow in 1291. He crowned himself
king of Poland in Gniezno in 1300. In 1301, he took the Hungarian crown
on behalf of his only son. He strove to strengthen royal power, which was
a difficult task after the long period of feudal disintegration and unrest.
He introduced the office of starost with large powers. The opposition against
Wenceslas was headed by his future successor, Ladislaus the Short, who
was supported both by Pope Boniface VIII and King Robert of Hungary, the
latter anxious about Bohemia's growing influence |
 |
Ladislaus the Short (1260-1333)
the younger brother of Leszek the
Black, inherited the province of Kuyavia and had plans for unifying the
Polish territory. In 1296-1300, following a number of minor conquests,
he captured the senior province and the principality of Sandomierz. Prevented
by Wenceslas II from taking Cracow, he appealed for assistance to the Hungarians
who helped him conquer Little Poland. However he lost Gdansk Pomerania
to the Order of the Teutonic Knights. In 1311, he suppressed a rebellion
of the Cracow townspeople, and then captured Great Poland. He knew what
he wanted and how to get it. In 1320, he crowned himself in Cracow. This
date is regarded as the end of the feudal disintegration of Poland. |
|
GREATEST
VICTORIES
Plowce 1331 (During the first
Polish-Teutonic Order War)
An army of Germans, from the Teutonic
Order, 7,000 strong. Poles had 5,000 men. The aim of the Order was to take
Brzesc Kujawski with a lightning attack. When the Germans under Dietrich
Von Altenburg arrived near the blockaded peasant town of Plowce the Poles
immediately attacked in a frontal assault. A few seconds later, Polish
detachments hiding to the left of the city in a forest attacked themselves.
The Poles were victorious in this phase of the battle taking into captivity
56 brotherly knights and freeing many Polish captives. The second battle
was even more bloody with rear elements of the German formations alarmed
on hearing the generals sounds of battle from Plowce. The battle was exceedingly
bloody, both armies not giving up an inch. Reuss Von Plauen, commander
of the army and 40 knights were taking into captivity by the Poles. An
estimated 4,000 men (combined) were said to have fallen on the field of
the battle. 73 of these were brotherly knights of the Teutonic Order. About
1/2 of the dead were Poles. The Germans had to retreat back to Torun, their
losses climbing to 1/3rd dead of all their knights taking part in the whole
war. The Polish armies, seriously bloodied as well didn't follow the retreating
Germans. In actuality because of the casualties the battle is treated as
a draw, but is important as it was the first defeat of the Teutonic Order
in battle by any central / northern European army of that time. The Order
was considered to have the most powerful armies in all of Europe during
this time.
|
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Casimir the Great (1310-1370)
the son of Ladislaus the Short and
Poland's only king with the cognomen "Great". He completed the work of
the reunification of the state which under his rule more than doubled its
size. He attached great importance to economic development. He is said
to have found Poland built in wood and to have left it built in stone.
He contributed to the development of the towns and commerce, carried out
a monetary reform and codified the laws. In 1364, he established the Cracow
Academy, the first Polish university. In foreign policy, in spite of some
opposition, he was in favour of compromise, for he believed that Poland
needed internal stability and peace. The only point of his policy which
never changed was his alliance with Hungary. In 1339, in Visegrad, he concluded
a treaty with the Hungarian king, under which the throne was to pass to
the Angevins in the event of his childless death. He was the last ruler
from the great Piast dynasty. His death caused sadness and anxiety among
his subjects |
 |
Louis of Hungary (1326-1386)
king of Hungary, called in his own
country Lajos the Great. He was the son of Elizabeth, Casimir the Great's
sister, and became king of Poland under the treaty concluded at Visegrad
in 1339 by Casimir the Great and his father, Charles Robert, the founder
of the Hungarian Angevin dynasty. After his coronation in Poland in 1370,
he ruled in Cracow through the intermediary of his mother. He wanted the
Polish throne for one of his daughters and therefore tried to win over
the gentry by giving them extensive privileges, called the Kosice pact,
which became the foundation of the freedom and political power of the gentry
in Poland. In exchange, the gentry agreed to one of Louis' daughters ascending
the throne. He left Poland united, its borders almost the same as after
the death of Casimir the Great |
 |
Jadwiga of Angevin
(1374-1399)
the daughter of King Louis of Hungary.
In 1384, the Polish lords recognised her rights to the throne and had her
crowned queen of Poland, but they forced her to break off her engagement
to William of Habsburg, since they were in favour of a dynastic union with
Lithuania, which would strengthen both these countries threatened by the
Teutonic Knights. Under the treaty of Krevo concluded in 1385, the grand
duke of Lithuania, Ladislaus Jagiello, together with his brother and the
whole of Lithuania, were converted to the Latin rite and Ladislaus married
Jadwiga. Jadwiga enjoyed great popularity due to her readiness to sacrifice
her life to state aims. She renovated the Cracow Academy and bequeathed
to it her personal property |
Śląsk
www.halat.pl/silesia.html
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji
w Polsce VII.
Założenie Szkoły Głównej przeniesieniem
do
Krakowa ugruntowane. R. P. 1361-1399-1400.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa
- depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie.

Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce V.
Klęska lignicka. Odrodzenie. R. P. 1241.
1888. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa
- depozyt w Zamku Królewskim w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce V. Fragment.
Na marach lezą: Henryk Pobożny i Poppo von Ostern, wielki
mistrz Zakonu Krzyżackiego. Po prawej pod kolumną stoi Konrad I Mazowiecki.
Klęczy Kinga, córka króla Węgier, żona Bolesława Wstydliwego, beatyfikowana
1683. Krzyżem leży Jadwiga, żona Henryka Brodatego, księżna śląska. |
Wojciech Gerson: Władysław Łokietek na wygnaniu. |
Jan Matejko: Władysław Łokietek zrywający układy z Krzyżakami
w Brześciu Kujawskim.
1879. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie. |
Wojciech Gerson: Kazimierz Wielki i Żydzi.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce VI. Powtórne
zajęcie Rusi. Bogactwo i oświata. R.P. 1366.
1888. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
In the fourteenth century, the Kingdom of Poland entered
a historic partnership with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, a union which
transformed the whole extent and future of Poland. The Lithuanian union
began in 1385, when Jagiełło of Lithuania, prince of the only pagan nation
left in Europe, was persuaded to marry the eleven-year-old Princess Jadwiga
in Kraków. In return, he accepted baptism and ordered his people to adopt
Roman Catholic Christianity. He was elected king the following year by
the Polish nobility.
In outline, the Polish-Lithuanian union went through much
the same stages as the union between England and Scotland several centuries
later. It began as a union of crowns: Jagiełło and his successors were
at once kings of Poland and Grand Dukes of Lithuania, while the political
systems of the two nations remained separate. Finally , after nearly 200
years of association, the Union of Lublin in 1569 brought Poland and the
Grand Duchy together into a single 'Commonwealth' with one united parliament
(Sejm). The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was to last for over 200 years,
binding together races of entirely different origins and language. After
the Lublin Union, the Lithuanian nobility and gentry - originally a warrior
caste speaking an East Slav dialect but ruling a population of Baltic language
- became steadily 'polonised', reinforced by immigration and intermarriage
from Poland proper until by the late eighteenth century the landowning
and dominating class in Lithuania was 'plus polonais que les polonais'
- the main source of Romantic Polish patriotism.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
 |
Ladislaus Jagiello (1348-1434)
became grand duke of Lithuania in
1377 and was crowned king of Poland in 1396. He was the founder of the
Jagiellonian dynasty, and as king opened a new epoch in the history of
Poland, a central European country with close ties with western, Latin
civilisation. Through Ladislaus Jagiello, Poland entered into a union with
Lithuania, a country covering a vast territory between the Baltic and the
Black Sea, inhabited by a mixture of pagan Lithuanians and Orthodox Christians
in the Rus territory captured by Lithuania. This union served an important
political aim: of checking the expansion of the Order of the Teutonic Knights
who were defeated by the combined Polish-Lithuanian-Ruthenian forces at
Grunwald on 15 July 1410. But it also resulted in some serious problems
in the East, with which the kingdom not always could cope. In 1413, Ladislaus
Jagiello concluded a new union at Horodlo, which strengthened Poland's
links with Lithuania, and issued new privileges for the gentry in order
to secure the throne for his sons |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce VIII.
Chrzest Litwy. R.P. 1387.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa
- depozyt w Zamku Królewskim w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce VIII. Fragment.
Mnich franciszkanin błogosławiący biblią. Przed nim z
włócznią Skirgiełło Iwan, książę trocki i połocki oraz podparty pod boki
Witold Aleksander, książę grodzieński, wielki książę litewski 1401. |
The Jagiełło dynasty ruled Poland until just after the
Lublin Union. At the outset, especially, these were dangerous years. The
threat of the fanatical and aggressive Teutonic Knights had to be confronted.
At the great battle of Grunwald in 1410, the Order was
defeated by the combined Polish and Lithuanian armies. The Teutonic Knights
were not finally subdued until the Peace of Toruń over fifty years later,
but the breaking of their power allowed Poland to gain control of the Baltic
seaboard around the city of Gdańsk. By dazzling good fortune, the whole
length of the Vistula river, stretching from the fertile plains of central
and southern Poland to the seaport of Gdańsk at its mouth, had now returned
to Polish possession just as the growing populations of northern Europe
were looking for fresh supplies of grain. Through the 'Vistula grain trade',
Poland was to feed the soaring prosperity of western Europe in the Renaissance
as North America's prairie wheat was to feed the Industrial Revolution
in Europe three centuries later.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
|
GREATEST
VICTORIES
Battle of Tannenberg, July 15,
1410
also called BATTLE OF GRÜNFELDE,or
Grunwald , battle fought at Tannenberg (Polish: Stebark) in northeastern
Poland (formerly East Prussia) that was a major Polish-Lithuanian victory
over the Knights of the Teutonic Order. The battle marked the end of the
order's expansion along the southeastern coast of the Baltic Sea and the
beginning of the decline of its power.
Polish and Lithuanian forces proceeding
toward the order's stronghold, Marienburg, met its army between the villages
of Grünfelde (Polish: Grunwald) and Tannenberg. Though the order defeated
the Lithuanian contingent, the ranks of the Poles remained unbroken. (as
shown on diagram below, Polish force is in white. To the right in stage
one the Lithuanians have been broken and indeed the Germans made an attack
on the Polish King himself, however were routed by the Polish Royal Guard)
The Poles / Germans continued to fight, the Poles slowly gaining an advantage.
The Lithuanians had now reformed and had rejoined the battle. Eventually
the Germans were circled and broke. Polish and Lithuanian cavalry charged
as they ran capturing their tents and continuing the charge many km's past
the battle zone.
By the end of the 10-hour clash,
the order's forces had been crushed and its grand master, most of its commanders,
and 205/250 of its knights had been killed. About 8,000 dead + 2,000 taken
into captivity. Subsequently many Prussian castles controlled by the order
surrendered to the Polish-Lithuanian force, though Marienburg, which was
defended by Heinrich Reuss von Plauen, did not fall. It was one the most
strongly built and defended fortresses in the whole of Europe. By September
1410 the Polish-Lithuanian army withdrew.
Sources are wild on actual numbers
of this battle, though its safe to say Polish-Lithuanian armies were at
between 30,000 and 50,000 men, whilst the Germans had around 25,000. Whatever
the stats of this battle is considered to be the largest and bloodiest
of the medieval era in the whole of Europe.
|
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem
1878. Olej na płótnie. 426 x 987 cm.
Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Fragment - Witold,
wielki książę litewski. |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Fragment - Wielki
Mistrz i atakujący go wojownicy. |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Fragment - Skarbek
z Góry i Kazimierz książę szczeciński. |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Fragment - Jan Żiżka
z Trocnowa. |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Fragment - Zawisza
Czarny. |
 |
Ladislaus of Varna
(1424-1444)
crowned king of Poland in 1434,
and king of Hungary in 1440; the son of Ladislaus Jagiello and Sophia of
Holszany. Since he ascended the Polish throne at the age of ten, the country
was ruled in his name by Cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki. The accepting of
the Hungarian crown involved Ladislaus directly in a war with the
Turks, who were a threat to Hungary. Encouraged by the papal legate, the
young king set out against the Turks at the head of a small, poorly prepared
army. In the decisive battle fought at Varna on 10 November 1444, the anti-Turkish
forces were routed and Ladislaus slain. Ladislaus is one of the best known
rulers of medieval Poland. His defeat on the battlefield of Varna gave
rise to a legend about a young king who died in a war between two different
civilisations |
Jan Matejko: Bitwa pod Warną
(fragment)
1879. Olej na płótnie
Szépmüvészeti Muzeum, Budapeszt

| The Jagellonian dominions
expanded. They reached their maximum after 1490 when, for a brief period
and through dynastic marriages, not only Poland and Lithuania but the kingdoms
of Hungary and Bohemia owed allegiance to the Crown of the Jagiełłos. They
were the princes of almost all central and eastern Europe. Only the duchy
of Muscovy, far to the east, remained beyond their control, labouring to
unite the territories of what would become modern Russia. |
 |
Casimir Jagiellonian
(1427-1492)
the younger son of Ladislaus Jagiello
and Sophia of Holszany; grand duke of Lithuania, crowned king of Poland
in 1447. He restricted the powers of Cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki and the
latter's supporters among the nobles, who held sway during the reign of
his predecessor. He carried out an active dynastic policy: his son Ladislaus
became king of Bohemia in 1471 and succeeded to the Hungarian throne in
1490. In his efforts to strengthen royal authority, he sought supporters
among the knights and limited the influence of the nobles. Under the terms
of the treaty of Torun, which ended the so-called Thirteen Years' War with
the Teutonic Knights, he incorporated Royal Prussia, that is, the western
parts of the Teutonic Knights' state. After years of conflict, he finally
won the right to appoint bishops (who were members of the Royal Council).
His long reign contributes to economic and cultural development, and to
Poland becoming a European power. |
|
GREATEST
VICTORIES
Swiecino 1462
Fought during the 13 years war with
the Teutonic Order. The definitive battle that saw the Order reduced into
ruin and fall under the might of Polish overlordship. Polish army decides
to charge the German Garrison near Swiecino. Assault is successful, 1,000
Germans die, 70 are captured, 200 tabors are taken including all 15 artillery
pieces. Polish losses at 100 dead and 150 wounded. After this battle the
Order's defenses slowly cracked. In 1463 ships under the Polish insignia
of Elbing and Gdansk defeated a German flotilla at Zalewie Wislanym. Puck
fell in 1464, Now in 1465. In 1466 Starogard and Chojnice. |
Jan
Matejko: Zjazd królów Jagiellonów
z cesarzem Maksymilianem pod
Wiedniem.
1879. Olej na płótnie.
Własność prywatna w Wiedniu.

But the victory over the Teutonic Knights, which made
the Jagellonian kings mighty, also began the process of limiting their
royal power. The Polish nobility was seeking to entrench its rights against
the monarchy. Even before the Peace of Toruń in 1466, the nobles had struck
a bargain with the king, selling him their military support in the war
in return for privileges which included the establishment of provincial
and national assemblies. Here were the origins of the Polish parliament,
the Sejm, and the seeds of a 'noble democracy' which was to put bounds
on the power of the crown. But here, too, was the beginning of a fateful
segregation in society , lifting the aristocracy to the status of a class
so self-confident and powerful that it came to identify itself as 'the
nation'. The gentry - ranging from magnates with huge estates to petty
squires with only a patch of land, composed not only of Poles but of Lithuanians,
Germans and eventually a number of Jewish nobles - was 'the nation', while
the burghers of the towns and the peasantry on the land were merely subjects.
This was not as outrageous as it sounds. In much of Europe
at the time, a nation was defined as a series of 'estates': nobles, the
Church, the burghers and commoners, and so on. But there was always a large
mass of the poor 'below the line' who belonged to no 'estate' and were
not considered to be part of the political nation at all, even though they
usually formed a majority of the population. The Polish 'noble estate'
merely pulled the line upwards until it excluded from 'the nation' almost
everyone but its own members.
There was good and bad in this 'gentry power'. It meant
that the Commonwealth was a primitive and limited democracy, in which no
king could ever attain absolute control - a contrast to the grimly autocratic
systems soon to arise on either side of Poland in Prussia and Russia. The
gentry, perhaps ten per cent of the total population, enjoyed their 'golden
freedom' by developing a high-spirited, generous, often wild and hard-drinking
style of life; their proud impulsiveness and touchy independence have left
their mark on Polish behaviour to this day. On the other hand, the Commonwealth
was not only difficult to govern but - more importancly - almost impossible
to adapt to changing conditions.
The sixteenth century was Poland's 'Golden Age'. All through
the period, the privileges of the gentry continued to accumulate. They
had personal immunity against the law, freedom to follow any faith and
- from l496 - a monopoly on landholding; the burghers had to sell what
land they possessed. They acquired increasing power over the peasants on
their land, who were steadily reduced to the condition of serfs, forbidden
to leave the estate.
Here was a real divergence between the histories of eastern
and western Europe. In the west, rural slavery or serfdom was rapidly vanishing
by the late Middle Ages, parcly due to the shortage of labour caused by
plague, and was being replaced by wage labour. But in central and eastem
Europe - not only in Poland, but in the whole region from eastem Germany
to Russia, from the Baltic south to Hungary - serfdom became far more common
in the same period, and survived until the nineteenth century . The cause
seems to have been the increasing monopoly of political power by the noble
classes, reinforced by the new wealth of the great estates which exported
grain to the West.
In 1505, the nobles extorted from the Crown the Nihil
Novi (Nothing New) statute, a pledge that no new taxes or laws would be
applied without the consent of both chambers of the Sejm. In 1573, when
the last of the Jagiełło kings died, the nobility finally secured the right
to elect the monarch - not through their representatives in the Sejm but
at a vast, often chaotic, rally of the entire gentry at Warsaw.
In the sixteenth century , the Polish gentry - and not
just the bigger landowners - prospered as the rye and wheat from their
estates was floated down the Vistula on rafts and sold at Gdańsk to German,
Dutch and Scottish merchants. But this was an agricultural boom. The urban
development and the rise of a native middle class which was taking place
so rapidly in westem and northem Europe at this period was only stunted
in Poland. Especially in smaller towns, jealous local landowners controlled
trade and prices; serfdom meant that it was almost impossible for peasants
to move off the land, find work in towns and enter trade, and most commerce
stayed in the hands of Jews, Germans and Scots. Some of the money rubbed
off on the towns; cities like Kraków or Torun acquired magnificent buildings
and became centres of craftsmanship, high art and science. But no coherent
middle class emerged in Poland, as it did in the West, to challenge the
old landed nobility for economic and political influence.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
 |
John Albert (1459-1501)
the son of Casimir Jagiellonian,
crowned king in 1492. He reigned in Poland, while his brother Alexander
became the grand duke of Lithuania. He carried out reforms which strengthened
the position of the gentry. The Statute of Piotrkow of 1496 reserved higher
church positions for the gentry exclusively, barred the townspeople from
buying land, and restricted the peasants' freedom of movement. In foreign
policy, John Albert concentrated on the Turkish problem and wished to improve
Poland's standing by assuming control over Danube principalities. In 1497,
he set out on an expedition against the Turks, which ended in his defeat. |
 |
Alexander Jagiellonian (1461-1506)
the son of Casimir Jagiellonian,
crowned grand duke of Lithuania in 1492 and king of Poland in 1501. At
the beginning of his reign, he issued the so-called Mielnik privileges,
by which the Senate under the monarch's chairmanship was granted the exclusive
right to take decisions on state matters. This caused sharp protests of
the gentry who well remembered Alexander's predecessors pro-gentry policy.
The gentry were against one person holding more than one dignity and in
favour of the participation of the lower chamber in government. This last
privilege was granted by the Constitution Nihil Novi, adopted by the Seym
in Radom in 1505. This meant that from then on no new law could be adopted
without the joint consent of the Senate and Deputies. This was the beginning
of the system called gentry democracy in Polish history. |
 |
Sigismund the Old
(1467-1548)
son of Casimir Jagiellonian, the
grand duke of Lithuania and king of Poland from 1506. He married Bona Sforza,
the duchess of Milan, who exerted a strong influence on the government
and who supported her husband in his efforts to strengthen royal authority.
Under Sigismund's reign, Renaissance spread in Poland, and the level of
eduction among the magnates and the gentry grew. Nicholas Copernicus worked
on his De revolutionibus orbium coelestium. The king corresponded with
Erasmus of Rotterdam. The townspeople became more active in the field of
literature. Discussion on the Reformation developed freely. The gentry
continued its struggle against the magnates and for restricting the Church's
privileges. The Polish language began to prevail in literature and diplomacy.
Sigismund incorporated Mazovia with Warsaw (the last province which remained
outside Poland) and accepted the tribute of Prince Albrecht Hohenzollern.
The state was powerful and no one threatened it. The golden age of the
Renaissance began. |
 |
Sigismund Augustus(1520-1572)
the son of Sigismund the Old and
Bona Sforza, crowned king of Poland and grand duke of Lithuania in 1529,
during his father's lifetime. He assumed power in 1548. He supported the
reformatory movement of the gentry. The result was the re-seizure of royal
lands and the setting up of a standing army. A supporter of tolerance,
he prevented persecution and religious wars, for, as he declared in the
Seym: "I am not the king of your consciences." He had no sons or daughters
to inherit the throne, therefore he strove to consolidate Poland's links
with Lithuania on the basis of a real union. He achieved this aim - the
Union of Lublin of 1569 - three years before his death. His romantic love
and marriage to Barbara Radziwillowna, and the latter's coronation was
in contravention of the dynastic interests and reasons of state. The king
built a large fleet and incorporated Livonia into the Polish-Lithuanian
state. He was a Renaissance man, a well educated protector of science and
learning which flourished under his reign |
Jan Matejko: Zawieszenie dzwonu Zygmunta na wieży katedry
w roku 1521 w Krakowie.
1874. Olej na desce. 94 x 189 cm.
Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Hołd pruski.
1882. Olej na płótnie. 388 x 875 cm.
Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie - Sukiennice |
Jan Matejko: Śmierć Zygmunta Augusta w Knyszynie.
1886. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Muzeum Okręgowym
w Toruniu. |
Jan Matejko: Astronom Kopernik, czyli rozmowa z Bogiem.
1872, olej na płótnie, 221 x 315 cm.
Muzeum Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, Kraków. |
The sixteenth-century Reformation came to Poland mostly
from Bohemia. Today, the overwhelming mass of Poles in almost all layers
of society are fervently Catholic, and allegiance to the Roman Catholic
faith - and loyalty to the Vatican - is commonly regarded as an integral
part of Polish patriotism. But this was not always so. Lutheranism, Calvinism
and other Protestant faiths made rapid headway in Poland, while some forty
per cent of the total population of the Commonwealth, mostly in the Lithuanian
lands, already belonged to the Orthodox Church. The Reformation scarcely
affected the mass of the Polish peasantry, who held to their old Catholic
faith, but Lutheranism was strong in the towns, especially among the Germans,
and a part of the nobility adopted Calvinism: more, perhaps, as a way of
outflanking and reducing the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Catholic
church than out of passionate conviction.
THE STRUGGLES FOR POLAND BY NEAL ASCHERSON
excerpts of the
First American Edition
Random House Inc.
New York 1988
|
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji
w Polsce X. Fragment.
Centralną postacią jest Jan
Kochanowski, obok z prawej - Mikołaj Rej.
Niżej po lewej siedzi Samuel
Maciejewski, biskup krakowski, kanclerz wielki koronny.
Na górze, po prawej Stanisław
Hozjusz, biskup warmiński,
kardynał, przywódca polskiego
Kościoła kontrreformacyjnego.

Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce IX. Wpływ Uniwersytetu
na kraj w wieku XV. Nowe prądy. Husytyzm i Humanizm.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce X. Złoty wiek
literatury w XVI w. Reformacja. Przewaga katolicyzmu.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce XI. Potęga Rzeczypospolitej
u zenitu. Złota wolność. Elekcja. R.P. 1573.
1889. Olej na płótnie.
Muzeum Narodowe, Warszawa - depozyt w Zamku Królewskim
w Warszawie. |
Jan Matejko: Dzieje cywilizacji w Polsce XI. Fragment.
Z lewej Jan Zamojski, sekretarz królewski i starosta
bełski, późniejszy kanclerz i wielki hetman koronny. Po prawej szablą migający
Jan Tomasz Drohojewski, referendarz koronny. |
END OF PART 2
PART
1
PART
3
PART
4
UNIVERSAL
DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS
(in English, French, Russian,
and Polish)
ALPHABETIC
INDEX OF CONTENTS
OF HALAT.PL DOMAIN WEB PAGES
|