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BLESSED BE THE PEACEFUL BECAUSE THEY WILL BE CALLED SONS OF GOD |
CHAPTER
I
ORIGIN
AND EARLY HISTORY
THE
ERA OF BEGINNINGS, 962-1386
I.
962-1139
When the light of history first dawned
upon them, the Slav ancestors of the Polish people were dwelling in the valley
of the Vistula. How they came there and where they came from are largely
matters of conjecture. The real history of Poland in any proper sense begins
with the tenth century. For the years before that date we have no reliable
historical material, though legends abound as to the origin and early life of
the Polish state.
From
what scanty material we have it seems probable that the Slavs, an Indo-European
people coming from Asia—we do not know when or why—were settled, about the
second century A.D., on the Danube, were driven thence by some stronger
people, perhaps the Romans, and were later at home for some centuries on the
slopes and plateaus of the Carpathians. Once again they were driven out, this
time by the Avars in the seventh century, and, fleeing north, south, and west
before their conquerors, scattered themselves all over central and southwestern
Europe. One large group, pushing westward, were stopped by the Germans on the
Elbe, which thus marked their western boundary. They are known as the Western
Slavs, for obvious reasons, and they occupied the territory between the Elbe
and the Bug, the Baltic, and the Carpathians. The Poles were part of this
group, while the Russians, or Eastern Slavs, their age-long foes, formed a
group just next them on the east, in the valleys of the Dnieper and its
tributaries.
In
the ninth century the invasion of another Asiatic people, the Magyars, and
their permanent settlement on the plains of Hungary, thrust a wedge right into
Slavdom, effectively separated the Slavs of the north and those of the south,
and resulted in an entirely separate historical development of the two regions.
It is only in the last two centuries that the expansion of Russia to the south
and the revival of a strong race-consciousness, as shown in the Pan-Slavic
movement, have brought the Southern Slavs once more into contact with their
brethren of the north.
The
Eastern Slavs, or the Russians, settled along the upper reaches of the Dnieper,
very early opened up a vigorous trade with the Scandinavians to the north of
them, and later pushed down the river to the Black Sea and traded with
Constantinople. The great barren steppe or prairie bordering the Black Sea on
the north, which formed Russia’s southeastern boundary, was a “No Man’s Land,”
a great highway along which, through the ages, the Asiatic peoples followed one
another in long procession to the west, and by which they returned east again.
Over it had wandered, from time immemorial, nomads of all races and countries,
and Russian trade needed constant protection against these peoples, all fiercer
and more warlike than themselves. This protection was supplied by the
Varangians, a band of Norsemen, who, under the leadership of their chief,
Rurik, came into the Dnieper Valley in the ninth century, and, conquering the
Slav people already there, built up the first Russian state, with its capital
at Kiev.
The
evidence for the origin of the Polish state is not so clear. The Western Slavs,
spread over the country between the Elbe and the Bug, lived probably in
separate, half-nomadic tribal groups until pressure from the Germans on the
west obliged them to combine for defense. The Poles, whose name signifies
“Plain-dwellers” or “Lowlanders,” occupied the region of the Wartha, and according to the legends, it was a Polish
peasant, Piast, who, drawing the tribes together,
founded the Polish state and established a dynasty that ruled in Poland for
five hundred years. The Poles have always claimed to be the purest of Slav
peoples, but it is probable that in Poland as in Russia there was a strong
Norse element. The Vikings were all along the Baltic seaboard at this time,
sailing up the rivers, plundering and taking possession of the lands as they
pleased, and there is at least indirect evidence of their penetration by way
of the rivers into the Polish plain.
In
the tenth century, when Duke Mieczyslaw I, the
first non-legendary ruler of Poland, supposedly the great-grandson of Piast, emerges into history, his state comprised the
greater part of the Slav tribes east of the Oder, west of the Bug, north of the
Carpathians, and south of the Netze River. Though at
different times in succeeding centuries the Polish state extended its rule far
to the east and to the west of these lines, yet it is the territory within them
that is properly Poland. Whenever there has been a Polish state this has been
its nucleus, and, independently of political conditions, this territory has
remained the permanent home of the Polish race. Here, in spite of all efforts
at Russification and Germanization, the people are today, as always,
predominantly Polish. Outside these lines this is not true. The Carpathians
form a natural boundary to the south, beyond which the Poles never penetrated,
and the marshes north of the Netze and in Masovia made advance in this direction difficult, too
difficult to achieve in the face of steady German opposition. To the east and
to the west, however, the land lies open and unprotected and has lured the
Poles to conquest when they were strong, exposed them to German and Russian
aggression when they were weak, and resulted in a constant shifting of their
eastern and western frontiers.
In
the tenth century the Germans were engaged in a great forward movement on
their eastern frontier. As elsewhere, when directed against heathen people,
this was a crusading as well as a conquering and colonizing movement.
Christian missionaries preceded and accompanied the Imperial armies, and the
men of the armies themselves were also soldiers of the Cross, who, sword in
hand, compelled their heathen brethren to believe and be baptized, and thus
save their lives as well as their souls.
It
was to oppose this advancing Germandom and
Christendom that the union of the Poles into a single state had come about, but
when Duke Mieczyslaw came to the head of the state, he found the odds against
him in the struggle. That the Germans had gained a real influence in the
country is seen by the fact that they had set up a bishopric at Gnesen, under
the Archbishop of Magdeburg, and that Mieczyslaw held some of his lands under Imperial
suzerainty. Unable to oppose both Germanism and Christianity, he became a
Christian in the hope of saving his state from absorption by the Germans.
Putting away his heathen wives, he married a Christian princess of Bohemia, the
Princess Dobrawa, and set to work to bring his people
to his new faith. As a good deal of preliminary work had probably already been
done, and as Mieczyslaw had the help of Jordan, German Bishop of Gnesen, and
of St. Adalbert, Bishop of Prague, Poland soon became a Christian state, at
least outwardly.
With
this same aim of maintaining the independence of Poland, the Duke made friends
with the Germans. After the death of Dobrawa he
married a German wife, and even took sides with the Empire against the Slavs
west of the Oder. In return, in the latter part of his reign, he received
German help in a war against Bohemian encroachment on his territories. At his
death Poland had emerged from its heathen obscurity, and had become a
recognized part of the Western Christian world. This is quaintly symbolized in
the old legend which made Mieczyslaw blind until his seventh year, when he
received full sight.
According
to the Slavonic custom, Mieczyslaw divided his lands among his sons. But the
eldest dreamed of a great, united Poland, and in order to realize his dream,
drove out his brothers and ruled alone over the whole kingdom, as Boleslaus I (992-1025). His dispossessed brothers roused
their neighbors against him, and he was obliged to fight on all his frontiers.
The wars which filled his reign, however, were not all defensive. He desired
to free Poland from all dependence on the Emperor, from whom as suzerain he
held his lands west of the Wartha, and also he
dreamed of conquering Bohemia and uniting it with Poland in a great Slav
Empire. He thought the amalgamation of the two peoples would be easy, on
account of the likeness of the two languages.
For
fifteen years he fought the combined forces of Bohemia and the Emperor Henry II
for these purposes, and in the end gained his freedom from Imperial control and
annexed the Bohemian provinces of Moravia, Silesia, and Cracow to his
territories. He was not able, however, to accomplish the union of Bohemia and
Poland. For a year, indeed, he held and ruled Bohemia, but he was not strong
enough to keep it without the Emperor’s sanction, and Henry would acknowledge
his claim only on conditions of Imperial dependence which Boleslaus refused to accept. When this plan failed, he made his
peace with the King of Bohemia, and tried to get him to unite with Poland in
forming a league of Slav states against the Germans. This also failed, but this
early attempt at Pan-Slavism shows that even in the eleventh century the sure
instinct of a great Polish leader recognized in Germany the abiding danger to
Slav independence, and saw in united opposition the only safety for Slavdom.
After
he had finished his western campaigns, Boleslaus made
an expedition into Russia, in order to replace on the throne of Kiev his
son-in-law, Sviatopolk, expelled by the sons of
Vladimir the Great. He was unable to accomplish it, however, as the country
was against Sviatopolk. Shortly before his death, Boleslaus took the title of “King,” which he was the first
of his line to bear.
From
the beginning of his reign, Boleslaus saw the
importance of having the support of the Church in his project of independence
from the Empire. He desired the independence of the Polish Church as at once a
step toward, and a guaranty of, the independence of the Polish state. He made
Gnesen a great shrine, by placing there the relics of St. Adalbert, the
martyred Bishop of Prague, which relics he bought from the Prussians, by whom
St. Adalbert had been murdered when he went among them to preach the Gospel.
Shortly after, in the year 1000, the Emperor Otto III paid a visit of piety to
the shrine of the saint, who was his old friend as well, and Boleslaus got him on this occasion to raise the See of
Gnesen to metropolitan rank, with jurisdiction over the three bishoprics of
Cracow, Breslau, and Kolberg, thus freeing these
Polish sees from dependence on Magdeburg. In his internal as well as in his
foreign policy, Boleslaus showed himself a great
ruler. He founded churches, endowed monasteries and schools, built roads, and
encouraged commerce with all the neighboring states. In order to increase the
wealth and prosperity of the country, he settled prisoners of war on the land,
gave them their freedom, and set them to work to clear the forest, plant the
land, and make themselves into prosperous colonists. The King also protected
the poor and the powerless from the oppression of the nobility, and exacted the
strictest and most implicit obedience from high and low alike. Though genial
and kindly with his friends and associates, he was stern to the evil-doer and
to those who crossed his will. The strength of the ruler’s personality was the
measure of good government in those primitive days. The great nobles struggled
unceasingly for the right to rob and to exploit their peasants, and only the
strong arm of a strong king held them back. The old chroniclers speak often of
the warm affection in which Boleslaus was held by his
people, over whom he spread the protection of his justice.
Because
he made his kingdom really independent of German control both in Church and
State, Boleslaus is often called its real founder.
Though the Germans tried to ignore this independence, and for centuries
continued to demand, and sometimes got, the recognition of their sovereignty
over Polish lands, it was never really effective, and Poland remained for
centuries what Boleslaus had made her, “the unconquered
kernel of Western Slavdom.” Germany had indeed succeeded in Christianizing
Poland, but she had failed to conquer her, which was the ultimate purpose of
the conversion.
The
political'organization of the kingdom over which Boleslaus ruled was very simple. Class distinctions had
already come into existence. All men except the slaves taken in war were free
and equal before the law, but there was a distinction between the szlachta, or landed nobility, and the kmeten
or simple freemen,^who possessed no land, but worked
the land belonging to some member of the nobility, and paid him for it both in
service and in produce. Originally, in all probability, the kmeten
also were landowners, and there was simply the one free class, but before the
time of Boleslaus the natural inequalities among men
and the pressure of economic necessity had created the difference. Military
service was required of all, the szlachta on
horseback and the kmeten on foot, and the constant
wars, which were so impoverishing, depressed the poorer nobles oftentimes to
the kmeten class. Each war meant more slaves and more
kmeten, but in spite of this the nobles remained for
centuries the most numerous as well as the most important—the only really
important part of the nation. All nobles were of the same rank, and all classes
were governed by the king directly, and paid tribute directly to him. The
feudal system with its divided sovereignty was never introduced into Poland*.
From the earliest times some nobles were more important than others, but they
became so, undoubtedly, through that personal initiative which differentiates
one man from another in even the most democratic society. Ability to lead in
war was probably the basis of most early superiority, as war was their chief
occupation and the main element in their lives. The influence of the Germans
undoubtedly hastened this development of the higher nobility, the so-called
magnates or pans of later centuries.
The
district, which was the unit of local government in early Poland, and which,
through its assembly of the inhabitants and its local magistrate, managed its
own local affairs, was the oldest institution among the Poles, and was probably
based on the original division of the land among the tribes. It was an
institution far older than the princely power, was
common to all Slav peoples, and was thoroughly democratic, as were all the
early Slav institutions. Throughout the country, in the center of a district or
of a group of several districts, strong places or castles were built for
defense, and served as places of refuge in time of invasion, as well as
administrative centers. Over each castle was a Castellan, who in time of war
led the people of his district, and in peace dispensed justice and looked after
the king’s interests, collecting his tribute, overseeing the cultivation of his
lands, and other matters of a similar sort.
The
great kingdom which Boleslaus had gathered together
was not destined to last. His son Mieczyslaw II, a weak prince, reigned only
nine years. Upon his death the government devolved upon his widow, Queen Rixa, as regent for their minor son Casimir. The Queen was
a German, a relative of the Emperor, desirous of restoring the German
influence in Poland, which country she neither liked nor understood. She gave
all the important positions to Germans, and governed with such entire
disregard of Polish customs and Polish interests that after a few years the
nobles revolted, and she was obliged to flee to Germany, taking her son and
the public treasure with her. The country, thus deprived of its leaders, fell
into anarchy and civil war. Everywhere the peasants, oppressed and exploited by
the nobles during the weak rule of Mieczyslaw and Rixa,
now rose against their oppressors, aided in many cases by those colonies of
prisoners of war which Boleslaus had established. In
many communities, where Christianity formed only a thin official veneer over
the old paganism, the people rose against the new faith, which was regarded
more or less as a German innovation and an instrument of oppression. They pillaged
and destroyed the churches and killed the clergy. The external enemies of
Poland also, Russians, Prussians, and Bohemians, taking advantage of her
defenseless position, seized the moment to invade her territories, and
destroyed what little of value the ravages of civil war had spared. They burned
villages and towns, killing or carrying off the inhabitants, so that great
tracts of country were entirely depopulated and made into a desert. In all
this desolation only one leader showed himself able to protect his territory
against aggression. This chief was Maslav of Masovia, who made the marshes of his country a refuge for
the persecuted of other states, and thereby built up a domination for himself
which it was found hard to destroy. Finally, after five years of this anarchy,
the young Casimir was recalled to his kingdom, which he ruled with wisdom for
sixteen years, restoring order, rebuilding towns and churches, and insuring
peace with Russia by marrying Mary, the sister of the Grand Prince of Kiev. He
was able, however, to do but little in the way of winning back lost
territories.
His
son, Boleslaus II, called the Dauntless, was
primarily a soldier, eager to fight for any and every cause, but he was a bad
ruler, a robber of citizens, an oppressor of the poor. He became, however, the
champion of dispossessed princes, of whom this turbulent age furnished many,
and spent long years fighting to restore to their thrones the rulers of
Hungary, of Russia, and of Bohemia. The long wars kept the King and his
soldiers away from Poland during many years, and the story that is told of
internal conditions during this absence shows only too plainly that Poland was
but very slightly Christianized and civilized, and that it was very easy for
her to drop back into pagan and barbarous ways of life.
It
is said that the wives of the soldiers, deserted by their husbands for war and
the pleasures of foreign cities, especially Kiev, where the voluptuous life of
the East had made a strong appeal to their senses,
had very generally consoled themselves with other lovers, some of them their
own slaves. Rumors of this situation reaching the soldiers, they had rushed
home, without permission from the King, to punish the unfaithful wives and
their servile seducers. A civil war resulted, in which even the women took
part, often fighting for their lovers against their husbands. In the midst of
the struggle, the King appeared with the few troops faithful to him, and meted
out punishment to all, slaves, women, and renegade soldiers alike. So
terrible was his vengeance that Stanislaus, Bishop of Cracow, threatened him
with excommunication if he did not cease his bloody work. The King, in a rage,
rushed into the church and stabbed and killed the Bishop before the high altar.
At this the nobles rose in a body, and drove him from his throne and his
kingdom, the Pope excommunicated him, and, visiting the sins of the father upon
the children, excluded his sons from the succession. This action was
especially significant as it was the first time that the Church had come into
political importance in Poland. Some authorities believe that the quarrel
between Bishop Stanislaus and the King was the result of political differences,
that the Bishop had joined an aristocratic party which was struggling to reduce
the power of the King in its own interests; certainly the exile of Boleslaus greatly strengthened the nobles, but the kingly
power was still so great that the King’s brother, Wladislaus
Herman, succeeded him without protest or question. Wladislaus
was not allowed, however, by the Pope, to call himself King, but only Duke, of
Poland.
Wladislaus,
himself quite incapable of ruling, put the whole kingly power into the hands
of a dishonest and unworthy favorite, who ruled so badly that finally the sons
of Wladislaus led a revolt which drove him from the
country.
The
death of Wladislaus Herman for a time increased
internal difficulties. An illegitimate son of Wladislaus
contested the throne with Boleslaus III, the
legitimate successor, and involved Boleslaus in a
long warfare, external as well as internal, because all of his neighbors,
Prussians, Pomeranians, Bohemians, and Germans, eager for his territory,
seized the opportunity of the contested succession to invade his borders. Boleslaus conquered them all, and reunited Silesia and
Pomerania to Poland. With the Emperor Henry V he signed a peace which was
sealed by Boleslaus’s marriage with Henry’s sister,
and the latter years of his reign were devoted to the work of re-Christianizing
his people, who during the preceding reigns had shown so plainly how slight an
impression the principles of their religion had made upon their lives.
But
though Boleslaus III had been able to reconquer
provinces and maintain Poland’s independence against the Empire, the long
period of disorder following the death of Mieczys-
law II had enormously weakened the prestige and power of the monarchy, and had
strengthened proportionately that of the nobility and the clergy, which
increased rapidly during the years of confusion. When, just before his death in
1138, Boleslaus III divided his territory among his
four sons, he put an end to the unity of Poland for two hundred years. Though
nominally the kingship was in the hands of his eldest son, Wladislaus,
Duke of Cracow, the alienation of so much of his territory, in addition to
other circumstances, made his control over his brothers purely nominal, and
began the so-called “Partitional Period,” which lasted for two hundred years,
during which the territory and the sovereignty of Poland were divided and
redivided into many independent but weak and small principalities, constantly
warring with one another. During this period all sense of Poland’s unity as a
state was lost, her weakness exposed her to constant aggression from without,
and necessitated an entire reorganization, both external and internal, when in
1320 a strong Prince became Duke of Cracow, and once more united the Polish
lands.
Boleslaus I
had had a very definite policy of Slav union and Slav advance against the Germans,
and in pursuance of this idea had pushed the limits of his state westward and
northward to the Elbe and the Baltic. After his death this statesmanlike policy
was given up, and no one of his descendants showed any practical appreciation
of the vital necessity of the possession of all the territories within these
limits, if Poland was to have a defensible frontier against German aggression,
and was to remain the greatest of central European states which Boleslaus had made her.
The
reign of the German Emperor Henry IV (1050-1106), when Germany was weakened by
her great internal struggle against the Papacy, offered the most favorable
opportunity to the Poles to reconquer Pomerania and the Western Slavs, and thus
consolidate the state. Had they used it their whole future would have been
different. But no ruler of vision and power arose from the confusion and
difficulties of the period, and nothing was done. So when, a century later, the
Germans had settled their
internal
difficulties and were ready to begin another eastward movement, the Poles were
at their mercy. Their opportunity to become a western European state was gone,
never to return. Henceforth they were obliged to turn their ambitions toward
the east.
2.
1139-1320
When
Boleslaus III divided his lands among his four sons,
with suzerainty over his brothers in the hands of the eldest, he was following
an old Slav custom, common to both Poland and Russia. The idea at the bottom of
this custom was that the kingdom belonged, not to the eldest son of the
reigning monarch, but to the whole princely family, and that the senior member
of the family, by virtue of his seniority, exercised a certain fatherly
authority over the others, which was shown by his possession of the capital and
other chief places of the kingdom. He was bound, however, to provide for the
younger members of the family, and was thus obliged to carve up his kingdom
into ever smaller and smaller bits, as the generations multiplied. According to
this theory, the territorial divisions were merely temporal arrangements,
lasting only during the lifetime of a single prince, and were not hereditary in
the family of any occupant, but when he died, and his eldest relative (not
usually his son, but a brother, or uncle, or cousin) succeeded him, an entirely
new apportionment of the kingdom among the members of the family took place,
the more desirable provinces going to the older members, the less desirable to
the younger, in a regular order of succession. This same process went on within
the provinces assigned to each of the major princes, and similarly all the way
down the princely line, as long as territories remained big enough to
subdivide, and resulted in very general dislocation all over the country.
It
will be readily seen that this theory, when put in practice in a state of any
considerable size, would encounter many difficulties. It took no account of
that strong attachment to their particular bit of native soil that is so
dominant a trait in all peoples, especially those engaged in agriculture, and
which makes them prefer a poorer piece of ground upon which they have grown up
to a far better one that is strange. From the first, therefore, the
rearrangements following the death of each prince were vigorously opposed, and
the attempt was constantly made to substitute primogeniture for seniority, as
the basis of succession. The influence of the Church as well as of the German
political system, was, of course, in this direction, and neither side ever
lacked for champions ready to take up arms in its defense. The result was
unceasing civil war, from one end of the country to the other.
In
Russia it resulted in such weakness that the princes were unable to defend
themselves against the attacks of the savage Polovstui
on their southeastern frontier, and were obliged to abandon their territories,
including their capital, Kiev, the “mother of Russian cities,” with all its
splendors and its traditions, to the barbarians, and to emigrate far to the
northeast and to the southwest, and there, in better protected regions, to
begin a new political life.
In
Poland the anarchy lasted two hundred years, from the death of Boleslaus III in 1139, until Wladislaus
Lokietek (1319-1333) established once more the unity
of the monarchy. During those two hundred years events of far- reaching
importance had taken place. As has been said above, when Boleslaus
III died, he left his kingdom divided among his four sons. Wladislaus,
the eldest, had Cracow, now the capital of the country, Little Poland, Silesia,
and Pomerania. To Boleslaus he left Masovia and Cujavia. To
Mieczyslaw Great Poland, and to Henry, his fourth son, Sandomir.
The youngest son, Casimir, received nothing from his father, but at the death
of his brother, Henry, a few years later, he succeeded to Sandomir.
Wladislaus
II was not at all content with his partial sovereignty. His wife, Agnes, a German,
ambitious, and unsympathetic with Polish ways, desired to introduce the German
feudal system, and she urged her husband to dispossess his brothers and rule
alone over a great kingdom as his father had done. As Wladislaus
was much older than his brothers, being a man of thirty, while they were all
three children under twelve, it seemed not a difficult thing to do. The nobles
and clergy, however, whose powers were far greater in a divided weak state than
in a strong, united one, rallied to the support of the minor brothers, and a
long civil war followed, in which finally Wladislaus
was not only defeated but driven from his own possessions. He and his wife also
were excommunicated by the Pope, because they had used barbarian and Russian
troops against their own people. Wladislaus went to
Germany, got the assistance of the Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, who
accompanied him back to Poland at the head of an Imperial army, and attempted
to reseat Wladislaus on his throne. But the
expedition did not accomplish its purpose. Some years after, Boleslaus IV, who had taken the throne after the exile of
his brother, made a treaty by which the sons of Wladislaus
were allowed to take possession of Silesia (which, as stated above, formed part
of the share of the kingdom which Boleslaus III had
given to their father) on condition of renouncing all claim to the throne of
Cracow. This line of princes, feeling themselves unjustly excluded from their
rights by the Poles, and closely connected with Germany by marriage and other
association, gradually became Germanized and alienated from Poland. Silesia
became known as a German province, with distinctly German interests, long
before its separation from Poland was officially recognized in 1340. It is only
in the last fifty years, since 1870, that there has come about a revival of
Polish nationalism in this province.
After
the death of Boleslaus, his son, Leszek, inherited Masovia and Cujavia, but Boleslaus’s brother, Mieczyslaw III, took the throne of
Cracow. He tried to restore the royal power, but only succeeded in making
himself so unpopular by his tyranny that he was driven out by the nobles and
clergy, who made his brother, Casimir, the youngest of the sons of Boleslaus III, ruler in his place. By the death within a
few years of his nephew, Leszek, son of Boleslaus IV,
Casimir came into possession of Masovia and Cujavia, and thus ruled over a far larger territory than
any of his brothers. Two senior lines, that of Wladislaus
II and that of Mieczys- law III, were thus excluded
from the throne, and for a long period of years constantly disputed the
succession with the descendants of Casimir, sometimes successfully, sometimes
not. But in the main the line of Casimir remained the dominant one, probably
because it was supported by the clergy, who, during all this period, were
growing strong just in proportion as the princely power grew weak. The active
part played by the clergy in political affairs, with the very important
privileges and immunities for their order which resulted from it, is indeed the
great outstanding characteristic of this period. It was through the Church
that there came into Poland those Western and German elements which, during the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries, destroyed the primitive organization of the
Polish state, and transformed the life of the Polish people. It is therefore
necessary to consider the position of the Church in some detail.
The
great reform in the Roman Catholic Church started by the monk Hildebrand, afterwards
Pope Gregory VII, in the latter part of the eleventh century, had transformed
the inner life of the Church in western Europe, and had also greatly
strengthened its external position. Hildebrand’s theory of the Church was that
it was the representative of God’s power on earth, and therefore the spiritual
ruler of the world, supreme over kings as over the humblest of their subjects.
To make this theory a reality, he saw it was necessary first to reform the
clergy, to make them able, eager, and devoted workers in the cause, showing in
their lives as in their words the power of the life of the spirit; and
secondly, to acquire such governmental powers for the Church that she should be
practically independent of the state, should form, indeed, a little state
within the state, with her own law, her own courts, her own sources of revenue,
and with the power of this independence should be able to curb the savage
passions and hold in check the rapacity, the lawlessness, and the cruelty of
the mediaeval princes.
It
was a great ideal, and perhaps it is needless to say that it was never
completely realized. But it came near enough to success to make the Church very
powerful, greatly to raise the whole level of the clerical life, and to produce
not a few saints and martyrs whose holy lives burned like beacons in the
darkness of a violent and barbarous world.
It
was not until the end of the twelfth century, nearly a hundred years after
their introduction to western Europe, that the influence of these reforms
reached Poland. At that time Poland had a married clergy, the churches were the
hereditary property of the priests, and the state had entire legal and
governmental control over the clergy as over all other parts of the
population. Pope Innocent III, the greatest of all the champions of papal and
clerical power, was much interested in Poland, and took active and energetic
steps to bring the Polish Church into line with the rest of Western
Christendom. The political disorder in Poland, just at the time when his
attention was turned toward her, offered him a unique opportunity. He found the
German clergy very ready to help, and the Polish clergy, though they opposed
the papal ideas at first, came later to understand the Pope’s purpose, saw its
advantages for them, and cooperated gladly. The religious feeling, so
characteristic of the age in western Europe, also showed itself in Poland, in
the response of princes and people to the quickened zeal and the new demands
of the Church. It resulted, not only in the foundation of schools and
monasteries and the endowment of churches, but also in the granting by all the
princes of countless immunities to the clergy in their duchies. “Because a
house dedicated to the highest God must not be subject to the laws of earthly
princes,” was the beginning of many a document in which twelfth and thirteenth
century princes freed great religious foundations from dependence on
themselves. And not infrequently they closed with these or similar significant
words: “This is done for the salvation of our own souls and of the souls of our
forefathers.”
By
1250 by far the greater part of the clergy were subject exclusively to clerical
courts, were freed from the dues and services which they had previously paid to
their princes, and the beneficed clergy had the right to hold courts for the
peasantry who lived and worked on their estates. The election of bishops and
abbots also, and the conferring of benefices, formerly in the hands of the
king, were now entirely in the hands of the clergy. The Church was thus
practically free from all kingly or princely government. This system of immunity
was a German practice, and its introduction into Poland was the first break in
the old Polish constitution, by which the king ruled, and ruled directly, all
classes of his people.
German
colonization was another element which brought about great changes in the constitution.
All during this and succeeding periods German colonization of the Polish lands
was going steadily on. Quietly and without ostentation a steady stream of
immigrants flowed across the border, settled in Polish territory, and began to
live there their essentially German lives. Sometimes the stream was swollen,
sometimes it ran almost dry, but it never completely stopped, and its
existence is one of the factors of first importance in Polish history. Among
these colonists the clergy were always numerous, and they were among the first
to encourage colonization and to profit by it in other classes. The monasteries
in Poland were very largely branch houses. Many of them accepted only Germans;
others only a minority of Poles; while among the secular clergy, and also in
the schools, Germans were very numerous. They used their influence to get
German peasants to come and settle on their lands, and the excellent terms
which they offered — personal freedom, hereditary right to their lands, no
dues for the first few years, and very moderate ones thereafter — made the
German peasants eager to come. The princes, seeing that they were good
colonists, welcomed them; and partly as a matter of convenience, partly because
the colonists demanded it, allowed them to live under German law. By 1240 their
position in the country was well established.
The
invasion of the Mongols or Tartars in the year 1240 made the need for colonists
much greater. Batu and his Tartar Horde swept across the steppe, across Russia,
into Poland, and down into Hungary, where a great battle was fought, in which
the Tartars were not indeed defeated, but were obliged to pay so dear for
victory that they retired from Poland as well as from Hungary. They left behind
them a devastated country, ruined towns, and a population so diminshed that colonists were a necessity if the life of
the country was to go on. The princes in this crisis turned to the Germans and
offered them practically their own terms if they would come to Poland. These
terms were, self-government, freedom from taxation, and in most cases from
military service. In return, the German colonists built up strong, rich towns,
better in every way than Poland had ever had before. These colonists soon came
to form, as they had formed at home, a wealthy middle class, which Poland had
never had, which she had greatly needed, and which was of the greatest value to
her in counteracting the influence of the nobles and establishing new standards
of comfort and economic efficiency.
The
nobles, for obvious reasons, disliked the immunities of the Germans, and were
slow to bring German peasants onto their estates; but they saw the advantages
of immunity for themselves, and began to demand it. As the princes were poor,
very numerous, and hopelessly at odds with one another, they were dependent
upon their nobles, and the “barons,” or more powerful of the nobles, were thus
in a position to make demands which the prince could not well refuse. The
result was that they too freed themselves from dues and public services, such
as the building of castles and roads, the repair of bridges, and from the
jurisdiction of all the royal officials. Sometimes they were even exempted
from military service. Quite generally they got the exclusive right to hold
courts for the peasants living on their estates, which was the most
remunerative of all these privileges. In granting these immunities the princes
made some exceptions. In case of invasion by the barbarians, exemption from
military service did not hold, nor did the exemption from taxes and dues in
times of great and exceptional public need. Often, also, in granting
jurisdictions, the prince kept the ultimate power of life and death in his own
hands, and reserved the right to summon the nobles before him in person, even
when he freed them from the jurisdiction of his officials.
The
net result of all this was that by the end of the thirteenth century the higher
clergy and the richer and more powerful nobles had very largely passed from
under the king’s control, and were practically free from the burdens of public
service and of taxation. This meant a corresponding depression of the szlachta and kmeten classes, upon
whom, quite contrary to the old law and custom, the whole public burden now
fell. Nor was this all. During this same period the higher nobles and clergy
had become the most powerful factors in the government of the kingdom and the
king had assumed quite a secondary place.
It
was during the struggle between Mieczys- law III and
the party that supported Casimir that the foundations of aristocratic government
were laid. As soon as he was on the throne, Casimir called a synod or general
assembly of the bishops of the kingdom and this assembly promulgated decrees,
on the one hand against the plundering of the poor peasants which had been so
grievous an evil under Mieczyslaw III, and on the other against the seizure by
the princes of the land of ecclesiastics after their death. Casimir also
created a permanent advisory council or senate, composed of the richer and more
powerful nobles and the higher clergy, which in the course of a few years took
to itself many of the powers of the King. They did not hesitate to threaten
deposition — at one time they even negotiated with the dethroned Mieczyslaw
III — when Casimir did anything without their advice or against their will.
After the death of Casimir, it was the Senate which chose his son, Leszek the
White, as his successor, using the opportunity to proclaim that the legality
of the Senate’s choice was quite independent of the sanction of either Emperor
or Pope; and although his claim was hotly contested by Mieczyslaw III in a long
civil war, yet in the end Leszek retained the kingship and thus vindicated the
power of the Senate.
During
the reign of Leszek the White, Pomerania became an independent duchy and the
Teutonic Knights settled in Masovia, the latter an
event of sinister and far-reaching importance in Polish history because the
power was thus established which was finally to cut Poland off from her Baltic
seaboard, thus altering and impoverishing her whole future.
Boleslaus
III had ruled on the Baltic coast from the island of Rugen to Konigsberg, including
the mouths of the three rivers, Oder, Vistula, and Pregel. Under Boleslaus IV, the Germans conquered to the Oder. Shortly
after, Casimir the Just gave the country about the mouth of the Oder to the
princes of the country and allowed them to take the title of Dukes of
Pomerania. The rest of the country — that is, the Vistula region and Danzig —
he ruled directly through governors. Both governor and dukes united against the
Danes, who coveted the country and after a time succeeded in seizing Danzig.
The Poles neglected to send help at this critical moment, and the Pomeranians,
thrown back on themselves, chose as their governor a Pomeranian, Sventopolk, who drove out the Danes and took Danzig. Leszek
confirmed him in his governorship, but Sventopolk
was not satisfied. He wanted to be independent. Some of the Polish princes
favored his pretensions, but Leszek would not consent to it and called the
Council in order to lay the matter before it. Sventopolk
came to the Council, kidnaped Leszek, carried him off on his horse to a lonely
place, and killed him; and as a result, the Council gave him his title of Duke
of Pomerania and Danzig!
Conrad,
the younger brother of Leszek, was Duke of Masovia, and,
on account of the position of his duchy, it was upon him that there fell the
brunt of the task of beating off the constant attacks of the savage heathen
tribes — the Prussians and Lithuanians and kindred peoples — to the northeast,
who took advantage of the weakness of Poland in the early thirteenth century
to push forward with special vigor. Conrad, a violent, passionate nature, in a
moment of rage had killed with his own hand his Palatine Kristian, who had
spent his life fighting against the Prussians and had become a terror to these
savages. After his death, Conrad could find no one to fill his place, and the
Prussians invaded, pillaged, and occupied at will the border districts of Masovia. To get rid of them Conrad had to buy them off, and
was obliged to tax his people exorbitantly for the purpose. They were obliged
to give their fur coats and other clothes as taxes, since it was these articles
that the Prussians especially wanted. Even this sufficed only temporarily, and
Conrad, at his wits’ end, finally sought help from the Teutonic Knights.
The
Order of the Teutonic Knights came into existence during the Third Crusade with
the founding by some benevolent German merchants from Lubeck and Bremen of a
hospital for the Crusaders in Acre. Later the hospital became attached to the
German Church of St. Mary in Jerusalem, and in 1198 the Brethren of the
Hospital of St. Mary were made into an order of knights and the rule was
established that henceforth only Germans of noble birth could become brethren
of the Order. They lived a semi-monastic life under the rule of St. Augustine,
and their duties were to fight, to convert the heathen, and to care for the
sick — with the emphasis in practice distinctly on the fighting. After the
Crusades were over it was a little difficult to find a place for these
turbulent soldiers of the Cross. They had gone to Hungary in 1211 to help the
king fight the Comans, but had been turned out of the
country as a result of trying to make themselves independent rulers of
Transylvania. It was then that the Duke of Masovia
invited the Knights to come to his aid, offering them the district of Kulm and
freedom to conquer what else they could at the expense of the Prussians. All
they needed was the opportunity. By 1260 they had conquered the whole east
bank of the Vistula from Kulm to the coast and the Baltic coast from the
Vistula to Konigsberg. By the union with them in 1237 of the Knights of the
Sword, an order similar to their own, which had been founded in 1201 to conquer
and Christianize the eastern Baltic coast, they added Livonia and Courland to
their possessions and were thus in control of the greater part of the Baltic
seaboard. During the fourteenth century they went farther, conquered the
Lithuanian province of Samogitia and then turned
their arms against the Poles, from whom they conquered Pomerellen,
or Pomerania east of the Oder, including the great Polish port of Danzig. Supported
by the Pope (to whom in 1234 the Order had given its territories and received
them back in fief, thus freeing themselves from lay control) and constantly
reinforced by the pick of the German military nobility, the Order became a
serious menace to Polish independence.
Thus,
both within and without, the Germanization of Poland went on and, added to disunion
and weakness, made the destruction of the Polish state seem a matter of only a
little time. The long reign of Boleslaus V, son of
Leszek the White, and of his son, Leszek the Black, marked the lowest point in
the degradation of Poland, and during the extraordinary confusion that
followed the death of the latter— extraordinary even for Poland in this period—
Waclaw, King of Bohemia, took possession of the kingship
and held it for six years (13001306). Many of the Polish princes supported him
as the only hope of uniting and saving their unhappy country, where violence
was the ordinary way of life in times of nominal peace as well as in times of
war; where privileges were constantly assumed and responsibilities and duties
abandoned without any kind of legal sanction, and only might was right. Many of
the lesser nobles lost land and freedom quite arbitrarily during this time,
while the peasants were so badly treated by both nobles and officials that in
some regions whole communities fled to the woods and became bandits and robbers.
Waclaw took the first necessary steps toward the
restoration of order, and this task was carried further and Poland finally
reunited by Wladislaus I, called Lokietek,
or “ Long-Span,” who was crowned king in 1320.
Wladislaus Lokietek, Duke of Cujavia, and
brother of Leszek the Black, had been recognized as king in his own duchy in
1306, but had later been deposed in favor of Waclaw
of Bohemia. But after the death of Waclaw, he was
recalled, having in the mean time won the gratitude
of the whole country and proved his ability as well as his patriotism by a
victory over the Teutonic Knights. The assassination of Prze-
mislaus II, the last representative of the line of
Mieczyslaw III, had removed all rivals to the claims of Wladislaus
to the whole kingdom of the Piasts, which he united
once more into a single sovereignty, with, however, some important exceptions.
Silesia was held by Bohemia with the consent of its princes, Masovia was ruled by its own duke, and Pomerania was in the
possession of the Knights. Not since Boleslaus III,
however, had any Polish prince ruled so many provinces, and the satisfaction of
the country was expressed by the solemn crowning of Wladislaus
at Cracow by the Metropolitan Bishop of Gnesen. The ceremonial observed on
this occasion became the custom for the coronation of all succeeding Polish
kings.
Recognition
by the Pope gave Wladislaus the support of the
clergy, and he had also the support of the mass of his people in the great task
of cementing this formal union by internal regeneration and by united
opposition to the foes that menaced it from without. Wladislaus
encouraged in every way the revival of order and prosperity in his kingdom. He
cleared the highways of brigands, and in a tour through the country he made a
beginning, at least, of the great task of abolishing privilege and restoring
the supremacy of the Polish law. He did not, indeed, attempt to take away the
German law from those communities to whom its use had been legally granted, but
all immunities assumed without sanction during the period of disorder had to
be given up and the persons concerned returned to their former status under
Polish law. Irrespective of what the previous arrangement had been, the King
now took to himself the sole right of holding the highest courts for both laws.
In
1331 the King called at Chenciny an assembly which
may be considered the first Polish Diet. It was composed of Senators,
Chancellors from each duchy, members of the local magistracies, and the nobles.
At the Diet of Chenciny the King for the first time
admitted all the nobles — not merely, as heretofore, the higher nobles and
clergy composing the Senate — to a share in his counsels. From this time on
their powers grew steadily and after 1370 very rapidly. The distinctions
between the kmetens, who had no voice in the
government, and the szlachta, all of whom had, became
sharp. At the same time also the distinctions between the greater nobles, who
alone were eligible to the Senate and to other places in the public service,
and the szlachta, or lesser nobles, also grew
sharper.
The
nobles, or equestrian order, formed the main army of the country, other classes
serving only when invasion or special need demanded it, and many of the greater
nobles led whole detachments to war under their own armorial banners, thus
usurping the war functions of the king’s officials, the castellans and
palatines, even as in peace they had usurped their jurisdictions.
Commerce
revived rapidly as order and security increased. The German burghers made the
most of the opportunities that the situation of the Polish cities offered for
trade. Cracow, especially, at the junction of great overland trade routes,
soon became the center of an enormous transit trade. A great highway from the
south brought the products of Hungary and the Near East through the passes of
the mountains into Cracow on their way north to Thom, Stettin, and Danzig,
whence ships carried them to Flanders and England. Cracow also lay midway on
the great road that led from the Black Sea and the South Russian ports to
Breslau, Prague, and the western European capitals. Both Cracow and Danzig (now
in the hands of the Teutonic Knights) were members of the Hanseatic League and
had thus every facility for using their trading opportunities. The rich
merchants of Cracow became powerful enough to get a law enacted enabling them
to buy land and thus to become nobles. Trade along the Vistula was also building
up the Masovian towns, and Warsaw began in the early fourteenth century to be a
town of some importance.
During
the whole of the reign of Wladislaus Lokietek the Teutonic Knights kept up a constant and
menacing pressure on his frontiers. A victory over them which the King won in
1332, however, kept them from further encroachment on Polish land and showed
the Poles that the Order was not invincible.
But
the Knights were not Poland’s only enemy. The King of Bohemia claimed the
Polish throne as the successor of Waclaw, and carried
on almost constant warfare on the southern border, while on the northeast the
vigorous young Lithuanian state was becoming a dangerous neighbor.
The
rise of Lithuania is one of the most remarkable of historical phenomena. The
Lithuanians, a people of the same race as the Prussians, had dwelt for
centuries among the swamps and forests of the upper Niemen, secure in their
independence and their paganism. They had lived a separate, loosely organized
tribal existence. The coming of the Teutonic Knights, their conquest of the
Prussians, and especially their absorption of the Knights of the Sword and the
resulting annexation of almost the whole Baltic coast, had roused the
Lithuanians to a sense of their own danger. Under able leaders the scattered
tribes threw off the habits of centuries and united to form a vigorous and
warlike nation and created a state which during the next hundred years became
by its conquests a vast empire and the greatest political force in central
Europe.
Mendovg,
the first of the great Lithuanian princes, ruled from 1240 to 1263, just when
the Tartar invasions were weakening Poland and Russia. As Lithuania was not
invaded by the Tartars, she was able to derive advantage from the misfortunes
of her neighbors and to conquer from Russia great slices of her western territories.
A century later, at the death of Gedy- min
(1315-1341), another of her great rulers, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania extended
from Courland to the Carpathians and from the Bug to the river Desna,
comprising Black, White, and Little Russia, including the great Dnieper Valley
and Kiev.
The
great West Russian provinces, weak and disorganized by the Tartar invasions,
offered little resistance to the Lithuanians, who occupied the territories
gradually, and generally without violence, restored order, and appointed
princes of great Lithuanian families as their governors. The Lithuanians,
pagans and barbarians, were thus brought into close contact with Christianity
and with a civilization far older and more advanced than their own. Many of the
princes were converted to Christianity by the Russians, some of them married
Russian princesses of former reigning houses, and very generally they adopted
the habits of life and in general the civilization of the Russians. The dialect
of White Russia became the language of the court and remained so until the
seventeenth century.
Gedymin
never became a Christian. He could never bring himself to accept a religion in
whose name the Teutonic Knights, the bitterest enemies of his country, fought
and killed his people. But his sons and most of his people adopted the
Christianity of the Russians, which was that of the Eastern or Greek Orthodox
Church. Olgierd, his successor, was baptized into the
Greek Church on his marriage with a princess of Vitebsk, but his Christianity
was more political than spiritual, as is seen by the fact that though in the
Russian Christian parts of his kingdom he was a Christian, in Lithuania proper
he sacrificed to the old pagan gods of his forefathers and by his own wish was
buried with full pagan rites.
Though
at first hostile to Lithuania, the Poles soon recognized her value as an ally,
and Wladislaus Lokietek in
1325 made a treaty with her against their common enemy, the Teutonic Order.
This alliance was of great value to Poland, still far from strong or really
united, and is interesting, also as the beginning of the far closer union of
the two states sixty years later.
When
Wladislaus Lokietek died,
he left to his son and successor, Casimir III, known as “the Great,” a kingdom
in which the worst forms, at least, of internal disorder were fast
disappearing, and whose commerce and wealth were growing rapidly, but whose
external relations were precarious. The King of Bohemia still claimed the
throne of Poland. Masovia, jealous of its
independence, was hostile, uniting sometimes with Bohemia and sometimes with
the Teutonic Knights, whom Wladislaus Lokie- tek had spent his life in
fighting and whose possession of Pomerania he regarded as the most serious
menace to his kingdom. His deathbed instructions to his son charged him to make
the recovery of Pomerania his first duty, but Casimir did not follow this
advice. He was not a fighter like his father, but a statesman who desired by peace
to heal Poland’s wounds, by wise legislation to restore order and prosperity,
and by diplomacy and foreign alliances to bring her out of her isolation and
into intimate and respected relations with other European states. Only thus he
believed could the integrity of Poland be preserved. He saw that the long wars
of his father had barely held his foes at bay. He preferred to lose what
territory he must in order to be sure of what was left, and in pursuance of
this policy he gave up to Bohemia all claims on Silesia for himself and his
successors, accepting in return the King of Bohemia’s renunciation of all
claim to the Polish throne.
With
the Knights also he made a treaty by which he acknowledged their claims to Pomerania,
to Kulm, and to Michelow, and in return got them to
withdraw from Cujavia and Dobzyn.
The Polish people were much opposed to this treaty. The King had hard work to
get it through the Diet, and never wholly regained the popularity it cost him.
The national instinct was undoubtedly right in opposing the relinquishing of
Poland’s claims on her seaboard, and it is a curious fact that Casimir seems
to have been unaware of its value.
To
balance these losses, Casimir added the Kingdom of Galicia or Halicz to Poland. This great territory had been settled by
Russian refugees from Kiev in the twelfth century and had become under able
princes one of the greatest of Russian principalities. In 1340 the princely
line became extinct and Casimir claimed the country in the right of his mother.
Olgierd of Lithuania, son of Gedymin,
also claimed it, and war followed, but neither ruler really wanted to fight the
other, and the mediation of the King of Hungary, brother-in-law of Casimir, resulted
in a compromise by which Poland got East Galicia with Lemberg (Lwow) and Lithuania had the rest.
Internal
policy was, however, Casimir’s real interest and the basis of his title “the
Great.” He protected the Jews, carefully defined the spheres of Polish and
Magdeburg or Teutonic law, and established within the kingdom a supreme court
of appeal for both laws. Appeal to German courts, outside of Poland, for final
judgment, was no longer permitted to communities under German law. He also
tried by legislation to improve the condition of the kmetens
and to protect them against the everincreasing power
of the lords. But Casimir’s reforms stopped short of the only measure that
could really improve their condition permanently : namely, to give them a
share in the government. In spite of the fact that he was called in derision
by nobles “the peasant king,” the condition of the peasantry became worse after
Casimir as the nobles became better organized and more united. It was under
Casimir, and largely as a result of the position his alliances gave his
kingdom, that Masovia decided to accept the
suzerainty of Poland instead of that of the Knights. Her allegiance was of
great value, was worth indeed far more than many fortresses on Poland’s
northeastern border. Casimir devoted much of his attention to internal
improvements. He founded new towns, built castles, churches, and monasteries,
attracted many foreigners to the country and left it richer and more prosperous
than it had ever been.
In
order to keep the government in the hands of a king of his own sort, who could
maintain its integrity and keep the peace, Casimir secured the succession to
the throne of his nephew, Louis, King of Hungary. He called a Diet at Cracow in
1339 which elected Louis to the Polish throne, thus setting aside the claims of
the more direct heirs, the princes of Cuja- ‘via and Masovia, in return for which Louis promised never to tax
without the consent of the Diet. Louis of Anjou, the new king, who came to the
Polish throne in 1370, was a very able ruler, but too occupied with other interests
to pay much attention to Poland. He visited the country only twice, indeed, in
the twelve years of his reign. He wanted to keep the Polish throne in his
family, however, so he saw that Poland was decently governed, and the prestige
of his name and power protected her from many dangers and difficulties. Before
his death he got the Polish nobles to elect as queen his daughter, Hedwig, and
in return he reduced the land tax to so small a sum that the crown became
dependent for supplies on the votes of the estates. Queen Hedwig in 1386
married Jagiello, Grand Duke of Lithuania, which is
the most important single event in Polish history, as it united Poland with the
great Lithuanian Empire and made her a great, powerful, and heterogeneous
state.
CHAPTER
II
THE
JAGIELLON KINGS
THE
ERA OF GREATNESS, 1386-1572
The union of Poland and Lithuania under
one king brought together two states which had nothing in common but their
enemies, the Teutonic Knights and the rapidly rising Grand Duchy of Muscovy,
and which contained elements so diverse, so antagonistic even, that it was an
all but impossible task to weld them together and make of them a real political
unit. Yet this was exactly the task that the Jagiellon
kings set themselves, and that they succeeded in it is a great credit to their
statesmanship. Four out of the seven of them were statesmen of real ability.
They were of the patient, tactful, cautious type, seeing the limits of their
tasks and staying carefully within them. But they were none of them really
great kings. They lacked the political vision, the genius for administration
which was necessary to stem the rising tide of the power of the nobility, and
it was precisely during this period of Poland’s greatness that the aristocratic
constitution came into existence, which in a short two hundred years replaced
effective government with anarchy, made the king a mere figurehead, destroyed
the freedom and the prosperity of the commercial and agricultural classes, and
prepared Poland to become the prey of her stronger neighbors.
The
election of Jagiello to the Polish throne raised up a
host of enemies against him. The Teutonic Knights, already weakened by internal
dissensions, saw their whole position menaced by the union of Poland and
Lithuania. The conversion of Jagiello and of
Lithuania (officially, anyway) to Christianity took away the nominal mission of
the Order and reduced its warfare to political aggression pure and simple, and
the great strength of the Lithuano- Polish state was
a serious menace to its political supremacy, especially as the Hundred Years’
War and the Hussite movement, both now at their height, drew German fighting
men to the West and deprived the Order of reinforcements. Thus threatened, the
Order used all its diplomatic skill to break up the union by making trouble
between Jagiello and his cousin, Witowt
of Lithuania, who, though he greatly admired Jagiello
personally, was opposed to him by every political consideration, and was the
natural center of all the disaffection to the union that existed in Lithuania. Jagiello had caused the death of his uncle, Witowt’s father, in order to secure the Lithuanian throne,
using for this purpose the services of the Teutonic Order — ever ready to
promote dissension among its neighbors. Witowt,
ambitious and very able, both as a statesman and a soldier, had himself aspired
to the throne of Poland, and failing that, had determined to keep Lithuania
separate, raise it to a kingdom, and rule it himself. He was supported in this
ambition, not only by the Teutonic Order and by the German Emperor Sigismund,
but also, probably, by the majority of the Lithuanian nobility. Their opposition
to the union was both political and religious. Religiously, though Lithuania
proper was officially Roman Catholic, in fact she was still more than half pagan,
while the province of Samogitia was frankly pagan and
remained so for along time. The rest of the
territory— that conquered from Russia, which was five sixths of the whole —
belonged to the Eastern or Greek Orthodox Catholic Church, and was almost as hostile
to Roman Catholicism as to paganism. Since the Greek Church is so important an
element in Polish history, a word regarding its history is perhaps in place.
Originally,
as is well known, the Catholic Church was one. Each bishop was supreme in his
own diocese and subject to no superior authority except the General Church
Councils. When, however, the Roman Empire broke into two parts, the Eastern and
the Western, as a result of the barbarian invasions, the two branches of the Church
developed very differently. The Church of the West was very strongly
influenced by Roman law. Changes in its creed, in its ritual, and also the
increasing claims of the Bishop of Rome to supremacy over the other bishops,
and finally over the world, completely estranged the Eastern Church and led to
its rejection of the authority of the Councils where these matters were
decided in favor of the West. It continued its existence as a separate Church,
composed of the patriarchates (or archbishoprics) of Antioch, Alexandria,
Jerusalem, and Constantinople. Although no one of these ever attained a
supremacy over the others at all comparable to the supremacy of Rome in the
West, yet Constantinople being the capital city and the residence of the
Emperor, its patriarch did acquire an influence and a prestige much greater
than that of the other patriarchs.
It
was from the Church at Constantinople that the missionaries were sent who
Christianized Russia and from Constantinople the Russians derived, not only
their religion, but their learning, their art, their philosophy, and their
whole civilization. The culture which they developed had thus a strong
Oriental strain based as it was upon Byzantine tradition. On the other hand,
the fact that the Poles were Roman Catholics meant that their civilization was
essentially Roman and Teutonic in origin. This difference has been the basal
reason for the age-long antagonism of these two greatest, arid, geographically,
most closely connected, of Slav peoples. From the very moment of her conversion,
Orthodoxy has been an integral part, a necessary characteristic, of Russian
nationalism, and opposition to the one has been, from the Polish point of
view, necessarily opposition to the other. All the old-Russian part of Lithuania
was thus steadily opposed to any union with Roman Catholic Poland.
Politically,
also, there were difficulties. Lithuania was feudally organized, and the
greater nobles as well as the Grand Duke dreaded the lessening of their
authority over their vassals and their peasantry, which amalgamation with a
state so loosely organized and so decentralized as Poland would be almost sure
to produce.
They
resented also Poland’s claim on the border provinces of Volhynia
and Podolia, which Lithuanian arms had conquered, and were jealous of Poland’s
claim to superiority on the basis of the higher level of her civilization.
Witowt
had, therefore, a strong following, and Jagiello saw
that he could not afford to remain his enemy, especially when the Teutonic
Knights began their inevitable campaign against him in 1390. Accordingly, by
the Compact of Wilna in 1401, Jagiello
surrendered all his rights to the Grand Duchy to Witowt,
on the sole condition that the two states were to have jointly elected
sovereigns and were to pursue a common policy. Witowt
then joined Jagiello in the war against the Knights,
and together they inflicted upon them the great defeat at Grtinewald,
or Tannenberg (July, 1410). Jagiello was unable to
follow up his victory, how ever, because Witowt withdrew the Lithuanian army to meet a Tartar raid
at home, and the Polish army had to be persuaded to fight. This took so much
time that the opportunity passed and the peace signed the following year, the
first Peace of Thom (1411), was in fact little more than a truce, as it left
the Order territorially intact. The Knights simply withdrew from Samogitia and Dobryzn — Polish
provinces that they had invaded during the war — and paid an indemnity.
The
King was determined to have more, and saw that to do it it
was necessary to conciliate Lithuania still further. Accordingly, he opened
negotiations with Witowt and in 1414 the Union of Horodlo was made which put the two states on terms of exact
equality. Separate and identical administrations were provided for the two
countries, all the great officers of state being duplicated, one for “the
Crown,” as Poland was designated, one for the Grand Duchy. The Grand Duke was
declared to be in all respects the equal of the King of Poland and all the
privileges of the Polish nobles were extended to the Roman Catholic nobles of
Lithuania. This last concession meant exemption from all the services and dues
of a feudal nature which had been in force since the time of Gedymin, and was a great advantage to the nobility, though
it impoverished the state. The limitation of the privilege to Roman Catholics
was to secure Poland against the Muscovite leanings of the Orthodox in the old-Russian
provinces. This enactment secured to the Union the support of all the Catholic
Lithuanian nobles in spite of the fact that Witowt
did not like it and prevented its being carried out in many cases.
During
the next reign, in 1434, a union of the Greek and Roman churches took place at
a convent in Florence, — known as the “Union of Florence,” — which resulted in
establishing what is known as the “Uniate Church.” The Orthodox Church conceded
recognition of the Pope, and in return the Roman Church agreed to their use of
their own ritual, the retention of their own creed and of a married clergy.
This arrangement was a convenient compromise by which, without violence to
their faith, the Orthodox nobles of Lithuania could enjoy the benefits of the
Union of Horodlo and it was very generally adopted
throughout the Ukraine and later in Lithuania, thus considerably increasing
Lithuanian support of the Union.
The
death of Queen Hedwig, in 1399, was a very real loss to the kingdom. Obliged
when only a girl, for political reasons, to give up her cousin, William of
Habsburg, to whom she was betrothed and whom she dearly loved, and to marry a
man twice her age, whom she had never seen and whom all her circle regarded as
a barbarian, she reconciled herself to the marriage by regarding it as a
Christian mission as weir as a patriotic service and devoted her life to
Christianizing, educating, and civilizing her people. Her sympathy with the
poor and the oppressed was well known all over the kingdom, but she had more
vigorous qualities as well. On one occasion, when Jagiello
was absent in Lithuania and the Hungarians invaded the Polish border, she
herself led an army against them, notwithstanding the fact that the Hungarians
were her own people. She founded a Lithuanian College at Prague, and bequeathed
her jewels for the completion of the University of Cracow, founded in 1364 by
Casimir the Great. Jagiello outlived her thirty-
three years and had two other wives after her death.
The
Hussite wars took place during the reign of Jagiello
and the Hussite influence was considerably felt in Poland. The King not only
helped the Hussite cause with men and money, for political reasons, but allowed
public discussions of the points at issue between the Hussites and Roman
Catholics to take place freely in Cracow. This was a unique and remarkable
thing in fifteenth-century Europe, where bigotry was so characteristic of
religious zeal and persecution the chief attention paid to new religious ideas.
During
Jagiello’s long reign of forty-eight years, Poland
was well started on her way to become a great power. He established a government
and created a unity of feeling strong enough to hold the country together and
enable it to go on by itself during the ten years of bad government that
followed his death.
Wladislaus
III (1434-1444), son of Wladis- laus-Jagiello,
was only nine years old when he became king and only twenty when he died on the
battlefield of Varna fighting against the Turks. In 1442 he had been elected
King of Hungary when that country was making a titanic struggle against the
Turks and wanted the assistance of the great Lithuano-Polish
state. The young Wladislaus defeated the Turks and
made a good peace for Hungary, but was urged by the Papal Legate to reopen the
war in order to draw off the Turks from Constantinople, which they were
besieging, and which nine years later they were to capture. It was at the head
of an expedition which he led for the relief of Constantinople that the King
was killed — happily, perhaps, for Poland.
Casimir
IV (1447-1492), his brother, who succeeded him, was a statesman of the type of
his father, whose work he carried forward with ability and devotion. He was
only seventeen when his brother died, he had always lived in Lithuania which he
had ruled during his brother’s life, and, sagacious beyond his years, he had
small desire to exchange the Lithuanian throne for the more troublesome one of
Poland. He was resolved to become King of Poland only on condition of
reestablishing the real union of the two crowns. It was three years before the
questions at issue between the two countries had been settled sufficiently to
his liking for him to accept the throne of Poland. '
Under
Casimir, Pomerelia (Pomerania west of the Vistula),
in the possession of the Teutonic Knights since the thirteenth century, was
restored to Poland as the result of the long war which Casimir waged against
them in alliance with the townspeople and gentry of Pomerelia.
These classes in 1440 formed the so-called “Prussian League” for the defense of
their rights against the Order, which had become simply a governing
aristocracy, wholly out of touch with the people, and exploiting them in its
own selfish interests. In 1454 the Prussian League offered its allegiance to
Casimir and fought with him for thirteen years for freedom from the Order. The
length of the war was due very largely to the fact that the Polish nobles made
the King’s dependence upon them for men and money the occasion to exact, as the
price of every subsidy, constitutional concessions of the greatest importance.
The delays and uncertainties thus entailed hampered the King greatly, but
finally he managed to get the money with which to pay Bohemian mercenaries,
the best soldiers of that day, by whose assistance the Order was, at last,
defeated. Casimir’s diplomatic skill also won the Pope, heretofore the champion
of the Knights, to his side, and it was through papal mediation that the Peace
of Thom (1466) was finally signed which gave to Poland Pomerelia,
or Polish Prussia. Over East Prussia or Prussia proper the King was able to
establish only his suzerainty, the Teutonic Order continuing to rule there, but
as vassals of the King of Poland. The Grand Master of the Order was given the
first place in the Polish Senate, having a seat at the King’s right hand, and
had exclusive jurisdiction over his own territories, even the amount of
military service he rendered being left largely to his own decision.
This
compromise treaty was a keen disappointment to the King, who had counted on
conquering the Order once for all and subjecting it absolutely to Poland, but
his hands were tied by the selfishness and fatal blindness of the nobles. But,
after all, Poland’s gains were very great. The possession of the Baltic seaboard,
after three hundred years, offered great opportunities for commercial
expansion, and tended to bring Poland into the wider channels of the life of
the West.
From
the constitutional point of view the struggle between the King and the nobles
who formed his army was of the greatest importance. Profiting by the King’s
necessities — which they ought to have felt were their own necessities also,
but did not—the szlachta refused to go to war until the King had granted
the so-called “Statutes of Nieszawa”
(1454), by which he promised neither to make new laws nor call the nation
(i.e., the szlachta) to arms without the consent of
the szlachta. As exemption from all taxes and dues
except military service had been granted them by Louis of Anjou (in 1374, by
the “Privilege of Kas- chau” in order to secure the
succession of his daughter to the throne), and as military service now became
voluntary with them and legislation was in their hands, they were
theoretically in control of the state, and needed only the machinery by which
to use their new powers and carry out their will. They found this machinery in
their local assemblies or Dietines, or Sejmiki, and later in the central Diet which they developed
to meet their requirements.
To
understand this development we must look back to the time of Casimir the Great,
when the szlachta, desirous of resisting the King’s
efforts toward centralization, looked about for means to their end. The most
natural and effective instrument that came to their hand was the local
assemblies of the principalities, or palatinates as they came to be called.
The szlachta succeeded in transforming these hitherto
official councils into general assemblies of all the szlachta
of the provinces. At first the Dietines concerned
themselves with local affairs only, but as the szlachta
won new and wider rights from the Crown they exercised these also through the Sejmiki, partly because they were in existence and no
machinery for united action was, but, probably, chiefly because it was natural
to them to act as members of the local community rather than as citizens of a united state. The long “Partitional Period ” had created
this provincial feeling which led inevitably to a decentralized state.
The
result of this was that for purposes of taxation after 1374, and of legislation
after 1454, the King had to consult each Dietine separately.
This was difficult in many ways, and the need of a central Diet was greatly
felt. The germ of one, indeed, existed and was developed in the next reign, but
Casimir had to deal with the Dietines directly, and
found it a slow and trying process.
The
Hussite movement was at its height in Bohemia during Casimir’s reign, and
Casimir, tolerant like all the Jagiellos, was very
friendly with the Hussite leaders. The King of Bohemia at this time was George Podiebrodski who, realizing that papal opposition to his
policy of toleration toward the Hussites would make the succession of his own
son impossible, made an alliance with Casimir by which Casimir’s eldest son, Wladislaus, became King of Bohemia on the death of Podiebrodski in 1471. Casimir also tried to put his second
son, John Albert, on the Hungarian throne, and wasted long years in this
fruitless and mistaken attempt — one of the very few mistakes that Casimir
made.
While
he was wasting his efforts on the south and west, his enemies on his Lithuanian
frontiers — Teutonic Knights, Turks, Tartars, and Muscovites, all encouraged
and aided by the hostile King of Hungary — were making serious trouble.
Muscovy, particularly, under its very able and astute Czar Ivan III, had thrown
off the Tartar yoke and had set to work to expand toward the west, and
particularly to reconquer the old-Russian lands in the possession of
Lithuania. The Turks also, in 1453, had captured Constantinople and had taken
the Tartars of the Crimea under their protection, and the combination had
become a very serious menace to southern Europe. A league was in process of
formation against them which Casimir joined in 1484, chiefly in order to keep
open Poland’s great southern trade route which was seriously menaced by the Turkish
capture of the Moldavian towns commanding the mouths of the Danube and the
Dniester. Poland had exercised a very loose sort of suzerainty over Moldavia
since 1393.1 It had been sufficient, however, to protect her trade
which was the chief value to her of the province.
During
the war over Moldavia the King of Hungary, Matthias Gorvinus,
the inveterate enemy of Casimir, was killed. The Hungarians at once elected Wladislaus of Bohemia to fill his place, which effectively
solved the Hungarian problem for Poland and put the Jagiellon
dynasty in possession of four thrones.
During
the reign of Casimir and under his wise guidance, Poland and Lithuania had remained
closely united and the state had become a great European power. The separatist
tendencies in Lithuania, still very strong and constantly pushing Lithuania
toward Muscovy, were always recognized by Casimir as a very real danger to the
union, and he worked incessantly to counteract these tendencies by constructive
means. He promoted Catholic propaganda in Lithuania by every means in his
power except persecution of the Orthodox, which he would not consider for a
moment. He also favored the Uniate churches, established in Lithuania in
1443, by considering the Uniates as Catholics and extending to them all the
privileges granted to the Catholics by Horodlo. He
never appointed a viceroy for Lithuania or allowed even one of his sons to
represent him there, but kept the government entirely under his own direction,
thus maintaining absolute unity and centralization.
The
long reign of Casimir IV was followed by the short reigns of his third and
fourth sons. John Albert (1492-1501) and Alexander (15011506).
The
reign of John Albert was filled with wars against the Turks, which were almost
never successful and necessitated constant appeals for money to the szlachta, who gave very little, but extorted in return
concessions that went far toward ruining the country. To avoid the necessity of
applying to each Dietine for each grant, a slow and
troublesome process, John Albert revived the National Diet and had each of the Dietines send deputies to it. Since the Diet of Chenciny in 1331 the szlachta had
had the theoretical right to sit with the Senate and advise the King, and from
time to time some of them had done so. So also had representatives from the
towns and the lower clergy. But it was not until 1493, in the Diet summoned by
John Albert at Piotrkow, that all the Dietines were represented. This Diet thus formed Poland’s
Model Parliament. Like the English Parliament the Diet sat in two houses: the
Senate, composed of prelates, palatines, castellans, and crown officials,
formed the upper House, while the deputies from the Dietines,
called Nuncios, formed the lower. Deputies from the towns sat with the Nuncios
in this and in some few succeeding Diets, but they soon dropped out, just why
is not known.
At
the Diet of 1493, before financial matters were even considered, the King was
obliged to sign a new “Constitution” confirming all the privileges of the szlachta. In return he might reasonably have expected a
generous grant, but, on the contrary, the szlachta
were so niggardly that by 1496 the King was as poor as ever, and had to call a
new Diet to relieve his necessities. The szlachta had
apparently spent the intervening years preparing for this occasion and came to
the Diet of 1496 with a whole volume of new demands which, when enacted into
laws, as they were before the Diet adjourned, completed the process which made
the szlachta a class apart, possessing all the privileges
of government, free from all its burdens, and holding the other classes in a
subjection that not only degraded the commercial and agricultural classes
politically, but ultimately ruined them economically, thus destroying the
prosperity of the whole country and diminishing very seriously the sources of
wealth for the state. One of the most important of these enactments was one by
which the burgesses were deprived of the right to hold land outside the very
restricted area of the city walls. This practically excluded them from holding
any land at all, and thus made it impossible for the richer merchants, as in
other countries, to buy landed estates, and thus enter the noble and military
class. Not only was a great incentive to the accumulation of wealth by this
class thus destroyed, but another enactment exempting the szlachta
from all export and import duties put the burgesses at such a disadvantage
commercially that they soon ceased to be a wealthy class, and in the course of
a century no longer formed a class distinct from the peasantry, to whose level
they had been gradually pressed down.
The
agricultural class, also, which had struggled long and manfully to maintain
its freedom, was now pushed down into a condition of serfdom by statutes
which, on the one hand, limited the freedom of the farmers by obliging them to
stay on the land and work only for their landlords and at customary wages
during harvest time when other labor was short and prices for outside labor
high; and, on the other, changed the system of land tenure into what was
practically the socage system.
Another
law passed at this time, by which the holding of Church benefices was limited
to those whose parents were both noble,1 put the Church on the side
of the privileged and deprived the lower classes of their best champion.
And
in return for all this, John Albert got nothing at all from the szlachta personally, who contented themselves with voting
him two small subsidies, one of which came out of the towns and the other from
the peasants! Small wonder that the King’s Italian tutor, Buonacorsi,
should have advised him to restrain the liberties of the nobles at all costs,
though it is not at all probable that the King allowed himself to be defeated
by the Turks and Tartars in Moldavia in order to increase the royal authority,
as some of his nobles accused him of doing. In spite of his misfortunes the
King seems to have kept the confidence of the masses of the people. Even the
Diet in 1501, shortly before his death, granted back to him the entire control
of the military forces of the kingdom in order to facilitate his opposition to
the Turks, who during the later years of the reign were ravaging Poland’s
southeastern border.
John
Albert was succeeded by his brother Alexander (1501-1506), who in open defiance
of the agreement of Horodlo had been elected Grand
Duke of Lithuania in 1492. Steady pressure from Muscovy, however, had at last
convinced Lithuania that union with Poland was useful, and from this time on
the Lithuanians took the Kings of Poland for their Grand Dukes.
During
Alexander’s reign, however, Poland could give Lithuania little help. Turks and
Moldavians continued their raids on her borders, and the Teutonic Knights,
under a vigorous and able Grand Master, Albert of Hohenzollern, took advantage
of the situation to refuse homage to the Polish King and to attempt the
reconquest of Polish Prussia. Worse than that, however, the szlachta
took advantage of the weakness of Alexander, both in character and in health,
to complete their work of wrecking the kingship and despoiling the lower
classes.
Perceiving
how much greater their power of extortion was over an uncrowned than over a
crowned king, the szlachta presented to him and
obliged him to sign, in place of the usual coronation agreement, by which the
King simply confirmed the privileges of the nobility, a whole series of
articles, known as the “Articles of Mielnica,” by
which the King was deprived of the control of the mint and the regalia, and his
appointing power greatly reduced; members of the Senate also were exempted from
prosecution by the royal courts.
The
Pacta Conventa thus became what it afterwards
remained under the elective kingship, one of the most formidable governmental
weapons in the hands of the ruling class.
But
even greater humiliations were in store for the King. In 1504 the Diet enacted
that the royal estates should not be mortgaged without the unanimous consent of
the Senate given during the sitting of the Diet; that the King should be
constantly attended by a permanent council of twenty-four Senators (the
Senators were to take six-month turns at this somewhat arduous addition to
their functions) and that the Grand Chancellor and the Vice Chancellor should
be appointed only during the session of the Diet, and should receive the
ratification of the Senate. In 1505, at the famous Diet of Radom, by the Edict
Nihil Novi, the Diet was given its permanent organization, and the King bound
himself and his successors never to alter it, or any other part of the Constitution,
or to enact new legislation without the consent of both houses of the Diet.
Alexander’s
death in 1506 left the country in a bad condition. The finances were ruined by
extravagance and bad government; the southeastern provinces were wasted by
Tartar raids, while Lithuania was threatened by Muscovy without and tom by
feuds among the nobles within.
Fortunately
the new King, Sigismund I (1506-1548), Alexander’s brother, was a man of
character, talents, and experience in government. His brother, Wladislaus of Bohemia and Hungary, had made him Governor of
Silesia, the most troublesome of all his possessions, where Sigismund had
speedily put an end to the continual and age-long dissension between Slavs and
Germans, reorganized the finances,' and made the province a model of a modem
well- governed state. There is no doubt that Sigismund understood Poland’s
problems and that his policy, of peace abroad and of economy and financial
reorganization at home, designed to pay Poland’s debts and give to the King an
income that should make him, in some measure at least, independent of the szlachta, was a wise one, and had he come to the throne a
little earlier, before the szlachta were so firmly
entrenched, he might have been able to carry out his policy and put the
kingship in a position of vantage that later monarchs could have sustained,
and thus have prevented the worst of Poland’s degradation. But it was too late.
The szlachta, already supreme legislatively, during
this reign steadily encroached upon the executive authority and passed statutes
forbidding the Captain-General, or “ Grand Hetman,” to levy troops, the Lord
Treasurer to collect taxes, or the Grand Councillor
to direct the tribunals of the kingdom. The Diet was to attend to these matters
henceforth. On the other hand, the King upheld the szlachta
in their determined opposition to the attempt of the magnates to separate
themselves from the szlachta and become legally, what
they were in large measure economically and socially, a class apart. The
victory of the szlachta is seen in the enactment of
the Diet of 1527, which did away with all exemptions from military service and
obliged every great noble, as well as every poorer one, to contribute to the
army according to his means. As the troops thus contributed had to be placed
under the King’s direct control, this measure was of real advantage to the
monarchy. On the other hand, however, suspicion of the magnates of the Senate,
through whose hands, as officers of the Crown, the public money must
necessarily pass, kept the Diets of 1522 and 1523 from voting anything at all
for national defense, notwithstanding the fact that the King was at war with
the Turks. This was only the culmination of a policy of parsimony and
indecision on financial matters that hampered and, in large measure, made impossible
the King’s work of rehabilitation.
In
view of these facts what the King accomplished in the way of financial
regeneration is really remarkable. At the very beginning of his reign, he
called to conference with him some of the successful foreign merchants and
bankers of Cracow, such as the Scotchman, John Boner, and the Germans, Kaspar Beer and the two Bettmans,
and put into their hands the reform of the finances of the state. By applying
very skillful business management to the problem, they succeeded in rescuing
the state from bankruptcy. The King was enabled to pay his brother’s debts, to
recover some of the alienated crown lands, and to hire a few mercenaries to
form the nucleus of a standing army independent of the vagaries of the szlachta. His attempt to increase this army by commuting
the military services of the nobility to money payments was, however,
rejected by the Diet.
The
szlachta were also during this reign doing their best
to exclude the deputies of the towns from the Diets and thus complete the
degradation of the burgher class. But this the King was able to prevent.
Recognizing the great value to the state of a rich, strong, middle class, he
was, as indeed were all the Jagiellos, the consistent
friend and champion of the towns. In 1513, when the representatives of Cracow
were excluded from their local Dietine, the King reinstated
them and publicly confirmed them in their right to be there. This, however, did
not prevent the Dietines from trying again, and in
1539 the King issued an edict threatening to prosecute for lese-majeste any noble who should attempt to curtail the rights
of the citizens.
Many
Dietines were also now steadily curtailing the rights
of the peasantry. The obligation to work one day a week without pay on the
lord’s land now became, in some palatinates, a legal and a general one, instead
of a matter of individual arrangement as heretofore.
It
was during this reign that the Reformation came into Poland. Poland had close
relations with Wittenberg and other German universities through her youth who
attended them in large numbers, and the doctrines of Luther spread rapidly,
especially in Polish Prussia. In Danzig, in 1524, five important churches
changed from the Catholic to the Protestant worship. The Protestant movement
here, as in many other places, was associated with a democratic political
movement which aimed at getting the town government out of the hands of the
ruling oligarchy. The Lutheran party were able to force the election of a new
town council, but not content with a moderate victory they proceeded to
abolish Roman Catholicism, close the monasteries, and declare all Church
property confiscated to the Government. These measures so offended the Roman
Catholics, still very numerous in the town, that the political issue became
secondary, and when the King came with his troops and restored the old order
the sentiment of the townspeople was generally with him.
Though
Sigismund was himself a strong Catholic and regarded the Lutheran doctrines as
dangerous innovations, he was not bigoted and neither persecuted Protestants
nor allowed the conversion of his friends to that faith to make a difference in
his confidence in them either personally or officially. He was equally
tolerant toward the Greek Church, and his favor and friendship toward their
religion did much to keep the old-Russian provinces faithful to the union with
Poland at a time when external events strongly taxed their allegiance.
Temperamentally
a lover of peace, and regarding it as a necessity for restoring prosperity to
the country and rebuilding the strength of the monarchy, Sigismund managed by
diplomacy and compromise to keep the country from a long war, but at no time
during his reign can he be said to have been really at peace with Muscovy.
Originally
a very tiny principality belonging to a very minor prince of the group that migrated
from Kiev to the northeast, Muscovy had used an excellent trading position to
become rich, under able princes had extended her territories, and by
friendship with the Tartar khans had grown strong enough to lead the movement
that finally freed the Russian princes from the Tartar yoke. Having thus
achieved the position of leader in an all-Russian cause, the Muscovite prince
laid claim to all the lands hitherto Russian (under the suzerainty of the Grand
Prince of Kiev) and called himself, by virtue of his claim upon them, “Czar of
all Russia.” The Russian principalities independent of him, no less than
Lithuania, regarded this claim as entirely preposterous, but Muscovy never
abandoned it, and in the end she made it good. It meant, meanwhile, permanent
hostility between Muscovy and Poland, and any cessation of hostilities was
never felt to be more than a truce.
Sigismund’s
relations with Muscovy, as well as his whole foreign policy, were complicated
and made extremely difficult by the treachery of Prince Michael Glinsky. A Lithuanian of great talents, highly educated,
traveled, a soldier of European renown, Prince Michael had won the heart as
well as the favor of King Alexander, who had made him Court Marshal of
Lithuania and had left the government of the Grand Duchy practically in his
hands. The Prince had used his position to enrich himself and his family to
such an extent that at Alexander’s death nearly half of Lithuania was in their
hands, and it was generally thought that Prince Michael meditated the erection
of these territories into an independent duchy for himself. In any case, he
was altogether too powerful a subject for Sigismund’s liking, and their mutual
suspicion led to Glinsky’s desertion to Muscovy,
carrying a good number of his friends and supporters with him. Henceforth he was
the most persistent and insidious of Sigismund’s enemies. As the chief adviser
of the Czar Vasily III, who had married his niece,
Helena Glinsky, he was a very formidable antagonist,
giving help to all Sigismund’s foes, and letting slip no opportunity to
embarrass and harass him. And there were many such. Turks, Tartars, and
Teutonic Knights, as well as Muscovites, were always ready to cross the border
when occasion offered, and the aspirations of the Habsburg Emperors to the
thrones of Hungary and Bohemia, occupied by Sigismund’s brother, Wladislaus, threatened the dynasty with a new danger.
As
a result of szlachta control the Polish army was
always inefficient and the treasury always empty, so that, though the Poles
were then, as always, excellent soldiers, and the Polish army particularly well
officered by men trained in the best foreign service, the Czar’s army, while inferior
in personnel, could generally defeat them by superior organization. For these
reasons Smolensk, the great border fortress of Lithuania, remained in Russian
hands, though Sigismund never acknowledged its loss by any treaty.
Similar
reasons and the added pressure of the Turks on the south made necessary
Poland’s recognition of the transformation of the territories of the Teutonic
Order into the Duchy of Prussia. Albert of Hohenzollern, the Grand Master, was
converted to Protestantism in 1522, and to keep the territory of the Order in
his own possession, he followed the custom of the day and secularized it; that
is, he declared it no longer the property of the Order, but a secular duchy,
hereditary in his family. Though this was, naturally, extremely objectionable
to the Roman Catholic Powers, from whom the use of a technical word did not
hide the fact that the transaction was plain robbery, Sigismund nevertheless
recognized the new Protestant state, accepted the new Duke of Prussia as his
vassal, and received his homage in April of 1525.
The
Turkish question was a very serious one for Sigismund, and was the determining
factor in his attitude toward Habsburg aspirations to the thrones of Bohemia
and Hungary. Up to the end of the fifteenth century, Hungary and Moldavia and
the No Man’s Land of the steppe had separated the Polish Empire from the Turks,
and the King of Hungary had been the ruler upon whom the task fell of keeping
the barrier intact against Turkish aggression. The subjugation of the Crimean
Tartars by the Turks in 1475, however, followed by the submission of Moldavia
to Turkish suzerainty, brought Poland for the first time into direct contact
with Turkey. How threatening the Moldavian situation was is seen by the events
of 1531. In that year, without any declaration of war, an army of Moldavians
and Turks simply invaded Polish territory. The King was quite unprepared, the
forces he could command few, and it was very largely the personal valor and
superior generalship of the Polish commander, John Tamowski,
that defeated them. It is probable that the object of this expedition was to
test the strength of Poland, and, if successful, it was to be followed up by a
serious attempt to conquer the country. The Turks were now, under Suleiman II,
nearing the height of their power; they had already crushed Hungary and
advanced to the very walls of Vienna.
The
King showed his appreciation of Tarnowski’s great services by descending from
the throne to welcome him when he entered the Senate — a unique distinction in
the relations between Polish kings and their subjects.
The
situation on the steppe was not less disquieting. The country from Kiev to the
Black Sea, lying in the arm of the Dnieper, was an unprotected wilderness (it
was known as the “Ukraine,” meaning “border”) and offered great advantages for
Tartar raids, which were all too frequent and very harmful. The Tartars kept a
Polish army busy all the time, but in spite of its presence the country was in
constant disturbance and many captives were carried off each year to be sold
as slaves in the markets of Turkey. The Poles felt keenly the humiliation of
this situation, as well as its other inconveniences, and the belief that the
great House of Habsburg would be the best guardian’ of both Hungary and Poland agaiiist the Turks was the chief reason why the King
consented to, and urged his brother, Wladislaus, to
accept, the marriage propositions of the Emperor Maximilian. By this
arrangement the House of Habsburg, by virtue of the marriage between Anne, only
daughter of Wladislaus, and Maximilian’s grandson,
Ferdinand, came into possession of the thrones of Hungary and Bohemia after the
death of Wladislaus’s only son, Louis. Sigismund was
one of the few statesmen of his day who recognized the real weakness of Hungary
in spite of her outward appearance of greatness, and he saw in the Austrian
connection the only means of giving her the strength which would enable her to
continue to act as the barrier for Europe against the Turk. He consistently
maintained this position throughout his reign; he refused the crown of Hungary
when it was offered to him by the opponents of the Germans after the death of
his nephew, Louis, in 1526; he refused also to help his sonin-law,
John Zapolya of Transylvania, who accepted the crown
when Sigismund refused it, and fought a long and terrible civil war to keep it.
This war was ended by the compromise Peace of Grosswardein
in 1538, by which John was to have the throne during his lifetime and was to be
succeeded by Ferdinand of Habsburg. When John died in 1540, Sigismund obliged
his sister, Queen Isabella of Hungary, to keep the treaty and hand over the
kingdom to Ferdinand, though she and a very strong Hungarian party wanted to
put her infant son on the throne. The leaders of this anti-German party were
the Polish Primate, Jan Laski, and his nephews, Hieronymus, Jan, and
Stanislaus, all of them very powerful and very able. Their activities were a
rather serious embarrassment to the King’s policy of Habsburg friendship, but
it survived to the end and was strengthened by the marriage of Sigismund’s only
son to the Austrian Archduchess Elizabeth.
In
this reign, in 1526, at the extinction of the Piastine
line of Masovian princes, Masovia was united with
Poland. Its annexation added a strong democratic element to Polish politics
which was of great importance in the next reign.
For
the defense of the Ukraine against the Tartars nothing was done, though the
Lord Marcher Daszkiewicz had a very admirable and
inexpensive scheme for the organization of the wandering bands of freebooters
of the steppe, called Cossacks, into companies for the defense of the border,
and Queen Bona, in the work that she did for the protection of her private
estates in the Ukraine, showed how easily and how effectively such a plan could
have been carried out. She built two castles,\
one
at Bar, another at Krzemieniec. At Bar she stationed
her Steward, Bernard Pretficz, who so successfully
repulsed the Tartar bands (he beat them off seventy times) that thousands of
colonists flocked thither where alone on all the border was life safe and a
living secure.
Queen
Bona was the second wife of King Sigismund; she was an Italian of the great
Sforza family of Milan. Beautiful, cultivated, the patron of the Renaissance,
she made the Court of Cracow a literary and artistic center of no mean
importance. She was very unpopular in Poland on account of her greed for both
money and power, her entire unscrupulousness, and her very mischievous influence
over the King all during his latter years. She is suspected
of having poisoned her daughter-inlaw, Barbara Radziwill, that her son might marry some
one more favored by herself.
Sigismund
Augustus, or Sigismund II (15481572), came to the throne under the disadvantage
of having to appoint almost all new advisers. A dozen or more of the old
magnate families of Poland, Lithuania, and Masovia became
extinct at this time, and the King had to raise members of the lesser nobles to
positions that had never before been given to their families. The new King did
not, however, regard this as a very serious disadvantage. He was of a far more
yielding disposition than his father, more interested in new things, and more ready
to welcome new ideas. He had much-of the suppleness of his Italian mother’s
race and much of their diplomatic genius, as well as a large measure of the
tenacity of purpose of the Jagiellos. His subjects, a
little contemptuous of a king “brought up by a woman,” the friend , of artists
and speaking three languages besides his own, were surprised to find in him a
ruler of firmness, intelligence, and rare skill in the management of men.
On
his first public appearance after his father’s death (he had been crowned during
his father’s lifetime), when the Senate of Lithuania came together to do homage
to the new ruler, he threw a bomb into their, midst by announcing his marriage
with Barbara Radziwill, member of a great Lithuanian
family, which had taken place secretly some years before. Barbara was a
Calvinist, and the daughter of the leader of Lithuanian Calvinism, Nicholas Radziwill, called “the Black.” As a Lithuanian she was
especially offensive to the Polish nobles, who wished the King to marry a
foreigner of royal blood, and as a Calvinist she was anathema to the clergy.
The King’s first Diet, which met in October, 1548, at Piotrkow,
almost unanimously demanded that he divorce Barbara. John Tamowski
was the only Senator who supported the King, while the lower House was almost
equally insistent. To these clamors the King replied quite calmly, “Every man
has the right to choose his own wife; why cannot the King do the same? Or does
the Christian religion allow me to put away her whom I have wedded? It is for
you of the clergy, who know better about such things, to convince your brethren
on this head. But I will not desert my wife, though she were stripped of
everything but her shift.” 1 After a stormy session the King
dissolved the Diet, and issued a “Universal,” or appeal to the people against
the position of the Diet. Eighteen months later, when his second Diet came
together, public opinion was so strongly with him that not a word about his
marriage was said!
The
szlachta used the opportunity presented by the
discussion of the King’s marriage to forward their plan of bringing the clergy,
as they had brought the other classes of society, under their control. They had
tried in vain to bring this about under Sigismund I, who, in spite of his
tolerant spirit, remained to the end of his life the stanch supporter of the
rights of the Church. When the marriage question came up the House of Nuncios
asked the privilege of meeting with the King without the presence of the
Senators. The Chancellor objected that this was contrary to usage, but the King
consented to it, and the meeting took place. Ever after the Nuncios considered
it a precedent and from this time on claimed the right to meet separately with
the King, and regarded their House as possessing powers distinct from those of
the Diet as a whole. The story goes also that in this famous interview the
Nuncios, in despair of moving the King concerning his marriage, fell upon their
knees in a body before him. Greatly astonished at this unprecedented occurrence,
the King rose from his seat and took off his hat. The Nuncios insisted on
treating this unconscious act as a precedent and demanded that the King always
receive any large body of the Nuncios uncovered. In the end the King was
obliged to concede both points.
From
this time the Senate lost its legislative predominance, which passed to the
lower House. The more important matters that came to the Diet were considered
in joint session by the two Houses, and their superiority of numbers gave the
House of Nuncios the advantage in all these sessions. With the military and
civil powers thus undermined, the King had very little to support his authority
except tradition and religious sentiment, and both these were seriously shaken
by the Reformation.
As
has been stated above, the Reformation had entered Poland during the reign of
Sigismund I, and had made some progress, especially in the German parts of
Poland, but it is doubtful if it would have proved a factor of great
importance had it not been for the szlachta's
jealousy of the power of the clergy and their recognition of the reform
movement as a weapon with which to destroy it. Protestants, who from conviction
refused to pay tithes, questioned the jurisdiction of the Church courts, and
objected to the payment of annates and other papal contributions, were
supported by the szlachta for political reasons irrespective
of their own religious convictions, and the very worldly lives and lax faith of
many of the more conspicuous of the Catholic clergy won a certain measure of
popular approved for the reformers from those not especially interested in the
political aspect of the case.
There
existed on the statute books a number of edicts against heresy, some of them
dating from the last reign, others from the period of the Hussite movement.
Sigismund had no wish to see the Church weakened or the conservative forces in
the state destroyed, and just after the session of the second Diet, in 1550 he
issued the famous edict by which he pledged himself to enforce the law of the
land against heresy and to maintain the privileges of the clergy. The Bishops,
regarding this as permission to persecute, summoned before their courts many
persons suspected of heresy, as well as those who had refused to pay tithes
and other Church dues. The szlachta were greatly
alarmed and the Diet of Piotrkow (January, 1552) was
a stormy one. The nobles were a unit, Catholic and Protestant alike, in
opposition to the rights of bishops to summon them before their courts, and the
opposition was so strong that the Bishops were very willing to accept the
King’s compromise proposal, which was that the jurisdiction of the Church
courts be suspended for a year on condition that the gentry continued to pay
their tithes during this period.
This
meant that there was in Poland entire liberty to think, speak, and worship. The
Church could as always decide upon the orthodoxy of a doctrine, and
excommunicate heretics, but there their power ceased. They could neither try
nor punish them. This freedom was so unprecedented in the sixteenth century
that it drew to Poland reformers of every sect and of every shade of opinion.
There were fewer Lutherans than other sects, perhaps because of its German
character; but Calvinists were very numerous and Socinians, Unitarians, and
Waldensians were all represented. There was also a group that favored a
National Church on Catholic lines, similar to the English Church under Henry
VIII. The great majority of the Polish nobles, the greater as well as the
lesser, were Protestant during the reign of Sigismund Augustus.
In
Lithuania, especially, Nicholas Radziwill the Black,
Palatine of Wilna and Chancellor of Lithuania, who
became an ardent Calvinist, devoted his fortune as well as his enormous influence
to advancing the cause, and succeeded in bringing over not only all the great
families, Orthodox as well as Roman Catholic, but many of the Roman Catholic
clergy as well. It is said that in Samogitia there
were left only ten Catholic clergymen. Radziwill
spent vast sums building Calvinist churches and colleges and having the Bible
translated into Polish. This translation, known as the “Radziwill
Bible,” was printed in 1564. It is now a very rare book because the son of Radziwill, converted back to Catholicism, bought up, in so
far as he could, the whole edition and had the books publicly burned in Wilna.
The
result of the Protestantism of the nobility was that the Diets were
overwhelmingly Protestant, and from 1552 to 1559 they made a strong effort to
set up a National Reformed Church. The suspension of the ecclesiastical courts
was indefinitely prolonged and most drastic proposals of reform were made, such
as the exclusion of the Bishops from the Senate, and the calling of a synod to
reform the Church, to which not only representatives of all sects within the
kingdom were to be summoned, but to which all the chief reformers of Europe
were to be invited—Calvin, Melanchthon, Beza, and Vergerius. ’
The
Roman Catholic Church was saved from this very grave danger by practically one
man, Stanislaus Bezdany, or, as he is better known, Hosius, the Grand Cardinal, who roused the Papacy to
undertake the Counter-Reformation and finally introduced into Poland the newly
formed Society of Jesus, actively to combat heresy. Nowhere did the Jesuits achieve
a more conspicuous success, perhaps because the masses of the people both in
Poland and in Lithuania were untouched by the reform movement, and the Jesuits
had chiefly the upper classes to conquer. They .ended by wiping out all
sectarianism, getting possession of all the schools, and becoming the
dominating political influence.
The
King was very favorable to the reformers, and some writers believe that had
he-lived longer he would have established a National Reformed Church. But his
chief concern was to keep his kingdom at peace and save it from the horrors of
civil wars of religion such as were devastating western Europe. His attitude
and his enlightenment are well expressed in the following words in which he
gives his reasons for granting permission to the Protestants to build a church
in Cracow: —
“Considering
the great calamities to which the largest and most flourishing Christian
countries have recently been exposed, because their kings and princes have
tried to suppress the different religious opinions which have arisen in our own
time, we have resolved to prevent these dangers . . . from disturbing the peace
and security of our realms, and from causing such excitement of the minds of
people as would produce a civil war, particularly as we have become convinced,
by the example of other countries in which so much Christian blood has been
shed, that such severities are not only useless but even most injurious.”
To
keep the peace, to reform abuses in public administration, and to transform the
somewhat unstable personal union of Poland and Lithuania into a real
legislative union strong enough to withstand the pressure of dangers from
without, — these were his ideals and to these he devoted his life. The union of
the two states was achieved, only a short three years before his death, by the
“Union of Lublin” in 1569. From 1386 the union of Poland and Lithuania had
been personal only. Each country had its own Diet and was governed quite separately
from the other. The point of union was that the hereditary Grand Duke of
Lithuania was always elected King of Poland. This was of great advantage to
Poland, as, though in theory an elective monarchy, in practice she had an
hereditary kingship during these important years, and there were none of the
contested elections that tore Poland to pieces in later centuries. By the
Union of Lublin the two Diets became one, though each country kept its own
separate army, court, laws, and administration. In order to meet the
objections to the union based upon the inequalities of the two countries, the
King resigned, his hereditary rights to the throne of Lithuania, which became
thereupon elective as Poland’s was, and he extended to the members of the LithuanianDiet (far less privileged than the Polish) all
the Polish rights and liberties. Henceforth the common Diet with the King ruled
the country. The jealousy that existed between the two countries led to the
choice of a new place of meeting for the united Diet, and thus the creation of
a new capital, Warsaw. As this town was in the Duchy of Masovia,
only recently united to Poland, it was neither Polish nor Lithuanian and thus
satisfactory to both countries. From this time on all the kings of Poland were
elected on the field of Pola near Warsaw, and lived in Warsaw. But they were
always crowned and buried at Cracow, Poland’s old capital.
One
of the most important events of the reign was the acquisition of Livonia. When,
in 1466 at the Peace of Thorn, the Teutonic Order became subject to the King
of Poland, the Knights of the Sword refused to accept the treaty and reverted
to their original condition of a separate order, their Grand Master taking the
place of the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order in the German Diet. Under1
the Grand Master Walter von Plattburg, the Knights of
the Sword fought long and vigorously against Muscovy, and in 1502 made a truce
for fifty years. During these years the Reformation spread throughout Livonia,
including among its converts the Grand Master and most of the Knights. During
this same period also it lost much of its military vigor and thus became
politically powerless at the very time that its commercial importance was
making its conquest an ever greater temptation to the growing powers on its
borders, Sweden, Muscovy, and Poland, all of whom were reaching out eagerly
toward the Baltic. The end of the truce with Muscovy and the refusal of Ivan IV
to renew it, except on terms that Livonia hesitated to accept, led to the
invasion of the country by Ivan. The Knights appealed to Poland for help and by
the Treaties of Wilna (1559) placed themselves under
Polish protection. Their two southern provinces, Semigallia and Courland, were
made into an hereditary Grand Duchy for the last Grand Master, Gothard von Ketler, who became a
vassal of the Grand Duke of Lithuania. Their- most northerly province, Esthonia, became a part of Sweden at this time, and John,
Duke of Finland, the heir to the Swedish throne, was married in 1562 to Catharine,
the fourth sister of King Sigismund. The treaty which contained these
arrangements was of great importance. By it Sweden and Poland were united in
common opposition to Muscovite ambition to reach and rule the Baltic, and
Poland for the first time in her history had the opportunity to make herself a
sea power. The marriage of Catharine and John Vasa, Duke of Finland, also was
to provide a new line of kings for Poland. On the other hand, it meant war with
Muscovy, and the truce which closed the war in 1569 left Polotsk
in the hands of the Muscovite, just as in the reign of Sigismund I, Smolensk
had been left in her hands. Thus slowly but ever surely Muscovy pressed on.
Under
Sigismund Augustus, Poland reached the height of her prosperity. Territorially
great and fairly well governed, her towns prosperous and still enjoying the
greater part of their liberties, commerce and industry feeling an enormous
impulse from the settlement in the country of skilled artisans whom religious
persecutions had driven thither, the depression of the agricultural classes
was not yet observable, and there were few signs to show that the beginning of
a sure decline was so near.
The
Jagiellon period is also Poland’s great literary age.
Her language during this period took on its modem literary form, and a great
national literature gave it permanence and expressed the nation’s sense of its
own expanding life.
CHAPTER
III
THE
ELECTIVE MONARCHY
THE
ERA OF DECLINE, 1572-1763
When King Sigismund died in July, 1572,
without direct heirs, the crown, always elective in theory, became so in fact,
and the nation had to choose a king.
It
was two hundred years since Poland had had an interregnum, there .was no
authority legally constituted to act in such an emergency, and just at first no
one seemed to know exactly what to do. The general confusion and disorder were
so great that the King’s mistress was able to run off with the crown jewels and
all the royal treasure, so that the dead king lay in state in borrowed jewels
and in clothes much wanting in sumptuousness. Factions among the nobility,
partly religious, partly personal, not only prevented any common action in this
crisis, but, on the contrary, led the kingless country to the verge of civil
war, as no group was willing that any other should
take the lead. Finally, however, all factions came together in the Convocation
Diet which met in January, 1573. This Diet enacted that during an interregnum
the Primate should act as Interrex and call the Diets, and that the Grand
Marshal should govern in the name of the Primate and the Senate. It also
arranged religious differences by a law which put all Christian religions on an
exact legal equality. Finally it set the meeting of the Election Diet for
April, 1573. On the motion of John Zamoyski it was
also decided, amid great enthusiasm, that the king should be elected, not by
the regular Diet, but by all the szlachta; that is,
that each noble should attend and cast his vote in person. This motion was the
foundation of Zamoyski’s enormous popularity and
influence with the nobility, which made him the most powerful person in the republic
during the next twenty-five years. He favored the vote en
masse because it indicated the complete equality of the nobility — an idea for
which he stood consistently all his life long.
It
is not improbable, however, that the suggestion of this method of electing a
king was made by the French Ambassador Montluc. He
was already busy gathering votes for the French candidate to the vacant throne,
the Duke of Anjou, brother of the French King, and, as he found the lesser
nobles much the easier to win over, it was to his interest to have as many of
them as possible at the election.
There
were other foreign Powers beside France who aspired to the Polish throne on
this occasion. Ivan IV of Muscovy, the King of Sweden, and the Duke of Prussia
were all candidates, while the Emperor Maximilian II put forward his son the
Archduke Ernest. The sentiment in Poland, however, was very general for a “Piast” or native Pole. When the Election Diet came
together, the Protestants, who were in a majority, brought forward the name of
John Firley, Grand Marshal and leader of the Polish
Calvinists. But the opposition of two powerful Lutheran families, the Zborowskis and the Gorkas, so
divided the Protestant vote that his election was impossible. The Papal Legate
then very skillfully intervened and got the Zborowskis
to support his Catholic candidate, the Archduke Ernest. Perceiving, however,
that the feeling against the Habsburgs was so strong that the Archduke could
not be elected, he threw his influence to the support of the Duke of Anjou, who
was finally chosen.
A
worse choice could scarcely have been made; Anjou had no interest in Poland and
was wholly unsuited, both as regards character and political ideas, to reign
there. He was simply the instrument used by the French Government to enlist
Poland’s support in the task of crushing the Habsburg Power. It was the zeal
and ability of the French Ambassador, and his unlimited use of both money and
promises, that secured enough influence to carry the election for France.
Before
electing the king the szlachta under Protestant
leadership had “safeguarded the future of their liberties” by preparing a pacta
conventa to which Henry of Anjou and succeeding
kings had to swear, and which took away most of the attributes of royalty. By
this the king agreed not to name his successor, neither to marry nor divorce
his wife, neither to declare war nor send ambassadors to foreign courts, nor to
levy taxes, without the approval of the Diet; he agreed also to govern through
a permanent council of fourteen Senators chosen by the Diet, four of whom
should always be with him; to call the Diet for a six weeks’ session every two
years; to keep the peace between religious sects and to protect them all
equally. The pacta included also a provision that if the king failed to keep
his oath in regard to any of these points, the nation, after duly warning him,
was released from its obedience and at liberty to rebel against him.
The
new King did not at all like these conditions and had no great wish to take up
his new duties. It was six months after the election before he reached Poland,
and when he arrived he entered at once into the schemes of the extreme
Catholics to omit the most obnoxious clauses of the oath (which he had already
sworn to in Paris) from the coronation ceremony, and thus* leave him a pretext
on which to disregard them. As a matter of fact the crown was about to be
placed on his head with no word said about religious liberty when Firley and the Chancellor Dembrinski
stepped forward and refused to allow the ceremony to proceed unless the King
took the whole oath. Firley took the crown in his own
hands and said in loud voice, “ If you will not swear you shall not reign.”
Thus coerced, the King took the oath, but it is doubtful if he would have kept
it very long, and the death of his brother in June, 1574, and his own succession
to the throne of France, probably saved Poland a civil war. As soon as he heard
of his brother’s death, Henry was eager to get to France and take up his new
honors, but he could not leave Poland without the consent of the Diet and it
took time to get the Diet together, so he resolved to run away! Late at night,
after a great court entertainment, he left the castle by a private passage from
his own rooms, found some French attendants who had provided horses for him,
and by riding all night was able to cross the frontier into Silesia before
morning. A deputation of Polish noblemen was sent after him to beg him to
return, but no amount of persuasion would induce him to resume so thorny a
crown.
He
was formally deposed in May, 1575, and Poland was obliged to choose another
king. But party antagonism was even worse in this than in the previous
interregnum, and it seemed as though agreement on any one candidate was an
impossibility. Just at this point a terrible Tartar raid, which laid waste the
rich fields of the Ukraine and took away fifty thousand captives, brought home
to the Poles the necessity for a king and a government even if the king was not
just the person of their choice. The Election Diet met at Warsaw in November,
1575, and after only a month of discussion and delay, Stephen Batory, Prince of Transylvania, was elected king by the
Izba, or House of Nuncios, after two Piasts had been
offered, and had prudently declined, the honor. The Senate, meanwhile, had
yielded to the influence of the Papal Legate and elected the Emperor Maximilian.
As neither king-elect was inclined to yield, the death of Maximilian relieved a
difficult situation and made Stephen’s throne secure.
The
affection of the country for the Jagiellon family had
made Stephen’s election conditional upon his marrying the Princess Anna, sister
of Sigismund Augustus, which he did, and she was crowned with him May I, 1576.
Danzig
alone in the whole country objected to the new monarch. “The Pearl of Poland”
favored the Emperor on account of her trade which the burghers believed the
German connection would greatly enhance. So she shut her gates and refused to
recognize Stephen, who spent the first six months of his reign besieging the
city. After its surrender the King imposed a heavy fine, but removed all rancor
by wisely confirming all privileges and immunities.
This
task accomplished, the King was free to give his attention to foreign affairs
which were both critical and delicate. Tartars and Muscovites were invading
Polish territory and the szlachta, were clamorous for
the restoration of peace, but were quite unable to see that the only way to get
it was to conquer both enemies. In all of Europe the Poles could have found no
one better fitted than King Stephen to deal with the situation. As Prince of
Transylvania, he had filled a difficult and precarious throne where the
continued existence of the independence of his country depended upon his exact
no knowledge of the policies of Europe, and his ability to play one power
against another and gain from all. No monarch in Europe was more intimately
informed as to the conditions and policies of both Turkey and Muscovy as well
as those of the Western Powers. Of Slav origin himself he spoke the Polish
language fluently, and understood, perhaps instinctively, the Polish
character. Not being known in Poland all factions believed him favorable to
them, and Stephen skillfully avoided committing himself on irritating questions
and used his popularity to get things done.
His
foreign policy was directly opposed to the non-intervention sentiment of the szlachta. To him it was an obvious fact that Muscovy and
Turkey menaced the future existence of Poland as a great state. The Turks in
alliance with the Crimean Tartars had cut Poland’s communications with the
Black Sea, were a constant menace to her southern provinces, and had already
torn away from Polish influence the principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia;
while the realization of Muscovy’s claims on all the Russian parts of
Lithuania, and of her ambitions to reach and control the Baltic coast, would reduce
Poland to a land-locked state of small dimensions and little importance. He had
no idea of submitting to these conditions. On the contrary, he meant to destroy
the Muscovite Empire and drive the Turk from Europe. As, however, the Turkish
question was a European matter and needed time to arrange, he made a temporary
peace. He continued the subsidies paid to the Tartars by Sigismund II, on condition
that they keep the peace with Poland and serve her in case of war. He then
turned his attention to Muscovy.
Under
Ivan III and his son, Vasily III, Muscovy had thrown
off the Tartar yoke, gathered most of the Russian “lands” under her rule, and
under Ivan IV had conquered the Tartar strongholds of Kazan and Astrakan, which had continually threatened her on the
southeast. With their conquest the Volga became a Russian river, and all the
region of the Caspian and beyond lay open to the expanding might of the
youthful Russian state. But Ivan, like Peter the Great after him, saw that
Russia must be in contact with the West if she would be great, and he fixed his
eyes on Livonia, which would give him a Baltic outlet with towns, fortresses,
and western European trade. His failure to achieve it and its subsequent
annexation to Poland has been considered in a previous chapter. In the anarchy
in Poland which followed Sigismund’s death, Ivan saw an opportunity to win it
back, and in 1575 he invaded the country. It was not until 1579 that Stephen
could go against him, but in that year he declared war and led an army into
Livonia to drive out the Muscovites and conquer Polock,
which would keep open Livonia’s communications with Lithuania. The Diet had,
quite characteristically, refused to make any grant for the war, but now, as
all through his reign, Stephen carried out his plans without much reference to
the Diet and found the money somehow. It took three campaigns, lasting nearly
three years, to induce the Czar to cede Livonia and Polock,
but Stephen accomplished it, though he had to borrow from the Electors of
Saxony and Brandenburg, and from his vassal the Duke of Prussia, in order to
pay his soldiers. His army was largely mercenaries, Hungarian and German, but
he had also an army sent by his brother, the Prince of Transylvania, and a
number of the great nobles, won over to the King by his genius and character,
sent him their private armies. The King also added a number of regiments of
infantry to the Polish army. As the nobles refused to serve except as cavalry,
the King enrolled the peasants on the crown lands as infantry, freeing them and
their posterity from certain dues when they enlisted, and after three campaigns
making them entirely free. The King also made a point of ennobling those who
distinguished themselves, with the result that the infantry became both an
effective and popular branch of the service.
The
szlachta were more dismayed than pleased or grateful
over the King’s victories. They accused him of all sorts of evil conduct and
ambitions, but the peasants recognized his greatness. When he returned to
Poland after his second victory over Ivan IV, he was received as a hero by the
peasants all along his journey, whole villages turning out to greet him. When
he reached Warsaw, all the bells were ringing and the people insisted that the
great bell of Warsaw distinctly pronounced the name of King Stephen 1 Even the
Diet, which had previously resolved not to grant him a penny, was carried away
by the general enthusiasm and made him quite a decent grant.
The
death of Ivan IV, shortly after the signing of the Truce of Zapolsk (January, 1582) which gave Livonia and Polock to Poland, gave King Stephen hopes of carrying out a
great European scheme of conquering Muscovy altogether and incorporating it
with Poland, uniting Poland and Hungary, and driving the Turk from Europe. The
Pope, Sixtus V, to whom he opened his scheme, had
agreed to furnish the money for the enterprise, and negotiations with Austria,
which was to have Transylvania as the price of assistance, and with Denmark,
were already under way when the King fell ill and died very suddenly.
The
lawlessness of the magnates and the absence of all responsibility for the
public welfare on the part of the szlachta, in whose
hands all the powers lay, convinced King Stephen as they had convinced other
kings that some reform of the Constitution was essential to any future
development of the country, and he was on the point of submitting a programme of reform to the Diet as a necessary preliminary
to his big foreign adventure, when he died. _
All
during his reign he combated lawlessness in high places. He insisted on
obedience to the law from all men of all ranks, and stood solidly behind all
his officials who found it difficult, sometimes even dangerous, to enforce it.
The famous case of Samuel Zborowski is a typical
instance of this sort. During the reign of King Henry this representative of
one of the greatest and also the most lawless of Polish magnate families
stabbed and killed a Senator within the precincts of the royal castle, and by
the clemency of the King was exiled, merely, instead of hanged as the law
provided. Under King Stephen he returned to Poland and lived openly in Cracow. Zamoyski, as Starost of Cracow, warned him to go or he
would be arrested and executed according to the law. Zborowski
impudently ignored the warning, and Zamoyski
arrested him and after a trial of scrupulous fairness over which the King
himself presided, he was condemned and executed (1584). His family at once
sought vengeance. They came to the Diet of 1585, to which they had referred
their cause, with a great army of retainers determined to overawe both Diet
and King. But the King and Zamoyski also brought
troops and, with a determination quite equal to theirs, carried on the struggle
in the Diet and won from that body not only confirmation of the justice of
Samuel’s execution, but the banishment of Christopher Zborowski,
Samuel’s companion in lawlessness and treason. Much of the disaffection of the
Zborowski was the result of their personal antagonism
to Zamoyski, their jealousy of the power given him,
and the personal favor shown him by King Stephen. This antagonism was
increased a hundred-fold by the events just recorded and was one of the chief elements of disorder in the early part
of the next reign.
In
religious matters the King was himself a Catholic, but was entirely tolerant.
He bestowed favors and rewards with absolute disregard of religious lines and
repressed intolerance in others with severity. Friends and foes agree that
Stephen was a great ruler. “There was no kind of glory which Poland did not
possess under him,” and the all-too-short ten years of his reign had shown what
Poland might be under a king who was able to give her, whether she wanted it or
not, strong and efficient government.
In
all his undertakings, whether of war or of peace, John Zamoyski
was the King’s righthand man, almost, indeed, his second self. Za- moyski’s personal qualities endeared him to the King, who
married him to his niece, Griselda, and took him into his personal intimacy,
while his preeminent abilities as general, statesman, and administrator, and
his great influence with the szlachta, made him an
invaluable public servant. The greatest offices in the gift of the Crown were
bestowed upon him, and he exercised an authority such as no citizen had ever
had before. As Castellan of Cracow he was the first of the lay Senators; as
Starost of the same province he had criminal jurisdiction over all Little
Poland; as Grand Hetman of the Crown he was Commander-in-Chief of the army,
while as Chancellor he was the Keeper of the Great Seal, the guardian of the
Constitution.
There
is no question of the value of his services to Poland, but, on the other hand,
he was extremely jealous of his dignity, far from scrupulous in his methods,
and all too prone to regard opposition to his policies as treachery to the
State. It is small wonder that he had enemies besides the Zborowski,
and of quite a different sort, and, natural enough, that all of them should
join together after the death of King Stephen in an attempt to curtail his
power. The Primate Kamkowski, an old man of seventy,
and completely under the influence of the Zborowski,
wrote to Zamoyski, who was in the Ukraine with the
army, not to come to the Convocation Diet, and it was hoped that the election
of the new king could take place without him. Zamoyski,
however, had quite other intentions, and when the Election Diet met in June,
1587, he was not only there, but he had the whole southern army with him.
There
were three important candidates for the throne on this occasion: the Czar of
Muscovy, the Archduke Maximilian, brother of the Emperor Rudolph II, and
Sigismund Vasa, son of King John of Sweden and of Catharine Jagi-
ello, sister of Sigismund II. Zamoyski
supported the claims of the Swedish prince, and his influence was, perhaps,
the decisive factor in the election. The Zborowski
and their faction were in favor of Maximilian, while the majority of the
Lithuanians supported the Czar. Factional feeling had never been so bitter, and
all the factions came with armies behind them1 so that the field of
election was a great armed camp. This had, indeed, been true of the elections
of both Henry of Valois and of Stephen Batory, but in
neither case were the numbers or the animosities so great. The remark of a
foreign observer about the election of Henry of Valois, that it looked far more
like an assemblage “come together to conquer a foreign kingdom than to dispose
of their own,” was equally applicable here.
The
Primate Kamkowski, after long delay, finally took the
side of the Swedish prince, partly because he was the popular candidate (the
majority of the Poles supported him on account of his Jagiellon
blood and because his election would mean a close alliance of Sweden and Poland
against Muscovy), partly also because he feared that under Austrian rule
Poland would lose her liberties and be drawn into war against the Turks in the
interests of Austria. He therefore proposed Sigismund in the Senate. At this Zborowski led out his troops. Zamoy-
ski did likewise and a battle seemed inevitable when the Primate, old and
infirm as he was, mounted a horse and rode alone between the lines and besought
them in the name of their common fatherland not to disgrace the nation by civil
war. The appeal was effective, and both sides retired to quarters and contented
themselves by each side proclaiming its candidate king! Zamoyski
fortified Cracow and sat down to hold it until the Prince of Sweden should
arrive.
The
King of Sweden had always hoped to have his son King of Poland, and had
educated him with this idea in view, but when he heard of the difficulties of
the election, of the opposition of the Emperor, and especially of the condition
imposed by the Polish Diet of Election that Sweden must renounce her claims on Esthonia, he refused to allow his son to accept the throne.
It was only when his ambassadors returned from the election and told him that
his arch-enemy the Czar of Muscovy would be elected unless Sigismund accepted,
and also assured him that the Poles would give way on Esthonia,
that he reluctantly allowed the Prince to accept and to start for Poland. He
made him promise, however, not to land in Poland until the Poles should
definitely resign their claims on Esthonia. For five
days after his arrival, therefore, the King-elect sat on his ship in the harbor
of Danzig waiting for the Poles to yield! But the delegates sent to meet him
had no authority to decide a point of such importance, and finally Sigismund
accepted the compromise that the matter should be left as it was during the
lifetime of his father. When he got to Cracow he told the Senate he would resign
the crown rather than cede Esthonia, and they yielded
the point in view of the danger from Maximilian and the necessity of a close
alliance of Sweden and Poland against Muscovy. Sigismund was crowned December
27, 1587, but Maximilian refused to recognize him, and it was only after Zamoyski had fought Maximilian and taken him prisoner that
he agreed to renounce all his claims to the Polish throne.
The
new King was a cultured, highly educated, and politically intelligent young
man.
His
political programme, which he brought with him
ready-made from Sweden, was based upon a clear understanding of the needs of
Poland, but unfortunately he had not the strength of will and he never achieved
the personal popularity by which alone a Polish monarch could overcome the
handicaps of his position and accomplish anything. The childhood of the young
King (he was only twenty- one when he was crowned) had been extraordinary and
not without an element of tragedy. He was bom in
prison where his parents were confined by the half-mad King Erick of Sweden,
who feared Sigismund’s father would seize the throne. Sigismund’s mother was an
ardent and devout Roman Catholic, and not only brought up her son in her faith,
but greatly influenced her husband in that direction. When after Erick’s death
he became king, he admitted the Jesuits to Sweden and allowed his son to be
educated by them. The King’s religious feeling was not, however, very deep, and
after the Queen’s death he yielded to the influence of a strongly Protestant
country, expelled the Jesuits, and began to persecute Roman Catholics.
Sigismund was subjected to what might be called persecution also in the effort
to make him Protestant, but the young Prince clung to his religion and to his
Jesuit friends with all his might, and their influence became the dominating
one of his whole life. Grave beyond his years, cold and self-contained, neither
asking nor taking advice, he was never liked by the genial, open-natured Poles.
His religion also was a great disappointment to the Protestants of Poland, who
were greatly in the majority in the governing class. Instead of supporting
Protestantism as they had hoped, he became its strongest opponent in the north,
gave his Jesuit friends a free hand, and during his reign religious persecution
for the first time entered Poland’s doors. It was, however, persecution in its
milder forms; there was no bloodshed, no horrors as in Spain or France, but the
change that took place can be seen from the fact that when Sigismund came to
the throne the vast majority of the Senators were Protestant, and when he died
there were only two who still held to that faith. As a Catholic also he
believed in authority, and he spent his life in the struggle to arrest the
democratic movement and establish strong government in Poland.
In
foreign policy he held the views of King Stephen as to the necessity of
conquering both Turks and Muscovites, and attempted to form a league of the
Catholic Powers, headed by Austria and the Pope, in order to carry them out.
This brought him into direct opposition to Zamoyski
and to the majority of the szlachta, who regarded
Austria — the representative of that German peril against which their ancestors
had fought unceasingly — as the archenemy of Poland and the only serious
menace. to her safety. Against this determined opposition
the King had to struggle during his whole reign of nearly fifty years.
f The
King’s marriage to an Austrian archduchess and the persistent rumor (which was
entirely true) that he was negotiating with Austria with the idea of giving up
the Polish throne to the Archduke Maximilian, threw the whole country into
great excitement. Zamoyski even got the Diet of 1590
to pass an act expressly excluding the Archduke from the succession. But no
sooner had the Diet risen than the opposing party, led by the Primate, formed a
“Confederation” which protested against the acts of the Diet of 1590, and
especially against the power of Zamoyski. An
extraordinary Diet, called by the King at the end of the year, reversed all
the acts of its predecessor and greatly weakened Zamoyski’s
influence by depriving him of the Grand Hetmanship
and the Castel- lanate of Cracow, and replacing many of his friends at court
with supporters of the King’s policies. By June, 1592, however, Zamoyski had sufficiently recovered from this blow to call
a “Confederation” of his own at Jendrzow, which
brought up once more the question of the King’s Austrian intrigues and
protested vigorously against his “treachery.” As all the szlachta,
the Senators of Great and Little Poland, and most of the Orthodox Lithuanians
were now supporting Zamoyski, the Diet of 1592, the
so-called “Inquisition Diet,” which met to investigate the charges against the
King, was largely composed of his men. For weeks this investigation continued.
In the course of it the King was hectored like a bad schoolboy in the hands of
an old-fashioned teacher, and the way in which he kept both his temper and his
dignity was much to his credit. The Primate in the course of a speech made the
following remarks to the King, which show very clearly the extraordinary
self-complacency as well as the lack of manners of the assembly: — “Remember,
most serene King, your oath and the example of your predecessor, Henry of Valois,
who, having broken it, miserably perished. You are reigning over a free
people, over nobles who have not their equals in any other nation. Are you not
aware that you stand much higher than your father, who, I am told, reigns only
over peasants? Remember what our late King Stephen of glorious memory used to
say, ‘ I shall some day put down those Swedish kinglings and teach them how to behave.’”
Before
the Diet was over, the Austrian party, led by the young Queen’s mother, the
Archduchess Maria, a very shrewd statesman, saw that Zamoyski
was too powerful to be disregarded and must therefore be conciliated.
Accordingly, through the Palatine of Cracow, the King made his peace with his
Chancellor and restored to him the Grand Hetmanship.
No wiser move could have been made, as it enabled the King to use to the full
during the next ten years the really great abilities of the greatest of his
subjects.
In
1602, however, all Zamoyski’s suspicions of “Habsburg
intrigues” were again aroused by the King’s proposal to marry as a second wife
the sister of his first wife, who had died in 1599, and in the Diet of 1603, Zamoyski was once again the leader of the party of
opposition to the King. By this time dissatisfaction with the King had become
very general, and the opposition of Zamoyski was but
the beginning of a struggle between king and szlachta
that lasted, with few intermissions, for the next six years. There were many
reasons for this opposition. It greatly offended the Poles that, since the
death of the Dowager Queen Catharine, the old Polish ways had been given up,
and the court to all outward appearance was German. It was openly charged that
the King intended to make the monarchy hereditary, and greatly to curtail the
“liberties” of the szlachta, thus violating both the
Constitution and his coronation oath, and that the Germans at his Court were to
help him do it. Religious persecution, also, which deprived Protestants and
Orthodox of all places of trust and power and made it very difficult for them
to own and maintain public places of worship or other property, was deeply
resented, as was also the establishment of the Uniate Church in Poland. Poland
had never accepted the Union of Florence, and when it was practically forced
upon her by the King and his Jesuit advisers in 1594, the Orthodox people of
the southwestern provinces were on the verge of revolt. The Diet also objected
to the King’s foreign policy, and to the fact that the troops were not paid,
and charged him with using the money voted for the latter purpose for his own
private expenses. All these matters and many others were discussed with
vehemence and great dramatic effect in the Diets of 1603 and 1605, but nothing
was done, and the only result was increased irritation of all parties. Zamoy- ski died in 1605, shortly after the close of the
Diet, and his leadership was assumed by Ze- brzydowski,
under whom the quarrel soon assumed the form of civil war. Zamoyski,
in his last public speech in the Diet of 1605, had threatened to depose the
King if he did not mend his ways. Zebrzydowski led
the movement to do it.
As
in many other mediaeval parliaments the decisions of the Polish Diet were
considered as expressing the “sense of the [whole] meeting,” as the Quakers,
who have always maintained this usage, put it, and not, as in modern legislative
assemblies, the will of a dominant majority. A determined minority could
always prevent action to which they objected, but unless the minority was large
or very determined, little attention was paid to it, and it was not until the
late sixteenth century that the practice of unanimity in voting led to serious
inconveniences. In Sigismund’s reign, however, unanimity was obviously
impossible, and as long as it remained the rule no legislative acr tion could take place. In
1606 the King called the Diet for the express purpose of changing the
Constitution in this respect and providing for majority decisions. Zebrzydowski at once called a “Confederation” to protest
against this change “so destructive to personal liberty,” and great numbers of
the most influential nobility attended. After a few weeks of debate the
assembly turned itself into a Rokosz or
“Insurrection” (an armed opposition to the king permitted by the Constitution
when the king had violated its provisions and had been warned by the Senate),
which proposed to dethrone the King and put the Protestant Prince of
Transylvania in his place. The King met the situation with energy. He summoned
his troops from the Ukraine, and after issuing a manifesto condemning the
insurrection took the field against the rebels and defeated them at Janowiec (September, 1606). He then offered pardon to all
who would lay down their arms. Zebrzydowski wished to
continue the struggle, but his troops obliged him to appear before the King’s
representatives. Being assured that the King was not a traitor, wishing to
give the Kingdom to Austria, or to establish absolutism, he consented to renew
his allegiance. Having kissed the King’s hand he addressed his sovereign in the
following words: “God ... be my witness that all I have done was with the
intention of serving the public weal, and I promise my allegiance in the firm
hope that Your Majesty will satisfy the wishes of the nation.” Radziwill, next in insurgent command, then spoke and ended
thus: “Whatever I did was done, not from any want of respect for Your Royal
Majesty but following the example of our ancestors, I stood up for our liberties:
and these as a true noble, I shall ever defend at the risk of my life.”
A
delegation from the army of the insurgents also sought an audience with the
King; their spokesman made the following address: “We are freemen and born in a
free country. We were taught by our parents that whenever it concerned the
preservation of our liberties and rights, we should be ready to sacrifice our
lives and property. Believing these liberties to be in danger, we threw
ourselves as it were into the midst of a general conflagration in order to
extinguish it. Having now learned that Your Majesty never had any intention
against these liberties, we are grateful for it, and come to request Your
Majesty’s pardon for the actions we have done, they having been done with good
intention.”
But
all this eloquence and these pledges amounted to nothing. The trouble broke out
afresh the next year, and a second Rokosz was formed,
which renounced its allegiance to King Sigismund and proclaimed the Prince of
Transylvania King of Poland. Once again the King defeated the rebels in the
field, but it was not until 1609 that quiet was finally restored by a general
amnesty. This meant that the King’s attempt to introduce a system of voting
which should make constructive legislation feasible had failed, and in
discouragement he gave up all further attempts at constitutional reform, and
turned his attention to foreign affairs.
But
here again the Diet’s jealousy of its “golden liberty” and the popular fear of
the designs of Austria prevented the seizure of a moment of unique opportunity
to deal fatal blows to Poland’s natural and inevitable enemies, the Turks and
the Muscovites, and to secure her position on the Baltic seaboard. In 1592, on
the death of his father, Sigismund had become King of Sweden, but his
Catholicism made him unpopular with his intensely Protestant subjects, and in
1598 they dethroned him and put his uncle, Prince Charles of Suder- mania, who had acted as viceroy for Sigismund, on
the throne. When Sigismund refused to acknowledge him or to give up his own
claims to the throne, the Swedes invaded Livonia. But Zamoyski,
with his two great subordinates, Zolkiewski and Chodkiewicz, reconquered much of the country and were well
on their way to take the whole of it when the troops mutinied because they were
not paid. For two years Zamoyski tried in vain to get
either money or reinforcements from the Diet; finally Chodkiewicz
out of his own pocket paid for mercenaries with whom he managed to wring a
sensational victory from the Swedes at Kirkholm in
September, 1605, and saved Livonia for Poland.
For
a war with Turkey the time was very propitious as dynastic dissensions had made
her weak, and Tartar raids into Polish territory, as well as Turkish interference
in the border states of Wallachia and Moldavia, offered constant occasion for
war. Moldavia, it will be recalled, had been under the protection of Poland
since the early fifteenth century, and though the Turks had since then overrun
the country and received the homage of its rulers, the Polish claim had never
been abandoned, and could always be revived from time to time as occasion
offered. But it was in the Crimean Tartars that Turkey had her best weapon
against Poland. Bold and cunning, swift, ruthless, and always eager to fight,
they were ideal raiders of an unprotected border, and the fact that they were
known to be very independent and difficult to control made it always possible
for Turkey to disclaim responsibility for them when responsibility was
inconvenient. Zamoyski was right in his position that
to pursue the Tartars into the Crimea itself and defeat them on their own
ground was the only way effectively to guard the border against them, but the
Diet steadily refused to vote money for such an expedition, though they had in
the Cossacks of the Ukraine material for an ideal border militia. The Ukraine,
or border, was the name given to the vast tract of territory that extended
roughly from the mouth of the river Pripet to the cataracts of the Dnieper,
some miles below Kiev. The constant exposure of this territory to invasion from
the steppe had developed certain special characteristics in the inhabitants
who, in self-defense, had learned the cunning of the Tartars, were marvelous
riders, shots, and swimmers, very skillful in warfare of the guerrilla type
and very difficult to bring under restraint. This type of frontiersman became
known as a Cossack (or freebooter or robber), a name that was at first used as
a term of reproach, but later became very honorable.
In
the reign of Sigismund I the Cossacks (the name was given to the whole border
population at this time) first organized themselves for the defense of the
border. The organization was entirely voluntary and unpaid; it elected its own
officers, including the commander-in- chief, or ataman, and decided in general
assembly the policy to be pursued. King Stephen saw the great importance of
the Cossacks and made them a part of the regular army, giving them a fixed pay,
the use of certain pieces of land, and establishing a regular method of recruiting.
Henceforth they were known as the “registered” Cossacks. They continued to
elect their own atamans, but the election was subject to the King’s approval.
They always steadily refused to pay taxes or to do service for their land, and
during the years when all the other Slav peasantry, both Russian and Polish,
was bound in serfdom, they remained really free and practically independent,
for even after they were taken into Polish pay they never could be induced to
fight for causes they did not like. They never failed to defend the lower
classes of both Russia and Poland against the nobles and they never could be
kept from fighting the Tartars whenever an opportunity offered. When Poland was
at peace with the Sultan she was often seriously embarrassed by this
propensity;,
The
Zaporoghian Cossacks were a body quite distinct from
the “registered” and bore somewhat the relation to them that a standing army does
to the militia. The name “ Zaporoghians ” means
“behind the cataracts,” or falls, and refers to their settlements on the
islands of the Dnieper below the cataracts. The early history of this group is
obscure, but it undoubtedly originated in the necessity of keeping an advanced
guard against the Tartars on these lonely islands. In the course of time this
guard became a permanent settlement, living a life of hunting, fishing, and
fighting. The settlement was known as the Setch, and
was entirely selfgoverning and republican. A general
assembly of the whole community elected all the officers including the chief
ataman, who was absolute in time of war, but in peace was merely chief of his
staff. The discipline was strict — the murder of a comrade, bringing a woman
into the camp, and a number of other offenses were punished with death, while
thieves were tied to posts in the midst of the camp so that everybody could
hit them as they passed by. Though no women were allowed in the settlement,
many Cossacks kept their wives and families near by,
and many of them brought their sons to be brought up as Cossacks.
Fighting
was their profession and chief occupation. They acknowledged the sovereignty
of the King of Poland and regarded themselves as his army, but, as has been
said above, in common with all the Cossacks they used their judgment as to
when to fight for him. Though the majority of the Cossacks were Ukranians, many people of other nations, especially
Russians and Poles, joined them — young men of good family who wanted
adventure; exiles or outlaws; peasants who found their lot too hard; and all
those who wished to lose themselves and forget their past. Like all the Ukranians most of the Cossacks were Orthodox, and under Sigismund
III and his successors Orthodox peasants in large numbers fled to their ranks
to escape religious persecution. Thither likewise fled many from both Russia
and Poland to escape the chains of serfdom and the tyranny of the overlords.
The
szlachta deeply resented the existence of this refuge
for their serfs and feared a body so entirely independent of their control as
the Cossacks were. They were never willing to vote money for a great Cossack
expedition against the Turks and Tartars, but instead limited the policy of the
Government to keeping order on the border, and to do it Polish generals were
obliged to turn their arms oftentimes against the Cossacks instead of using
them against the common enemy. The result of this disastrous and suicidal
policy was ultimately to throw the whole Polish Ukraine into the arms of
Russia.
All
during the reign of Sigismund his Hetman fought a continual and losing fight
against the Tartars and the chronically rebellious Cossacks for the peace of
the border, and was rewarded by suspicion and ingratitude. Zolkiew-
ski, after forty years of service, a part of the time at his own private
expense, was accused of protracting the wars for his private advantage.
Faithful to Poland, he died in 1618 at the head of a little band of Poles who,
deserted by their comrades, were cut to pieces by the Turks, who had now become
strong enough to take the offensive and were invading Poland with all their
forces.
This
terrible disaster roused even the Diet which, with unprecedented generosity,
voted something more than half enough money to finance a campaign! Under the
Grand Hetman of Lithuania, Chodkiewicz, of Livonian
fame, and with the assistance of the Cossacks, the Turks were defeated and
forced to a truce (1619) that kept peace between the two states for nearly
forty years.
Meanwhile
events of dramatic and far-reaching importance had drawn Poland into a war
with Muscovy. Shortly after the death of Ivan IV, Muscovy fell into a state of
anarchy that bade fair to destroy her. The successor of Ivan IV on the Russian
throne was his son Theodore, a weakling both physically and mentally, undef whom the government was carried on by the Czar’s
brother-in-law, Boris Godunov, who ruled so well that after Theodore’s death a
national assembly elected him czar. The way had been paved for this by Boris
himself, who during the life of Theodore had had the Czar’s half-brother
Dmitri, the last of the direct heirs to the throne, murdered. Boris had hoped to
found a dynasty, but the great nobles, or boyars, never liked him, and some
time before his death in 1605, were already planning to supplant him. To
prepare the way they spread the news that the Czarevitch
Dmitri had not died, that it was another child who had been killed in his
place, and that the Czarevitch himself was in
Lithuania and about to return to claim the throne of his fathers. After Boris’s
death this Pretender succeeded to the throne amid great popular rejoicing-. It
has never been discovered who he was. That he was a Great Russian and sincerely
believed himself to be the Czarevitch Dmitri, and
that he was a wise, able, and independent ruler, there is no doubt at all. But
the boyars, who had hoped for a facile tool, were greatly disappointed and
began at once to plot to overthrow him also. In less than a year he was
murdered and Prince Vassily Shuiski
put in his place. But Shuiski was not the choice of
all the boyars. His lack of any title to the throne made him unpopular in the
country at large, and rival boyars saw their opportunity to produce a new
Pretender who claimed that he also was Dmitri once more miraculously escaped
from death! There was little belief in his claims, — he was an adventurer pure
and simple, — but he was proclaimed czar and set up his camp at Tushino from which he was popularly known as “The Thief of Tushino.” There were now two czars, Shuiski
at Moscow and “The Thief” at Tushino.
In
the whole Russian domestic difficulty the Poles had taken a large, though not
at first an official, part. It was in Poland at the court of Prince Adam Wisniowiecki that the False Dmitri had first laid public
claim to his title, and here and elsewhere in Poland his claims were recognized
and kingly honor-s were accorded him. He was converted to Roman Catholicism by
the Franciscans and betrothed to Maria, the eldest daughter of the Palatine of Sandomir, during the year 1603, and early in 1604 was
presented to King Sigismund at Cracow. Sigismund did not see his way to
recognize him publicly, but acknowledged him privately and paid him a small
pension. His future father-inlaw then took up his
cause, collected an army of Poles and Cossacks, and started out to place him on
the throne of Muscovy. The Diet of 1605 protested vehemently against this
expedition, and recalled the Palatine and his troops. But the Cossacks, who
formed more than half his force, refused to return, and with them the Pretender
proceeded on his way, winning many to his side as he went. “The Thief” at Tushino also had many Poles in his army, and many Cossacks
were drawn to his support by the fact that all the lower classes in Muscovy
were supporting him and that under him a great peasant and Slav rising was
taking place.
The
horrors inflicted on the country by “The Thief" and his Cossack allies
were indescribr able, and Shuiski
called in the Swedes to help him restore order, ceding Carelia
to them and renouncing all Muscovy’s claims on Livonia in return. At this King
Sigismund insisted on intervening, though the Diet was still indifferent. Zolkiewski led an army against Shuiski,
defeated and took him prisoner, and received the proposition of the boyars to
place Prince Wladis- laus,
the son of King Sigismund, on the Muscovite throne.
Zolkiewski
managed the matter with great skill. He got the boyars to render homage to him
as the representative of the Prince, to send a deputation of their most
distinguished men to confer with King Sigismund as to the terms on which his
son could accept the Muscovite throne, and to admit the Polish army to the
Kremlin of Moscow, thus giving them control of the city. But the King could not
allow him to accept and protect Orthodoxy, without which the Muscovites would
not accept him, so after months of futile negotiation the conference broke up.
Meanwhile a great popular movement was sweeping over Muscovy — a movement
that was essentially religious and was led by the clergy — in opposition to the
rule of a foreigner, and a schismatic. A national assembly met and elected
Michael Romanoff czar, thus founding a new dynasty and at the same time ending
the only opportunity the Poles ever had of ruling in Muscovy.
It
was only when the opportunity was gone that the Diet was willing to fight! They
voted money for a year’s campaign and sent Chod- kiewicz
and the young Prince off “to conquer Muscovy.” But the Polish troops were badly
equipped to stand a Russian winter and the Muscovites were too exhausted to carry
on a long campaign, so after a few months of fighting the Truce of Deulino (1618) was arranged by which the Poles recognized
Michael as czar, and Muscovy ceded Smolensk and the great province of Novgorod-Severski to Poland.
Just
at this time the Swedes under Sigismund’s great cousin, King Gustavus
Adolphus, were invading and laying waste Livonia. Gustavus realized that
Sigismund’s real interest in both Sweden and Livonia was to bring them under
the influence of the Counter-Reformation, and he regarded the conquest of
Livonia and the maintenance of his dynasty in Sweden as an integral part of the
great struggle for Protestantism, as whose champion a few years later he
entered the Thirty Years’ War. Success in Livonia led to the invasion of both
East and West Prussia, and Gustavus soon had practically the whole country,
with the exception of Danzig, in his hands. Here again it was the fatal
blindness of the Polish Diet that permitted this to happen. In Stanislaus Koniecpolski the Poles had a general worthy of Poland’s
best military traditions; in spite of heavy odds he won some brilliant
victories in the Swedish war, and had the Diet supported him, the task of the
Swedes would have been much more difficult, and the outcome might have been
very different. But the Diet never grasped the significance of the war, and in
1629 made the Truce of Altmark, which left not only
Livonia, but most of the Prussian coast as well, with its important trading
towns of Elbing, Brauns-
berg, and Memel, in Swedish hands.
During
the last years of his reign the King took little part in public affairs. He
died in 1632, disillusioned and disappointed, seeing only too plainly the abyss
toward which the country was headed and the powerlessness of her monarchs to
save her.
Sigismund
was succeeded by his son Wla- dislaus
IV (1632-1648), who united many of the great qualities of the Vasa race with a
thoroughly Polish temperament. It was the dream of his life to win the
Muscovite crown that in his early youth had been almost within his grasp. He
was an able and experienced general, a great favorite with the Cossacks as
well as with the regular army, and the breaking of the Truce of Deulino by the Muscovites as soon as they heard of his
father’s death seemed to offer him his opportunity. But the Diet refused
absolutely to vote money for the war, and it was only by pawning his father’s
crown and selling to the Elector of Brandenburg (who had succeeded to the Duchy
of Prussia and was therefore his vassal) exemption from doing homage in person
for his duchy, that the King was able to raise enough money to go to the relief
of Smolensk, which the Muscovites were besieging. Although he won a brilliant
victory before Smolensk, news that the Turks were attacking in the south
convinced the King that he could not take the offensive against Moscow at this
time, and he agreed to a peace (March, 1634) by which territorial arrangements
were left as they had been before the war, Muscovy paid a large indemnity, and Wladislaus recognized Michael as czar.
The
Turks proved less troublesome than the King had feared, and in October, 1634, a
fairly advantageous peace was made with them.
Meanwhile
the death of Gustavus Adolphus and the entrance of France into the Thirty
Years’ War had led both sides to negotiate with King Wladislaus.
Though the Diet refused to consider Poland’s going to war with them, the Protestant
allies were willing to pay well for her neutrality, and by the Truce of Stuhmsdorf (September, 1635) Poland recovered all the
Prussian territories conquered from her by Gustavus Adolphus, and Sweden agreed
to return Livonia after the war.
The
constant interference of the Diet with every phase of his policy, their
parsimony, stupidity, and lack of interest in everything except their own
powers and prerogatives, led the King to plan the destruction of their power by
force. The Order of the Immaculate Conception, formed from among the younger
magnates and sanctioned by the Pope, was intended to be the nucleus of a
royalist party which should aid the King in this project. But the Diet, aided
in this instance by all the Protestants and the Orthodox Lithuanians, raised
such a commotion that the King was obliged to abolish the Order. He then turned
to the Cossacks, with whom he was very popular, and planned to use them to
carry out a coup d'etat by means of which power
should be taken forcibly from the szlachta and put
into his hands. To create circumstances which should be an excuse for such a
revolution, he planned to bring about a war with the Turks and, contrary to the
pacta conventa, he made a secret alliance with Venice
to aid him in such a war. The Turks, however, carefully avoided war, and Venice
spoiled the whole plan by betraying the existence of the secret treaty. The
Diet of 1646, declaring that a Turkish war would be "the grave of the
national liberties,” reduced the army and forbade the King to make war without
their consent. But the King did not give up. He kept his army ready for action
and continued his negotiations with the Cossacks, in the hope that his chance
might still come. The Cossacks, however, got tired of waiting, and, in 1648,
their Hetman Bogdan Chmielnicki made an alliance with the Tartars and invaded
Poland. It is possible that the King might have been able to use this revolt
for his own purposes, but he had no time to try. He died very suddenly just as
it broke out, and his successor was left to deal with what proved to be a very
terrible situation.
The
Cossacks had many grievances against the Poles. Not only had the Government forbidden
them to attack their constant and traditional enemy the Tartars unless Poland
was at war with the Turks, but the Jesuits had tried to convert them to
Catholicism, and the Polish nobles, who had gone in great numbers into the
Ukraine during the sixteenth century and taken up vast estates there, were
making a determined effort, in which they were ably seconded by their Jewish
stewards, to take away the freedom which was the basis of the corporate
existence of the Cossacks, and force them into serfdom. The Polish Government
also had not kept faith with the Cossacks. It had made promises and treaties
only to break them, and when the Cossacks resented this treatment had no better
remedy to apply than suppression. The fire was thus laid and the match was applied
by Bogdan Chmielnicki, a small Polish noble whom the tyranny of the Governor of
the Ukraine had driven into the Cossack ranks and whom the Cossacks had elected
their Hetman.
John
Casimir, brother and successor of Wla- dislaus IV, as soon as he was elected, realizing the
justice of the Cossack cause, and seeing the necessity of putting an end to the
horror of Cossack warfare, made a treaty with them recognizing Chmielnicki as
their leader and confirming their privileges. But it was only a truce and of
short duration. Its terms were not kept because neither nobles nor Jesuits
wanted to keep them, and for six long years the war with the Cossacks went on.
It was a war of indescribable barbarity. To Cossack fury was added the horrors
of servile war, as the peasants and serfs of the Ukraine joined the Cossacks in
this war for freedom. Old men, women, and children, the noncombatants in the
villages, were subjected to a thousand tortures before they were finally killed
and their villages pillaged and burned to the ground. Whichever side was
victorious ruin and massacre followed the victory. Finally, in 1654,
despairing of any permanent arrangement with the Poles, Chmielnicki turned to
Muscovy and made a treaty with the Czar by which the Cossacks transferred their
allegiance to him in return for his promise to maintain all their privileges.
This promise was not kept. Little by little the Czar took away the Cossacks’
privileges and curtailed their freedom until only a few pitiful remnants were
left of the organization that had been their pride and bulwark. That, however,
belongs to the history of Russia, not Poland. For Poland the immediate result
of their defection was the invasion of the country by Muscovites and Swedes;
the ultimate result was the permanent loss of the great Dnieper Valley (the
Ukraine) to Russia and of the Duchy of Prussia to Brandenburg.
Like
a flashlight suddenly turned upon her, the defection of the Cossacks revealed
to her enemies the internal divisions in Poland and her resulting weakness,
and Muscovite and Swede hastened to take advantage of it. The Muscovites
pushed into Lithuania, took the fortresses of Polotsk
and Smolensk, and ended by establishing themselves in the capital, Wilna. The rest of Lithuania, led by Janus Radziwill, submitted voluntarily to the Czar Alexis. Meanwhile
the Swedes under their King, Charles X, whom John Casimir had never recognized
as King of Sweden and against whose accession he had strongly protested,
invaded Great Poland, while the Prince of Transylvania took Cracow and Podolia.
Led by Radzijovski, a Polish exile who returned to
Poland with the Swedes, the many nobles of Great Poland who were disaffected
toward John Casimir set up Charles X of Sweden as king, and John Casimir,
deserted by all parties, was obliged to flee to Silesia. The state of Poland
had ceased to exist!
That
it speedily came to life again is due very largely to the faith and the
patriotism of one man, Augustus Kordecki, Prior of
the Monks of St. Paul, of the Convent of Jasna- Gora,
which was situated inside the fortifications of Czenstochowa,
where a miracle-working image of the Virgin of great age and sacredness was
preserved. He resolutely refused to surrender his fortress, though his garrison
within and his countrymen without all urged him to do so, and the little band
began the apparently hopeless task of defending their bit of rock — “the only
spot in all Poland that remained free” — against the Swedish army, trained and
seasoned by the Thirty Years’ War, and the traitor nobility of their own land.
But before they were obliged to surrender, the example of their courage and
constancy had aroused the shame, the patriotism, and the religious enthusiasm
of the Poles. Many Polish soldiers deserted the Swedish cause, the nobles held
a “ Confederation ” and withdrew their allegiance from the Swedish King, John
Casimir came back to Poland, and taking command of the troops relieved the
little garrison of Czensto- chowa.
He then set up his headquarters in the Convent of St. Paul, held there the
first meeting of the Senate, from there issued the proclamation announcing
his return, and calling the people to return to their allegiance and arm
themselves to drive out the foreign invaders. In responding to this call the
Poles showed themselves for once a united people.
But
Poland needed allies, and the King devoted his attention to finding them. An
alliance with Denmark was of the greatest value because it took the brunt of
the Swedish war off the Poles. The Emperor also as King of Hungary sent
assistance to Poland, and Frederick William of Brandenburg, the “Great
Elector,” in 1657, by the Treaty of Wehlau, made an
offensive and defensive alliance with Poland. But Poland was ruined by the
price she had to pay for these alliances. Unable to meet her obligation to
Austria, she was obliged to give Austria temporary possession of the salt mines
of Wieliczka, one of the greatest sources of revenue
of the Crown, while to satisfy Brandenburg she had to renounce her suzerainty
over East Prussia.
In
1618, by the extinction of the line of Albert of Hohenzollern, the Hohenzollern
Electors of Brandenburg had become Dukes in Prussia, and the vassals of
Poland. Frederick William, the “Great Elector,” who became Duke of Prussia in
1640, resolved to free himself from this vassalage and by the conquest of West
Prussia from Poland and of Pomerania from the Swedes (who had conquered it in
the Thirty Years’ War) to unite his electoral with his ducal territories and
become the dominating power on the Baltic. No ruler of his age, few of any age,
surpassed him in his sinister ability to use the misfortunes of his neighbors
in achieving his own ends. The Treaty of Wehlau was
only the first of many successful arrangements by which this prince raised his
electorate from an obscure little German State to a Power of European
importance and paved the way for Empire.
The
war begun by Poland’s misfortunes had thus assumed European proportions and
significance, and in 1659 bade fair to ruin the commerce of the Baltic. The
Maritime Powers, England and Holland, then intervened and negotiated the peace
finally signed at Oliva in May, 1660, by Sweden, Brandenburg, and Poland, by
which John Casimir renounced all claims on the crown of Sweden and ceded Livonia
(except one small portion) to Charles X. The war with Muscovy, begun in 1654,
had been abandoned in 1656, and Russians and Poles united to fight against
their common enemy, Sweden. War between them was resumed in 1660, however, and
Poland inflicted upon Muscovy two serious defeats, which resulted in her
withdrawal from White Russia and Lithuania and from nearly all the western
Ukraine. The exhaustion of Muscovy, Lubo- mirski’s rebellion in Great Poland, and the entrance of
the Cossacks of the western Ukraine into an alliance with Turkey, which raised
up for Muscovy and Poland a common enemy far more terrible to both of them than
either was to the other, led to the signing of the Peace of Andrusovo
in 1667, by which Poland ceded to Russia all the territory east of the Dnieper,
including Smolensk and Kiev, and the Cossacks of the Dnieper were put under
the joint dominion of the Czar and the King of Poland, who agreed together to
restrain the Cossacks from the Black Sea raids so provocative of Turkish
hostility and to prevent their rebellion against either of their sovereigns.
The Cossacks agreed to defend both Muscovite and Polish territory, and to
protect the Ukraine from the Tartars. Thus ended the Thirteen Years’ War, as
the Russians know it, a war that exceeded even the Thirty Years’ War in its
terrible devastation, its brutality, and bestiality.
It
was in the reign of John Casimir also that the last touch of anarchy was given
to the Polish Constitution by the introduction of the use of the veto power by
which a single deputy could bring about the dissolution of the Diet. Such a
dissolution not only ended the session, but it rendered null and void the acts
already passed. The Diet was considered as not having taken place. It is to a
deputy named Sicinski from Upita
that the doubtful honor of making this innovation belongs. It was not at all
liked at first by the other deputies, though they recognized that it was
legally implied in their • system
of unanimity voting. Its advantages were soon recognized, however, and it was
used very frequently in the years that followed. It became in fact a means of
putting an end to all legislation and hence to all government. In the course of
the next one hundred and twelve years no less than forty-eight Diets were
broken up, or “exploded” as it was technically expressed — seven under John
Casimir, four under Michael, seven under John Sobieski, and thirty under
Augustus II and Augustus III. It meant that Poland was without the laws
necessary to progress, that justice was not administered, and that the country
was practically without an army since no taxes were voted to pay it.
A
year after the Peace of Andrusovo, John Casimir
abdicated, and left the country. His reign of twenty-one years had been a reign
full of difficulties, dangers, and disasters, and the King had borne a leading
part in all of them. But after the death of the Queen he lost interest in
trying to rule a country which would not be ruled and whose internal
dissensions (which had led to the open and serious rebellion of Great Poland
under Lubomirski, Grand Marshal and Vice-Hetman of
the Crown) were, as he plainly saw, leading straight to ruin.
John
Casimir had been a Jesuit and a cardinal before he became king, and after his
abdication he returned to the religious life which he had abandoned for the
kingship, and spent the rest of his life in France as Abbot of the Monastery
of St. Germain des Pres.
For
a number of years before his abdication the King had tried to get the Diet to
accept the French Prince of Condd, known as “The
Great Cond6,” as his successor. As naming his successor was contrary to the
King’s pacta con- venta, this attempt roused a storm
of protest from both houses of the Diet, but many of the most influential
magnates believed as he did that in the choice of an outsider like Cond6,
personally able and supported by a strong state like France, lay the best hope
for the reform of the Polish Constitution, and the King abdicated largely in
the hope that his abdication would be followed by the election of Cond£. That
many of the magnates had received French bribes and that this had undoubtedly
had a good deal to do with forming their convictions, is unfortunately true.
But the most carefully laid plans and the ablest diplomatic skill were of no
avail in the Diet of Election, where the majority of the szlachta
still held the mediseval belief that the election of
a king was a religious act and that the deputies simply proclaimed king him
“whose name God put it into their hearts to proclaim.” When, therefore, after
violent and protracted discussions, the Castellan of San- domir
proposed the name of Michael Wisnio- wiecki (whose only qualifications were that he was a “Piast” and the son of the Polish general, Jeremiah Wisniowiecki, who had made his name a terror to the
Cossacks), and said in explanation that he had simply followed the voice of
God who had put in his heart the words “Long live King Michael,” the matter was
decided for the majority of the szlachta. Previous
sessions had also convinced the supporters of Cond£ that he could not be
elected, and finally they also went over to Michael, who was elected and
crowned in 1669.
Opposition
to Cond6 had indeed gone so far that in one session a nobleman had risen and
cried, “ If any one votes for the Prince of Cond6 I will shoot him,” and to a
Senator who rebuked him somewhat sharply he replied by simply firing his
pistol at him! The session then resolved itself into a free fight during which
the Bishops and Senators ran to cover and could not be induced to resume
deliberations for three days. From this it will be seen that not all the
members agreed with the Castellan of Cracow, who said that “he rejoiced in the
session which showed ‘real Polish vigor’ and that he wished every election
could be decided amid the whistling of pistol shots.”
The
election of Michael was a signal for a war with the Turks. The Cossacks,
believing that the son of their greatest oppressor (the father of King Michael)
would be sure to resume their persecution, rushed to arms and offered their
allegiance to the Turks in return for protection. The Grand Hetman, John
Sobieski, defeated the Cossack leader Doroshenko, but
was too busy conspiring with the French to dethrone King Michael, to follow up
his victory, and the Turks were able easily to invade Podolia and capture Kamieniec, the key to the whole province and the only
strong fortress on its frontier. With conspiracy that amounted to civil war
going on in Warsaw and absorbing the whole attention of the Diet and the
magnates, the King could do nothing in the south but make a peace by which he
surrendered all of Podolia and the Ukraine and agreed to pay tribute to the
Turks. The Diet, when it finally met, considered the peace too disgraceful to
ratify and blamed the King for making it, though it is difficult to see that
they had left him any alternative. They raised a large army and sent it south
under John Sobieski, who fought the Turks with skill and vigor for four long
years and in the end was able to make only a compromise peace, Kamieniec and part of the Ukraine being left by it in the
hands of the Turks.
In
the midst of this war King Michael died, and the Poles elected John Sobieski in
his place. There were other strong candidates, but Sobieski overcame all
opposition to himself by appearing suddenly in the Diet with several thousands
of his southern troops.
The
new King, John III, though a really great general, was a man of very minor
talents in other directions, and his personal character was far from lofty. His
great personal ambition and his entire unscrupulousness had led him to spend
the first forty years of his life in secret intrigues or open rebellion against
his King. It was the events of these years that contributed in large measure
to create a situation in Poland that frustrated his plans for reform after he
himself became king. He was, also, very much influenced by the Queen in political
matters, and the influence was entirely bad. During his reign Poland declined
steadily, disorder increased, and government almost ceased to exist, while in
both town and country economic ruin was advancing upon the unhappy country by
leaps and bounds. The one really great event of John Sobieski’s reign was his
famous rescue of Vienna from the Turks, and even this achievement was of more
value to Austria than to Poland.
Although
the Turkish power had already entered the period of slow but sure decline that
was to enable Austria and Russia during the next century to push her back
beyond the Danube and the Black Sea, where she was no longer a menace to
Christian Europe, yet in the late seventeenth century no one knew this, and the
victories of Turkey under the latest of her great Grand Viziers, Kara Mustafa Kiuprili, were in any case a terrible danger to southeastern
Europe. The Emperor, who as King of Hungary and overlord of Transylvania was
the natural leader in this movement against the Turks, was engaged at this time
in a great struggle with Louis XIV of France for the domination of western
Europe and had no forces at liberty to use against the Turks. Hungary,
moreover, entirely disaffected as the result of Jesuit persecutions and
much-resented changes in her traditional system of government, joined the
Turks, as did also the Prince of Transylvania, and wherever the Emperor turned
for allies he found that the diplomacy of France had arranged to thwart him.
Everywhere except in Poland. Here the presence of the Turks at their very doors
and the energy, decision, and tact of the King prevailed over French gold and
even over the traditional suspicion and fear of Austria, and in 1683 Poland
allied herself with the Emperor and agreed to put forty thousand men in the
field against the Turk. But as usual it took time to get either money or
soldiers in Poland, and it was six months before Sobieski could start south.
Meanwhile the Turkish forces had overrun Hungary and advanced up the Danube to
the very walls of Vienna, outside which their vast armies lay encamped for
miles around. Turkish engineers had already undermined the walls, and the capture
of the hungry and disease-stricken city was only a question of a very short
time when the Poles arrived. Shouting “Sobieski forever,” they threw themselves
upon the Turks and the terror of Sobieski’s name, as well as his skill and the
fighting qualities of his troops, won the day. All Europe rejoiced that Vienna
was saved and Christendom preserved from the invasion of the infidel. Venice
and the Emperor joined in following up this victory, and soon Hungary was
cleared of the Turks and their retreat from the border countries was under way.
The Treaty of Carlowitz which closed the war was not
made till 1699, but by it Poland recovered Podolia and Kamieniec
which an earlier treaty had left in Turkish hands.
But
even the prestige of this victory did not enable the King to control the
quarrels of his subjects, and he died in 1696, broken-hearted over the coming
ruin of his country which on his death-bed he plainly saw and foretold.
So
low had Poland sunk by this time that the election of her new king was a matter
about which she herself had little to say. Among eighteen candidates the only
two who had any chance of election were foreigners, Frederick Augustus, Elector
of Saxony, and the French candidate, the Prince of Conti. France bribed very liberally,
but the threat of Peter the Great now Czar of Muscovy, that he would declare
war on Poland if Conti was elected, was even more effective than French gold,
and the arrival of Augustus with his pockets full of money, after all the
others had spent theirs, completed the argument in his favor and he was elected
and crowned king as Augustus II, in September, 1697. A large party in the Diet,
however, had proclaimed Stanislaus Leszczynski king,
and the first act of Augustus was to drive him out and to win over his chief
adherents, by bribes, to the Saxon side.
The
chief event in the reign of Augustus II was the participation of Poland in the
Great Northern War. When Charles XI of Sweden died in 1697, leaving a minor son
as his heir, all the enemies of Sweden, — Denmark, Russia, Brandenburg, and
Poland, — thinking her moment of weakness had arrived, joined in a league to
despoil her of the territories they all coveted. Never was a band of robbers
more entirely mistaken in their estimate of a character and a situation.
Though young, the new King, Charles XII, was a born soldier and a general of
genius; and his army though small was well trained and of fine material.
Striking first at one enemy, then at another, jumping with amazing speed from
one part of the country to another, he was everywhere successful, and in
1706-1707 his camp was the center of European diplomacy where both sides in the
great war then waging in western Europe, the War of the Spanish Succession,
competed for his alliance.
Though
it was the King as Elector of Saxony who had made this war, it was his Polish
kingdom that suffered from it. After Charles had defeated Augustus he deposed
him from the Polish throne and put in his place that same Stanislaus Leszczynski whom Augustus had driven out a few years
before. But the reorganization of Russia, under Peter the Great, led to the
defeat of Charles at Poltava in 1709, the withdrawal of the Swedes from Poland,
and the flight of the King whom they had made.
But
whether her king was Pole or Saxon, whether she was victorious or defeated,
made little real difference to Poland during these years. Friend and foe alike
treated her as if she had no political existence — which was indeed very near
to the truth. Swedes, Saxons, and Russians marched back and forth across the
country, plundering and destroying wherever they went, and the Polish magnates
took sides in the conflict quite as it pleased them personally, supporting
Augustus, Stanislaus, or Charles XII, with equal ease and without any apparent
sense of the national interests. When the war ended in 1720, the ruin that John
Sobieski had foretold for Poland had already overtaken her.
But
though ruined Poland was still of importance in the field of European
diplomacy. Austria, Russia, and France all regarded her with interest and wove
about her a tangled web of diplomatic intrigue, in which she was caught and
held like a helpless fly in the web of a spider.
With
the accession of Michael Romanoff to the czardom a
new era dawned in the history of Muscovy, and in the succeeding one hundred and
twenty years she developed into one of the great Powers of Europe. Under
Michael and his successor Alexis, order and some measure of prosperity were
restored to Russia, and the way was prepared for the son and successor of
Alexis, Peter the Great, who undertook the great task of bringing Russia once
more into contact with western Europe from which she had been cut off for four
hundred years by her long subjection to Tartar rule, and its consequences. To
restore her contact with western Europe it was necessary to reach the Baltic
where the King of Sweden was at this time supreme (he ruled Western Pomerania
and all the East Baltic Coast north of Courland besides Sweden proper), and
from which Muscovy was completely shut off. The best efforts of the early
years of the reign of Peter the Great were spent in preparing the country for
this task, and the Great Northern War which brought about the ruin of Poland
gave Peter his opportunity and was the beginning of Muscovy’s greatness.
Peter
used his opportunity to the full. For twenty years he fought, sustained defeat,
reorganized his army and his government, and fought again, and when the peace
was finally signed at Nystadt, in 1721, it left Peter
in proud possession of Carelia, Ingria, Esthonia, and Livonia. Her “little window to the West’’ was
wide open, and Muscovy was looking out ready to take part in the commerce and
the life of the Western world.
It
was after the Peace of Nystadt that Peter took the
title of “Emperor of all Russia,” a title which a number of his predecessors
had desired, but had not been strong enough to assume in the face of
opposition from Poland who was also a ruler of Russian lands. But Polish
opposition was now of no importance. On the contrary, one of the most
significant results of the Northern War was that it left Russian influence
already well established in Poland. It was Peter the Great who restored
Augustus II to the Polish throne in 1709, and it was Peter’s ambassador who
obliged Augustus to accept the arrangements of Nystadt
which left Poland with no compensation at all for the losses and the sacrifices
of nearly twenty years of warfare. Peter planned quite consciously to bring Poland
under Russian rule, and Catharine II in this, as in most of her other policies,
but carried out his far-reaching and far-seeing plans.
In
western Europe also the Treaties of Westphalia which closed the Thirty Years’
War had opened a new political era. The great questions which agitated Europe
after 1648 were no longer the religious questions that for one hundred and
fifty years had determined her policies and dictated her alliances, but
questions of territorial aggrandizement. On the ruins of feudalism, to which
as a system of government the wars of religion had given the final, irretrievable
blow, the bases of the modern European state system were being laid down.
Territorially great and strongly centralized monarchies were being created by
conquest and maintained by force, and questions of defensible boundaries became
of paramount importance. Of the two greatest of these boundary questions, the
rivalry of France and Austria for the Rhine, and of Austria and Russia for the
Danube, that of the Rhine was already in existence before 1648, and France’s
interest in the election of the kings , of
Poland all during the seventeenth century was the result of her policy, already
well defined, of keeping a barrier of states friendly to France in the
Emperor’s rear ready to strike him in the back if he attacked France on the Rhine.
Turkey, Poland, and Sweden formed such a barrier for several generations, and
France's alliance with Russia in the nineteenth century — the Dual Alliance —
is but the latest form of this same idea.
Under
Louis XIV Polish friendship was carefully cultivated, Polish kings married
French princesses (the queens of Wladislaus IV, John
Casimir, and John Sobieski were all French), and the French party at the court
of Warsaw was able and influential. But under the Regency and Louis XV this
policy, like most others of the “Great Monarch,” was less effectively carried
out and France sustained some serious diplomatic defeats. But the policy was
kept up, and on the death of Augustus II, in 1733, France made a vigorous
effort to revive her waning prestige in Poland by bringing about the election
of a king who would represent and serve her interests. The candidate whom she
chose to support on this occasion was the ex-King Stanislaus Leszczynski, who was also the father-in-law of the King of
France, his daughter Marie having married Louis XV in 1725. Stanislaus was also
supported by the best element among the Polish magnates and as a “Piast” was favored by the majority of the population.
Encouraged
by the statement of the French Government that France intended to defend
against every enemy the liberties of Poland, "a power to whom France was
bound by all the ties of honor and friendship,” and backed up by the power of
French gold which flowed very freely through the fingers of the French Ambassador,
Monti, the Polish Primate and Interrex, Theodore Potocki,
and his party rallied the country to the support of Stanislaus, and in
September, 1733, he was elected King of Poland.
But
his election was only the beginning of his difficulties. The opposition of
Austria to any candidate supported by France was inevitable, as was also that
of Russia to the friend of Sweden and her age-long enemy Turkey, and these two
Powers issued a joint protest against the candidature of Stanislaus Leszczynski. They had no candidate in mind to propose in
his place, but they speedily adopted the Elector of Saxony, the son of Augustus
II, and undertook to put him on the Polish throne. It could be done only by
force of arms, so twenty thousand Russians and ten thousand Cossacks were sent
into Poland. King Stanislaus having no army was obliged to take refuge in
Danzig and there await French assistance. Without difficulty, therefore, the
Russians entered Warsaw in October, got together a handful of Senators and
Nuncios and obliged them to proclaim the Elector of Saxony King of Poland. But
Danzig still held out, and it was eight months before the Russians could
force it to surrender, though the help sent by France was wholly inadequate and
surrender was a foregone conclusion.
The
reign of Augustus III, which lasted for thirty years (1733-1763), was a period
of almost complete stagnation. Poland simply continued to exist, but without
new laws because all the Diets were “exploded”; without foreign ambassadors
because the szlachta, did not want to pay them;
without even that minimum of executive activity which Poland had had heretofore,
because the King, who was indolent by disposition and very indifferent to the
interests of his Polish kingdom, lived in Saxony, visited Poland infrequently,
and left the government entirely in the hands of his Chief Minister, Count Briihl. Briihl tried at first to
introduce some order and authority into Poland’s anarchy, but found himself
balked at every turn by the determined opposition of the Poles themselves and
the less obvious but no less persistent opposition of both Austria and Russia.
There
were now as always in Poland a few people who realized the evils and dangers of
her Constitution and of the public opinion which supported it. These men did
their best to change the situation, both by introducing an entirely new system
of education which they hoped would lead to sounder political theories and
ideals, as well as by attempting, once more, to bring about an immediate
constitutional reform. In these endeavors the great educational reformer
Stanislaus Konarsky worked hand in hand with the Czartoryski, a Lithuanian magnate family of enormous
wealth and great political importance. They were related to the Jagiellos and were distinguished above all other Poles of
the period for their civic virtues and their intelligent interest in public
affairs. Their family connections and official position, combined with their
great wealth and public spirit, gave them such preeminence that they were
generally referred to simply as “The Family” by their contemporaries.
Prince
Michael Czartoryski, Chancellor of Lithuania and the
head of the family, and his brother, Prince Augustus, Palatine of Red Russia,
were the leaders of a small political group that desired to overthrow the
republic and make Poland an absolute monarchy as the only means of saving her.
They were the intimate and trusted friends of Count Bruhl,
and during the first twenty years of the reign of Augustus III Bruhl left Polish affairs very largely in their hands.
When, however, all their plans of reform failed because their opponents
“exploded” every Diet and annulled every “Confederation” by a
“Counter-Confederation,” and thus prevented them from ever getting their proposals
before the country, they urged Bruhl to provide the
force for a coup d'etat. When he refused, fearing to
lose Poland entirely, the Czar- toryski turned
against both him and the King and tried to get the aid of Russia to dethrone
Augustus and put in his place a king of their own choosing, a native Pole
pledged to carry out their ideas.
Nothing
could have shown more clearly than this proposal their utter ignorance of the
motives and forces at work in the politics of Europe or the hopelessness of
Poland’s case in their hands. The years of Poland’s stagnation had been years
of struggle and momentous achievement among her neighbors. In Russia the successors
of Peter the Great had consolidated his conquests and maintained and
strengthened the position he had won for Russia in Europe, and the country was
almost ready to take another long stride along the path marked out for her by
Peter. This path led directly over a conquered and dependent Poland, and
nothing was further from the mind of the Russian Empress than the
strengthening of Poland’s kingship. In Brandenburg-Prussia also, Frederick the
Great had succeeded to the throne in 1740 and was already embarked on the
career of conquest that was to make his little state a European Power. He too
had designs on Poland and was already astutely hinting to Russia that they
might combine.
In
1763 Augustus III died, and in that very year the close of the Seven Years’ War
left Prussia and Russia free to turn their attention to Poland.
CHAPTER
IV
POLISH
SOCIETY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
During the J agiellon
period Poland had developed into a great Power and had made a constitution
which the next hundred years put to the test of experience. The Constitution
was unable to meet the test. Power was wholly in the hands of the nobility,
who, narrow and ignorant, did not see the necessity of strong government, and
neither allowed the king to exercise any compulsion on their order nor exercised
it themselves. This period of the late sixteenth and the early seventeenth
century was exactly the period when states about Poland were building up strong
governments. They were making, out of just such loosely organized elements and
very much such turbulent and lawless nobilities, organized and disciplined
entities that developed into modern states, and Poland’s development in the opposite
direction put her at a disadvantage from which she never recovered. Perhaps, as
many writers claim, it was not necessary for Poland to develop a despotic
kingship; a strong, enlightened oligarchy might have given her good
government, but her best chance of success lay probably in a strong king. She
was in much the position of England under the Lancastrian kings, when
Parliament had powers that it was not sufficiently disciplined or developed or
experienced to use. The English Parliament lent those powers to the Tudors and
submitted to discipline. The Poles would not resign the use of their powers and
destruction followed. In England it was popular confidence in the monarchy
that made the Tudor despotism possible. In Poland hereditary right might
possibly have given a really able king the opportunity to win the confidence of
the most suspicious of peoples and induce them to submit to a government that
would have preserved order at home and have kept Poland respected and
wholesomely feared by her neighbors. But any such chance — and it was a slim
one — was lost when the Jagiellon dynasty came to an
end with Sigismund II and the theory of the elective kingship became a
disastrous reality.
The
fact that they were the “makers of kings” and could unmake them at will enhanced
enormously the self-esteem and selfconfidence of the
szlachta, already dangerously great. There is no
evidence that any, even the faintest, suspicion of their own competence or the
fallibility of their judgment ever assailed the Polish nobility. Many of
Poland’s kings saw her desperate needs and tried to meet them, but the szlachta, blind to the interests of the country as a whole,
regarded every attempt at effective government as an attack on their own
privileges, their “liberty,” and opposed it. But though strenuous in
opposition, the szlachta took no initiative
themselves for the promotion of the public welfare. They seemed to feel, indeed,
that if they prevented any infringement of the liberty of the individual noble,
the general welfare would look out for itself. As they would not govern and
the king could not, the quite natural and inevitable result was that Poland had
no government, and anarchy and its resulting weakness led her straight to her
fall.
The
responsibility for Poland’s fall thus rests with her nobility. They formed only
about eight per cent of the population — not more than a million out of a total
of between twelve and thirteen million souls — and comprised people of a very
different sort from the nobilities of other European countries. In Poland any
one was noble who possessed a freehold estate or could prove descent from
ancestors who possessed one, who was not engaged in either trade or commerce,
and who was legally free to live where he chose. All nobles were equal by
birth, and titles or honors gave no right of precedence or other advantage.
Each noble was a lawmaker, an elector of kings, and eligible himself to
election to the kingship. But though theoretically powerful, the szlachta as a whole were really very weak. The development
of the liberty of the individual had been pushed so far that by the eighteenth
century it had defeated its own ends. The Diets met only to be “exploded,” and
the szlachta were quite as powerless to make new laws
as the kings were to carry out the old ones. Society had returned to that primitive
state where the power of the individual was the only decisive force.
As
a matter of fact a few great^magnate families were
so strong that they practically ruled the country. There were perhaps eight or
ten such families in Poland and as many more in Lithuania, and their names,
such as Czar- toryski, Potocki,
Radziwill, Lubomirski,
occur on nearly every page of seventeenth and eighteenth century Polish
history. _Land was the only source of wealth open to their class, and the
estates which they owned and ruled were of enormous size — far larger than many
of the contemporary German and Italian states — and their wealth of almost
fabulous proportions. They also held, among them, all the great offices of
state in the gift of the king.
These
“dynasts” conducted themselves like the sovereigns they really were. Their
“courts,” as they called their establishments, were modeled on the official
court, and in many cases far surpassed that of the king in both size and
splendor. Like the king, they had their treasurers, chamberlains, major-domos,
equerries, and other state officials, while their wives had their
ladies-in-waiting, ladies of the bed-chamber, pages, and so on, quite like
queens. Attached to each court was what was called the. “ house miilitia,” which was really a standing army. As it was the
privilege of each Polish gentleman to keep as many armed men in attendance
upon him as he desired and could pay for, these private armies often numbered
five to ten thousand men — and this at the very time when the most serious
wounds were inflicted upon the country by Swedes, Muscovites; and Tartars
because the king could not get an army of sufficient size to guard the frontier
and could not pay it when he got it! Horse and foot guards kept sentry day and
night at the gates of these “courts,” and the “dynasts” kept up direct
correspondence with foreign monarchs and began their communications, “We by the Grace of God,” quite in the kingly
fashion. About the only attribute of royalty which they did not possess was the
privilege of coining money, which was reserved to the king.
Extravagance
and a somewhat barbaric love of display, which characterized their class, gave
their courts a sumptuousness and a picturesqueness that was quite strange to
western Europe. The Polish national dress, which in the eighteenth century was
still very generally worn, and consisted of a robe of cloth with hanging
sleeves belted in with a sash and worn over a vest of silk, high boots meeting
the robe at the knee, and a cap bordered with fur, made the Polish gentleman
far more Oriental than Western in appearance. Besides the house militia the
courts of the magnates were full of retainers of a more plebeian sort, —
peasants, Cossacks, Tartars, and others, who acted as messengers and lackeys at
home and swelled the number of the magnate’s following when he went abroad.
They wore gorgeous and barbaric liveries which gave a marked Oriental
character to the appearance of the court.
Although
a few of the magnates had received everything that western Europe had to offer
in the way of education, and were as widely informed, as highly cultivated, and
as cosmopolitan people as there were in Europe, the majority of upper-class
Poles, the old-fashioned country magnates, had little education themselves and
provided little for their children. Most of them could write, but so illegibly
that when an old-fashioned gentleman wrote a letter it was customary to send a
copy made by his secretary along with the original in the interests of clarity.
Hunting big game which abounded in their forests, riding and looking after
their estates, where they acted as judges and meted out what went by the name
of justice to their peasants, were their chief occupations when at home. Many
of them, however, spent most of their time playing the game of politics which
kept them away from home a great part of the time, and their stewards, who were
mostly Jews, managed their estates.
But
the majority of the nobility were not magnates. Many of them formed what in
other countries would be called the well-to-do middle class. They owned enough
land to support themselves and their families in comfort if they stayed quietly
at home, looked after their estates themselves, and left the expensive and
absorbing game of politics to their richer brethren. They were ignorant,
prejudiced, and very conservative, but in spite of these faults were probably
the best of Poland’s citizens.
Another
and perhaps the largest section of the szlachta were
by no means well-to-do. Unable to go into trade without losing their rank;
unable to serve in the national army because, practically, there no longer was
one; possessing very little land, too little to give them a decent living; or,
more often, having lost the little that had made their families noble, these
nobles were quite as poor as the peasants upon whom they looked down as from a
great height. They were very humbly grateful for the opportunity to attach
themselves to the courts and enter the service of their magnate relatives or
neighbors, which offered them, indeed, almost their only means of livelihood.
It was this class that supplied the magnates with their house militia and most
of their other retainers. They were fed, housed, and clothed by the magnate,
and in return fought his battles with his neighbors and accompanied him to the
meetings of the local Dietine, where their votes as
well as their arms were completely at his service and preserved for him that
complete ascendancy over the whole countryside that the “liberty" of a Polish
magnate required. The children of many of them, who were kinsmen of the
magnate, were adopted by him, brought up with his own children, and given the
same advantages; the sons were provided with some lucrative public post which
made them independent and the daughters were well married. But there was also
another side to this service. In many houses no rooms or even beds were
provided for the majority of the retainers, who slept in the kitchens, on
stairways, or in the stables — wherever they could find a board to lie on. They
did also hard and menial work and were beaten or otherwise punished in quite
the same ways as were the servants of the peasant class. But in spite of all
this the rank of the szlachcic was always recognized;
whatever his occupation he could always wear a sword, which entitled him to the
deference paid by all the peasants to a gentleman, and when he was beaten it
was his privilege always to have a carpet under him!
The
worst vices of the nobility, rich and poor alike, were gluttony and
drunkenness. Perhaps their chief virtue was hospitality, but their love of
display often made their hospitality a heavy tax upon their resources, and
their habits of eating and drinking to excess meant that their entertainments
often degenerated into mere orgies where vast sums were wasted, which all too
often were urgently needed to improve the conditions of the peasantry.
All
contemporary observers seem to agree that in the eighteenth century Polish
peasant conditions were the worst in all Europe. By a series of laws, passed
chiefly during the sixteenth century, the free Polish peasants or kmetens lost all their freedom and became practically the
chattels of the nobility. Forbidden to own land or to move from one estate to
another, they became serfs on the lands of the Crown, the Church, and the lay nobility,and were without legal rights. The lord of the
land held the only courts of justice to which they had access, and from his
decisions there was no appeal. He even determined the religion of his peasants,
and if he killed one of them his only punishment was the payment of a fine.
King Stanislaus Leszczynski said that Poland was the
only country where the common people were deprived of even the rights of
humanity.
Nor
did physical well-being at all mitigate the misery of their legal position. On
the contrary, there were no more wretched beings in the world than the Polish
peasants. Their houses were merely shelters without beds, chairs, tables, or
any other of the most necessary furniture. They slept on straw, often on the
same straw as their cattle, and were regarded as little more than beasts by
their masters who treated them with a cruelty that is almost incredible. Living
in filth without proper clothes, food, or care, only about half of the children
lived to grow up, and those who did had, indeed, small incentive to do so.
Forced labor on the lord’s land, fixed quite arbitrarily by the lord on Sundays
as well as week days if it suited his pleasure or convenience, often reduced
the time at the disposal of the peasant for the cultivation of his own little
plot to a minimum too small to yield him a living; but in spite of that he was
obliged to pay a part of that small harvest to the lord, and in the forest
regions half of all he trapped or shot likewise belonged to the lord. Living
(if indeed existence under such circumstances can be called living!) on the
edge of starvation in normal times, in a bad harvest year the peasants died
like flies. It is small wonder that they felt that any change in their
condition must be for the better, and that they made from time to time the most
savage insurrections against the lords, of which that led by the Cossack Bogdan
Chmielnicki is a notable and terrible example. When one remembers that the
peasantry formed over seventy per cent of the population, that here as
elsewhere their welfare was a necessary condition of the welfare of the whole
country, and that they were a laborious and naturally intelligent people with a
history of happy and prosperous years behind them, it is indeed a heavy load of
responsibility that rests upon the szlachta who quite
arbitrarily reduced them, and with them their common country, to such utter
misery.
Only
less sad than the condition of the peasants and quite as significant is the
condition of Poland’s towns. In the early fifteenth century the towns were
numerous, large, and prosperous; they were represented in the Diet and were of
political as well as economic importance. The Turkish conquest of
Constantinople, which cut off the Black Sea trade, struck them their first heavy
blow, and the szlachta followed up this economic
crisis by legislation against their political position and by artificial trade
restrictions which made their recovery of lost ground difficult if not
impossible. The devastation of the country by Swedes, Turks, and Muscovites
during the seventeenth century swept away all their attempts at rehabilitation
and left them economically ruined even when they escaped physical destruction.
In the eighteenth century grass was growing in the streets of Lemberg, while
Cracow had sunk to the proportions of a small provincial town of sixteen
thousand inhabitants. Even Warsaw, where the court of the king stimulated a
certain amount of business, was but a ghost of its former prosperous self. In
these and all the towns the little business that remained was in the hands of
the Jews. The prosperous Polish and Polonized- German burghers of earlier days
had sunk to the social and economic level of the peasants and were scarcely
distinguishable from them.
All
the travelers speak of the great natural riches of the country, its forests,
mines, and fertile fields with their vast possibilities of prosperity, and
equally of its entire economic stagnation. There were very few manufactures
and almost no commerce, while a large laboring population starved in the midst
of riches they did not use. Some observers seemed to think that even under the
bad conditions of the eighteenth century far more prosperity was possible than
was enjoyed, and it is probably true. The slavery of the peasant had killed all
his ambition and interest in his work, and centuries of misfortune,
oppression, and injustice, as well as the vicious influence of a class system
which made work degrading, had blunted the initiative of the Polish burgher and
had blinded him even to the possibilities that were open to him. With a grain
country second to none in Europe, with only a section of it under cultivation,
and only the very inadequate local market for what was raised, the Poles never
took the pains even to investigate the rich possibilities of opening up once
more their old Black Sea trade by sending their grain down the Dniester through
Turkish Moldavia. The same thing was true in regard to trade with Silesia by
way of the river Notez, a tributary of the Oder,
which an entirely unfounded report declared was not navigable. Frederick the
Great found out that it was navigable even before he invaded Silesia, and as
soon as the region came under his control the Notez
became the channel for a large and very lucrative trade.
No
account of the Polish towns would be complete without some mention of the Jews.
Though they formed only a small part of the population, they were an element to
whose importance in the life of the eighteenth century all travelers bear
witness. The English traveler Coxe says that, in
Lithuania “if you ask for an interpreter, they bring you a Jew; if you come to
an inn, the landlord is a Jew; if you want post-horses, a Jew procures them and
a Jew drives them; if you wish to purchase, a Jew is your agent: this perhaps
is the only country in Europe where Jews cultivate the ground; and we
frequently saw them engaged in sowing, reaping, mowing, and other works of husbandry.”
They also acted as stewards for the nobility, and the management of nearly all
the noble estates in the country was in their hands. They were practically the
only tradesmen and artisans and general business class that the country had.
They picked up and carried on the tasks that the Poles let drop because they
were too hard or too unremunerative or too degrading to continue, and it is
difficult to see how the country could have got on without them.
But
if they were useful to Poland, Poland was a haven of refuge to them. Though
they were disliked and persecuted by the Polish nobility, the Jews yet found in
Poland during the Middle Ages a measure of protection and toleration that was
denied them everywhere else in Europe.
Boleslaus
the Pious in 1264 issued a charter of liberties to the Jews in Great Poland
which was confirmed by Casimir the Great a few years later and extended to the
whole kingdom. This formed the foundation of the legal position of the Jews for
nearly five hundred years and was confirmed by all the kings of Poland. It
granted the Jew express trading privileges, protected him against persecution,
and allowed him to organize his own life under his own law just as the Germans
were allowed to organize under the Teutonic or Magdeburg Law. The charter
expressly permitted the Jews to receive all kinds of pledges, including
mortgages on the estates of the nobility, and gave them entire freedom of
transit, of trade, and of financial operations. They were exempted from the
jurisdiction of both municipal and ecclesiastical courts and were placed under
the jurisdiction of a personal representative of the king, who was known,
though a Christian, as the “Jewish judge.” He was not permitted to convict a
Jew on exclusively Christian testimony, and was obliged to punish an injury
done to a Jew just as severely as though it had been done to a szlachcic. His verdicts also had to be approved by the
Jewish Elders, who could themselves try certain minor cases. Particular
emphasis was laid in the charter on guarding the Jew against the charges of
ritual murder and violation of the Host.
Although
these provisions show that the kings who issued them wished, as the charter
quaintly states, that “they may realize during our happy reign that they have
found comfort with us,” they also imply that the kings were practically alone
in that desire. It is sadly true that Church, szlachta,
and burghers were all opposed to the Jews and fought them persistently.
Prior
to the time of Sigismund II, who, at the request of the Jews themselves,
forbade the settlement of any more Jews in Poland, the Polish kings had
encouraged Jewish immigration chiefly for two reasons. The Jews were able and
willing to lend money to the kings who were always poor, and also the kings
hoped, by building up a strong trading class in the towns, to counteract the
growing influence of the szlachta. Furthermore, the
Jews were willing to pay well, not only for the trading privileges granted
them, but also for the mere privilege of living in Poland, and the Jewish
poll-tax formed one of the most important items in the king’s revenue. As the
chief capitalists of the country, also, and its only financiers, they rendered
invaluable services as the financial agents of the king and the court. They
also opened up the mines and quarries of the country, cut its timber, and in
general began the development of its rich and almost untouched resources.
During
the Jagiellon period the kings were usually strong
enough to protect the Jews from the worst forms of persecution, but not always.
Toward the end of the reign of Sigismund II, three Jews were burned at the
stake, and during the succeeding century Jesuits, burghers, and szlachta united to rob them of most of their privileges and
to reduce them to a condition as miserable and as uncertain as that of their
race anywhere in Europe.1
Worst
of all was the fact that this bitter struggle and its resultant misery was only
one instance of the disunion and the antagonisms of race, class, and religion
which were tearing Poland to pieces. With only fifty per cent of her population
Polish and the rest a medley of Russians, Lithuanians, Jews, Germans, and
Tartars, the problem of amalgamation was necessarily a difficult one and
religious differences added enormously to race antagonism. It was a fateful
moment when the Poles, who during the period when religious wars were
practically universal had set an example of unity and tolerance to all Europe,
began themselves in the late seventeenth century a period of religious
persecution. First the Protestants and then the Orthodox were subjected to the
steady pressure of Jesuit intolerance, which reached a climax in the Acts of
1717, 1733, and 1736 by which the Dissidents were deprived of all political
and civil rights. These acts threw the whole country into a ferment and drove
the Orthodox populations, especially those of the southeast, to the very edge
of rebellion.
In
the long struggle of class against class, religion against religion, race
against race, of which Poland was the theater during the closing century of her
existence as a state, the last vestige of national unity disappeared. The time
had come, that more than a hundred years before the Jesuit Skarga
had foretold, when the enemy of the Poles would come in and destroy them seeing
that, “since their hearts were no longer in accord, they were already lost.”
Skarga,
who was the friend and confessor of Sigismund III, and perhaps the greatest of
the Polish Jesuits, had seen with wonderful clearness where internal disunion
and weakness were leading his country and with a truly prophetic vision had
foretold her fall.
“Close
on the footsteps of your dissensions,” he said, “will come the despotism of a
foreigner who will destroy all your liberties: those liberties of which you are
so proud will become merely a tale to tell your children and a mockery for all
the world. Your children and their families will die in misery in the hands of
an enemy who hates them. . . . You
will see your language destroyed, and your race, degenerate and scattered,
condemned to . . . adopt the manners and customs of a people who hate you and
whom you despise. You will have neither king nor the right to choose one,
neither kingdom nor fatherland. Exiled, poor, miserable, and without a country,
you will be spurned by those very kingdoms who now seek your alliance.”
CHAPTER
V
THE
LAST KING OF POLAND-THE ERA OF PARTITION, 1763-1795
1.
The First Partition
Poland’s impotence during the period of her
decline had made her the tool of foreign Powers, a pawn in the game of European
diplomacy, the victim of the ambitions of first one and then another of the
rival Powers.
The
part that she had been able to play in the War of the Polish Succession and in
the Seven Years’ War had made Russia the Power of predominant influence in Poland
in 1764, and the Empress Catharine II, who had come to the throne in July,
1762, was a ruler who knew how to make the most of that position. Of great
ability and boundless ambition it was Catharine’s dream, by the conquest of
Poland, Sweden, and Turkey, to make the Baltic and the Black Sea Russian lakes
and to rule at Constantinople, and the Seven Years’ War had, she thought, put
the possibility of realizing it in her hand. That war had established the
claims of Russia and her neighbor, Prussia, to rank as great Powers in Europe,
the equals of the older states, France, Austria, and Spain. The last years of
the war also had seen the close alliance of these new Powers as a result of the
accession to the Russian throne of Peter III, a great personal admirer of
Frederick the Great of Prussia. This alliance, dictated by the personal whim of
a semi-idiotic despot rather than by the real interests of the country, was
retained in modified form by Catharine when, six months after his accession,
she usurped her husband’s throne. She saw in the Prussian alliance the
necessary condition of the success of her plans. She could not hope to carry
them out unless Frederick the Great was willing to cooperate. Frederick on his
part was very favorable to an alliance, though he by no means sympathized with
all of Catharine’s projects. He saw in friendship with Russia the best guaranty
of the peace which was essential to his exhausted country, and he was not at
all averse to the conquest of Sweden and Poland, always provided it was made of
advantage to him — and he trusted himself to see that it was! Most important of
all, perhaps, at this moment he feared the youthful might of Russia, and
thought it far safer to be friend than foe to so dangerous a neighbor.
Accordingly
when in October, 1763, the death of Augustus III of Saxony and Poland made
immediate action in Poland necessary, Russia and Prussia had already come to an
understanding and were ready to sign a treaty (March, 1764) by which they
agreed (1) to place Prince Stanislaus Poniatowski on
the throne of Poland and keep him there by armed assistance if necessary; (2)
to maintain the existing Constitution in Poland; and (3) to oblige the Polish
Diet to grant complete political equality to the Polish Dissidents.
Maintaining
the Polish Constitution meant, in plain language, preventing the abolition of
the vicious liberum veto and the elective kingship. It meant that Poland was
not to be allowed to reform her government, which alone could restore her
strength and secure her independence. It was thus the first step toward her
destruction as an independent state.
The
question of political equality for the Dissidents was a matter of a very
different sort, but quite as significant. The Dissidents were dissenters or
non-conformists — people who would not accept the state religion, which in
Poland was, as has already been said, Roman Catholic. The majority of the
Dissidents, and the only ones in whom Catharine was interested, were
Greek-Orthodox, or members of the Russian Church. In taking up their cause Catharine
hoped to do two things: first, to make herself popular in Russia and make the
Russians forget that she was a foreigner and a usurper by making herself the
champion of the cause dearest to all Russian hearts, the cause of the Orthodox
religion; and second, she hoped to build up in Poland out of these enfranchised
Dissidents a Russian party devoted to her interests. Nothing could have shown,
more plainly than these arrangements, that Catharine’s plan was to make Poland
hers in fact if not in name, and to govern the country in the interests of
Russia. The choice of the king also was made with this end especially in view.
Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski was a young Polish
noble, connected through his mother with the great Czartoryski
family. His father was Count Stanislaus Poniatowski,
Castellan of Cracow, friend and companion in arms of the Swedish hero, Charles
XII.
An
excellent education on cosmopolitan lines, by tutors at home and study abroad,
especially in France, had developed the natural parts of the young prince, and
had made him a keenly intelligent, highly cultivated, and charming gentleman.
Unfortunately, neither nature nor education had given him the decision of character,
tenacity of purpose, and high courage that his country sorely needed in her
king. At the age of twenty-two he was made, through his father’s influence, Stolnik, or High Steward of Lithuania, and the next year he
was sent to Russia as secretary to the English Ambassador, Sir Charles Hanbury
Williams, to gain diplomatic experience, and especially an acquaintance with
the Court of St. Petersburg, which would enable him to be of help in carrying
out the plans of his maternal uncles, Prince Augustus and Prince Michael Czartoryski, the well- known Prince Palatine and Prince
Chancellor.
Arrived
at St. Petersburg, he almost at once won the affections and became the lover of
the Grand Duchess Catharine, wife of the heir to the throne, and later the
Empress Catharine II. The relationship lasted for three years, and was ended,
if we may believe Catharine’s own account, by him and not by her, and caused
her great, if not very lasting, sorrow. It was due to her influence that at the
end of 1756 he was made Polish Ambassador at the Court of St. Petersburg, and
.during the two following years he was one of the chief conspirators in the intrigues
which aimed at placing the Grand Duchess instead of her husband on the throne
at the death of the Empress Elizabeth. The conspirators went a little too far
and showed their plans too openly in 1758, when the Empress was ill — it was
thought fatally. When she recovered, Poniatowski was
told to leave Russia in thirty-six hours, and the Grand Duchess was in disgrace
and strictly excluded from any further opportunity to play the game of
politics.
But
the wheel of fortune turned quickly for her. In four short years she was on the
Russian throne, and in a position to play a part big enough to satisfy even
her vaulting ambition. During these years her infatuation for Prince Stanislaus
had gone, but an intimate knowledge of his character and capacities remained.
Catharine believed she had in him a tool with which she could govern Poland in
her own interests.
Meanwhile
the Polish Reform Party, wholly ignorant of the Russo-Prussian treaty, whose
terms were secret, were preparing to use the opportunity presented by the
election of a new king, to introduce a new constitution. Their plan was briefly
to strengthen the powers of the king at the expense of the Diet, to make the
kingship hereditary, and to abolish the thoroughly vicious and anarchic
liberum veto. The two brothers, Prince Michael and Prince Augustus Czartoryski, were, as has been said, the leaders of this
party, and had worked for twenty years preparing for this opportunity,
organizing their little group into a party of reform, educating public opinion
to support reforms, and training a new order of statesmen capable of managing
a new government when they should get it.
Upon
the death of Augustus III this party at once submitted its Constitution to the
Diet, but before any action could be taken the Diet was “exploded.” Other
attempts met with a similar fate. The reformers then succeeded in forming a
“Confederation,” but their opponents held “Counter-Confederations” which
nullified all their actions, and they realized that it would be impossible
either to reform the Constitution or elect a king without the aid of a foreign
Power. Thereupon the Prince Chancellor in February, 1764, played right into
Catharine’s hand by begging her support in the approaching election in the
interests of order and good government. This gave Catharine the very opportunity
she wanted to send a Russian army into Poland, and made her mistress of the
situation.
Although
the Reform Party had chosen Prince Adam Czartoryski,
son of the Prince Palatine, as their candidate for the kingship, they very
readily transferred their support to Prince Stanislaus Poniatowski
when they found that the Empress would support no one else. Their influence,
combined with that of the Russian Ambassador, who had used Russian troops to
imprison or to drive out of the country all who refused to be influenced in
favor of Stanislaus, resulted in his unanimous election. Stanislaus on his part
had solemnly promised his uncles to use his kingly influence to advance their
cause, which was indeed the cause of all patriotic Poles.
But
as the price of her support the Empress had imposed upon him conditions which
made the keeping of that promise an utter impossibility. He promised “always
to regard the interests of Russia as his own,” to maintain a constant,
unfeigned “devotion” to the Empress, and never to refuse to support her “just
intentions.”
In
addition to this he was throughout his reign under constant financial
obligations to the Empress. Her ambassadors paid his debts and advanced him the
money by which alone he was able to avoid the open bankruptcy to which his
extravagance had reduced him.
Nor
was this all. Throughout the length and breadth of his kingdom he was cordially
hated and despised by the vast majority of his subjects. By the conservatives
he was hated as a reformer, by the many opponents of the Czartoryski
as a member of their family, and by the people at large as the tool of Russia.
Altogether
his position and that of Poland under him seemed well-nigh hopeless from the
start. But on the other hand, the whole situation was so complicated, so many
interests were concerned with the solution of the Polish question, and the
Poles themselves displayed so fine and patriotic a spirit and really
accomplished so much in the dark days that followed the first partition, that
one cannot but wonder if events might not have taken a different path had the
King assumed from the first a strong position about constitutional reform.
There is reason to suppose that the Empress had not made any hard-and-fast
decision as to the best way to treat Poland. Her Chief Minister, Count Panin, believed that a reasonably strong and well-governed
Poland would be more useful to Russia than a weak and anarchical one. So did
Prince Repnin, Catharine’s Ambassador at Warsaw, and
both men had much influence with her. Frederick the Great was a strong
influence on the other side. He reminded her and warned her of the dangers of a
Poland strong enough to oppose her control. But after all, Frederick regarded
Poland as primarily Russia’s affair, and if the King of Poland had stood
strongly by his party and his principles, urged reform uncompromisingly, and
let all Europe know what he was doing, the Empress might have yielded. She
would certainly have found it somewhat difficult to refuse. That, however, was
just what King Stanislaus did not do. Uncompromising devotion to principle was
something of which he was constitutionally incapable. Prince Repnin had only to threaten him with the withdrawal of the
Empress’s favor (and battalions!) to make him give way on any and all points
at issue. The King began his reign with an appeal to the Empress to assist in
the abolition of the liberum veto. When she refused, the Reform Party tried to
put their measure through the Diet in spite of Russian opposition. When the
Russian and Prussian Ambassadors protested, the Prince Chancellor defied them,
and said he would rather see Poland conquered by force of arms than subject to
such dictation.1 But the King gave way before their threats,
withdrew his support from the bill, thus deserting his uncles and their cause,
and allowed the measure to fail. And although the King burst into tears when
the Ambassador thanked him for his services to Russia in this matter, his tears
did not prevent his taking an exactly similar position the following year
(1767), when, at the instigation of Russian and Prussian gold, the worst
elements in Poland formed the Confederation at Radom, and requested the Empress
to guarantee the perpetuity of the • existing
Polish Constitution — which meant that no Diet could ever change it without her
consent. Though the King protested feebly at first, he finally yielded
unconditionally. So well did the Russians appreciate the value of his
subservience that in the important matter of the Dissidents Prince Repnin himself suggested that the King ought to be rewarded
for his services to Russia.
This
matter of the Dissidents was one that stirred Poland to the depths. Few matters
of public concern could rouse the interest of the Polish peasant and the lesser
nobles, but an attack on their religion was one of these few, and in the
proposition to put the Orthodox on terms of equality with Roman Catholics they
saw a blow at the very vitals of their religious life. Every
one in Poland, whatever his class or party, saw that the proposition was
an impossible one, and not only King Stanislaus and other Poles of position,
but even her own ambassador advised Catharine to let the matter drop. Perhaps
the worst feature of the situation was that the Dissidents themselves, in
whose behalf this so-called reform was being demanded, did not want equality,
and petitioned the Empress to let them alone! They had had since 1686 entire
freedom of religion, and the only point of inequality with Roman Catholic Poles
was their ineligibility to hold office. And they did not want to hold office.
Almost without exception, as Prince Repnin reported
to Catharine, they were simple peasants, quite ignorant of public affairs, and
wholly unfitted, as well as unwilling, to take part in public life. Catharine’s
plan of making a party of them to represent her interests at Court was quite
impossible. It would have been ridiculous, indeed, if it had not been so
serious a blunder.
In
the face of full knowledge of the situation, however, Catharine persisted in
her plan, and by means of bribery and intimidation, the imprisonment of
leaders, and the enlistment in her interests of all the factors in Poland
opposed to the Czartoryski and the party of reform, succeeded
in pushing her bill enfranchising Dissenters through a subservient Diet, and,
worst of all, getting the King’s sanction for it. This task accomplished, the
Empress thought her troubles with Poland were over. In reality they were just
begun.
As
news of the action of the Diet spread through the country, a great wave of opposition
to this betrayal of their religion by their King rolled up, and broke in the
distant Ukran- ian province
of Bar, where the so-called “Confederation of Bar” was formed, and a great
religious insurrection was preached. Many thousands of peasants and lesser
nobles enlisted under the banner of the insurrection, which bore upon it the
image of the Virgin, the Crucifix, and the motto, “To conquer or die for
religion and liberty.” All Poland was soon in civil war, and envoys were sent
to Turkey and France, asking their aid against Russia and Prussia. Both
governments were rather favorable to the enterprise. Turkey was never loath to
attack Russia, and needed little urging from France to make her declare war,
which she did in October, 1768. France also appealed to Austria, closely bound
to her, by the Treaty of 1756, to aid Poland.
Catharine
was taken by surprise, and had the Turks acted promptly and cooperated wisely
with the Poles the situation might have been a difficult one for her. But the
Turks were not ready, and that gave her time to attack the Poles separately.
The Confederates themselves were no mean fighters, though they had no
organization and little discipline. They never succeeded in getting a real army
into the field, but for four long years they kept the Russians busy, and
devastated the country by a savage guerrilla warfare. “While the Poles
massacred in the name of the Catholic religion, the Russians massacred in the
name of tolerance.”
Meanwhile
also Catharine had called upon Frederick the Great to carry out the Treaty of
1764 by coming to her aid. Frederick, however, on his part, had no desire or
intention of going to war. He knew that Austria also was very desirous of
maintaining peace, and he hoped by an understanding with her to prevent the
Russo-Turkish War altogether and limit the conflict to Poland. By the beginning
of 1769 he saw that this could not be done. His task then became that of
limiting the war to Russia and Turkey, and thus preventing a European conflagration,
but Frederick’s plan did not end there. He had long coveted Polish Prussia, which
formed a great wedge of territory effectively separating his province of East
Prussia from his central German territories. He thought he saw in the existing
situation an opportunity to acquire that territory.
The
chief danger of the war becoming general lay in Russian interference with
Austrian interests in southeastern Europe. Austria regarded the region of the
Danube as her preserve, and Frederick knew that she would never consent to
Russia’s annexation of the Danubian principalities,
Wallachia and Moldavia (the modem Kingdom of Roumania),
which Russia would inevitably claim, among other territories, as reward for
the brilliant victories she was winning against the Turks. In such a situation
Austria would almost inevitably be drawn into the war, and, on account of the
system of international alliances, the entrance of Austria would mean that the
war became European. As Austria could do little in a war against both Turkey
and Russia without his help, and he was resolved not to fight, he suggested
that Austria offer her services as mediator between the warring countries, and
propose that Russia indemnify herself by the annexation of Polish rather than
Turkish territory; and to offset that increase of territory on the part of
Russia, that
Austria
and Prussia each be allowed a slice of the same helpless country.
Although
this was not her first and preferred plan, Catharine was not averse to it, as
she could use the opportunity to take possession of certain Polish territories
which would give her a defensible frontier on the west, which she had long
desired and had probably intended to take when the chance offered, as it did
now. It was from the Austrian Empress Maria Theresa that the chief opposition
to the plan came, but she finally yielded, and it was agreed that each
participant should have territory of the same value as the others, and it was
tacitly understood that each should have the particular territories he most
desired.
By
the treaty signed July 25, 1772, Russia secured White Russia (Polotsk, Vitebsk, and Mohilev)
and Polish Livonia, which gave her the rivers Dwina,
Dnieper, and Drusch as her frontier. Austria had Red
Russia and Galicia, with a little piece of Podolia, while Prussia’s share
included Ermeland, West or Polish Prussia exclusive
of Danzig, the Netze district, Kulmerland
exclusive of Thom, and part of Cujavia.
The
next step was to make King Stanislaus convoke the Diet and force that body to
go through the form of ratifying the partition treaty. As a preliminary, all
three powers took the precaution to occupy the territories they claimed with
their respective troops, and to issue proclamations of annexation to the inhabitants.
The elections to the Diet also were so carefully guided by the bribes and
threats of the occupying Powers that the Diet (which the King, though loudly
protesting, had yet been obliged to convoke) was largely composed of their
creatures. Under such circumstances immediate ratification seemed a foregone
conclusion, but it was not until September, 1773, after nearly fourteen months
of delay, that the Diet could be induced to take the final step by which Poland
signed away nearly a third of her territory and something more than a third of
her population.
2.
The National Revival and the Second
Partition
The
years following the first partition were years of momentous import in Polish
history. In spite of the losses and humiliations of the partition, they were
years of reviving prosperity and hope.
Russia,
it is true, governed the country absolutely, and in her own interests, through
the Russian Ambassador, who was the adviser, mentor, and close friend of King Stanislaus.
But the Empress had come to realize that her interests would be better served
by good government than by anarchy in Poland. So, after the first partition
had been ratified, Russia put through the Diet of 1773 the so-called “Constitution
of 1773.” Under this Constitution the “Permanent Committee,” or Executive Council,
governed the country. It consisted of thirty-six members, eighteen Senators and
eighteen Deputies elected by the Diet every two years, and was divided into
five departments— War, Finance, Foreign Affairs, Justice, and Police. It was
hated, indeed, as a Russian institution, but it gave to Poland a unity, order,
and economy of administration unknown to her before.
Also,
as long as Poland remained politically quiet and subservient, Russia made no
objection to activities along other lines, and there were started during these
years economic and social reforms of lasting value — reforms which in fifty
years would have transformed Poland from a mediaeval to a modem state, and
which, even in the brief dozen years allowed to them, gave the country a good
start on the upward path.
Poland
in 1773 was amost entirely an agricultural country.
She was one of the granaries of Europe, exporting yearly vast amounts of grain
through her great Baltic port, Danzig. Her rich lands were almost wholly in the
hands of the nobility, who paid no taxes and worked their vast tracts by
practically unpaid serf labor. Under such conditions the profits were enormous,
in spite of the fact that almost no improvements in methods of farming had been
introduced for two centuries. The first partition, however, made a great
change in these conditions. Many landowners found their lands greatly reduced,
and more important still, the King of Prussia was now in control of the trade
of the Vistula, and imposed ruinous duties or tolls, thus reducing greatly the
profits from the trade still left to them.
The
Government of Poland also by the first partition lost about one half its
revenue, from the Crown lands occupied by the partitioning Powers, from duties
on merchandise sent to Danzig, which now enriched Prussia, and especially from
the salt mines taken over by Austria, which had been the chief source of
revenue for the Crown.
These
losses meant that the Government was obliged to find new sources of revenue.
Among them a general land tax, imposed for the first time in 1774, still
further diminished the profits of the nobles. As a matter of sheer necessity,
therefore, even the conservative element among the nobility seconded the
efforts of the reformers to develop new industries in Poland, and by the
application of modern scientific methods to increase the productiveness of the
old.
As
a result, manufactures sprang up all over the country — there were few magnate
families who did not start at least one; the roads were improved so that
communication was not only possible, but travel was stimulated; rivers were
dredged and widened, and a system of canals planned and partly built, by which
the many rivers of Poland were connected with the Black Sea, thus opening new
markets. All this meant new life for the towns, whose existence had been
stagnant for two centuries. Warsaw, for example, increased in size from 30,000
to 160,000 inhabitants. Trade increased in spite of Prussia’s exactions; Polish
manufactured goods appeared in foreign markets for the first time in her
history; and a middle class, prosperous, educated, and enterprising, came into
existence, and supplied an element in the national life which Poland had long
needed.
As
a result of the reviving prosperity of the country and the fiscal reforms of
the Permanent Council, the government revenues were twice as great in 1788 as
in the early years of the reign of King Stanislaus. The army also, which by
1788 had been increased from almost nothing to eighteen thousand men, was
trained according to the Prussian model, officered from the new cadet school,
and regularly paid.
At
the same time the Education Commission, established in 1774, had begun an
entire reorganization of education — a reform most urgently needed, and which
yielded large results in a comparatively short time.
Until
1773, when they were expelled from Poland, the Jesuits had had entire control
of the education of the country, and their methods were those of the sixteenth
century and earlier. The confiscation of the property of the Order gave the
Commission something to work with, and they introduced an entirely new system,
from the elementary school to the university, based on the same principles as
the system which the Revolution was introducing into France. A very real
intellectual revival both dictated and followed these measures. Once more,
after two centuries of isolation, Poland came into contact with current European
ideas. The "enlightenment” of the eighteenth century and the culture of
revolutionary France, adopted with enthusiasm in Poland, broke up the old
provincialism of thought and the old ignorance of the modem world which had
proved so fatal to her growth. The way the country rose to these opportunities
and turned all its energies into reform shows that at bottom the nation was
sound and capable of regeneration.
In
all these enterprises King Stanislaus and the Patriot Party worked hand in
hand, though their ideas as to the political future of Poland were very
different.
The
disastrous experiences which ended in partition had convinced the King that
dependence on Russia was the necessary condition of all progress. His idea was
by good behavior to merit rewards from his protector, and by services in time
of need to win compensation which should take the form of enlarging both his
prerogatives and the Polish army to the extent of making him really
independent of Russia.
The
Patriots, on the contrary, had learned quite a different lesson from the
partition. They saw that the fatal mistake had been to trust Russia, and they
realized that the first and indispensable step toward any real freedom was to
cast off Russian influence altogether.
But
all parties agreed that, whatever their plans for ultimate action might be, the
time was not ripe. Poland was not ready. She must first be made so, and then
await an opportunity. The whole national energy was turned, therefore, during
the years 1775 to 1788, into national regeneration. As we have seen above,
much was accomplished. But was it enough? That was the question that was
anxiously and eagerly asked by all friends of freedom, when in 1788 the
long-awaited opportunity seemed to present itself in the absorption of both
Russia and her ally Austria in a war on the Turks. The general sentiment of the
country believed that Poland’s hour had struck, and was in favor of making the
supreme effort. “Our sons and grandsons,” the Dietine
of Samogitia declared, “will not live to see a
better occasion than we now have for setting our house in order, increasing the
forces of the Republic, assuring our liberties . . . and reviving the once
famous name of Poles.” 1
While
the country talked, the leaders of both parties were busy maturing their
respective plans. Even before hostilities began, King Stanislaus had approached
the Empress with the project of an alliance against the Turks. In return for
the use of Poland’s army, which King Stanislaus would command himself,
Catharine was to permit an increase in the size of the Polish army, a
considerable extension of the prerogatives of the King, an immediate subsidy
for war expenses, and, after the war was over, the cession to Poland of
Bessarabia and part of Moldavia, including the port of Akkerman.
All these territories he expected their combined efforts would conquer from
Turkey.
Catharine
was very favorably inclined toward a closer alliance with Poland at this time,
chiefly to prevent the possibility of a Prusso-
Polish alliance, but she attached very little value to the services which the
Polish army could render, and had no idea of allowing the King to use the
occasion to strengthen his position. Accordingly, while accepting an alliance
in principle, she made a counter-proposition as to terms, in which none of the
King’s requests were granted, and from which Poland would have gained no
advantage whatever. Nevertheless the King accepted it, — perhaps he himself
would have found it difficult to say why!— and convoked a Diet to ratify it.
Just at this point, however, Prussia received information of the proposed
alliance, and at once informed Russia that Prussia would regard its ratification
as a cause for war. The Polish alliance was not worth a new war to Russia, so
the Empress gave up the plan, but as she openly said that she might take it up
again when a more favorable occasion offered, the Prussians remained suspicious
and far from reassured.
The
leaders of the Patriots, meanwhile, recognizing the necessity of outside aid
if they were to throw off the yoke of Russia, had made overtures to Prussia,
and were anxiously waiting to see what she would do for them.
This
was the situation when, on October 6, 1788, the famous Four Years’ Diet, or as
the Poles call it, the “Great Diet,” came together amid a country-wide
excitement and enthusiasm such as perhaps Poland had never known.
The
members of the Diet were divided among three parties: the Royalists, or King’s
Party, Russian in its sympathies and in favor of a Russian alliance; the
Patriots, or party of thoroughgoing reform, very anti-Russian and in favor of
the Prussian alliance; and the Republican Party, consisting of the
ultra-conservatives who desired to retain the old Constitution intact, who saw
“despotism” in any orderly government, and extolled the sacred “freedom” of the
old anarchy and the liberum veto.
The
Royalists were at first the strongest party. They had been well organized by
the King and the Russian Ambassador, and were prepared with a definite programme and a plan for putting it through. The control of
the Diet was entirely lost to them, however, when at the very first regular
session a note was read from the Prussian Envoy, protesting against a Russo-Polish
alliance, and offering the Poles instead the alliance of Prussia.
Its
effect on the Poles was most extraordinary. The chains of servitude seemed
broken. Anew and happy self-respect, bom of the delightful
experience of proffered friendship, gave them new courage and hope, and they
hastened to express their hatred of Russia and all her works, not merely by
words, but by deeds as well. Under Prussian protection the Patriots, into whose
ranks men from all groups, and particularly from the King’s Party, were now
crowding, undid all Catharine’s work in Poland. Bit by bit the whole structure
of the government of the Permanent Committee was abolished, and this was
followed by the bold demand that the Empress withdraw her troops from Polish
soil. To the astonishment of every one, the Empress complied with the request,
and by May, 1789, Poland was free of Russian control.
It
seemed almost too good to be true! The joy of the Poles knew no bounds. But
their enthusiastic satisfaction in their work did not blind the leaders to the
fact that they owed their freedom to the protection of Prussia and to the
absorption of the Empress in the Turkish war. They resolved, before that war
was settled, to accomplish three things: a treaty with Prussia which should
insure them her continued protection; a new Constitution which should
regenerate the country; and an hereditary kingship which should preserve Poland
from outside interference.
In
spite of the apparent friendliness of Prussia, the treaty was far from easy to
arrange, and it was a year before it was finally and formally signed (May,
1790).
The
root of the difficulty was that Prussia’s chief reason for desiring a Polish
alliance was to get more Polish territory. The King of Prussia wanted Danzig
and Thom to round out his boundaries and complete his acquisitions of 1772, and
he coveted Great Poland as a protection to Silesia and as linking up that
territory with East Prussia. Prussia wanted to get the Poles to cede part of
this territory to her as the price of a political and commercial alliance. The
wiser ones among the Polish leaders realized that Poland must expect to pay
for an alliance, and that her territory was about all she had to pay with, and
they were prepared to accept the arrangement. But the Diet and the country
would not consider it for a moment. All their old distrust of Prussia flared
up, and for a time it seemed as though there would be no treaty. The King of
Prussia, however, wanted the alliance of Poland at this time for another reason
(he was trying to form a league against Austria), so the commercial treaty and
the question of territory were waived for the time being, and a purely
political alliance was signed, by which the contracting parties guaranteed
each other’s territories, and the King of Prussia promised that in case “any
foreign Power . . . should seek to assert the right to interfere in the
internal affairs of the Republic of Poland, the King of Prussia will first endeavor
by his good offices to prevent hostilities . . . but if these should not prove
effective . . . His Majesty the King of Prussia will then assist that Republic
according to Article IV” (i.e., render military assistance).1
The
question whether the Prussian alliance was a wise move for Poland is one on
which there was then and still is great difference of opinion. There is no
reason to suppose that the men who made the treaty were ignorant of the very
grave dangers for Poland that lay in this course. They knew that Prussia wanted
Polish territory, that self-interest was pretty certain to be the only motive
in a Prussian alliance, and that as soon as that interest was served they could
hope for nothing from Prussian friendship. But on the other hand, was an
alliance on better terms at all likely to be offered to Poland? Was it not,
after all, inevitable that a country in Poland’s desperate situation must take
desperate chances in order to save herself? There is no secure, safe course for
a state too weak to protect her own independence. She must get what she can out
of the chance coincidence of her interests with those of more powerful states.
The Prussian alliance, at any rate, offered the opportunity to Poland to free
herself from Russia, who, the Poles believed, and probably rightly, was
unalterably opposed to any improvement in their condition.
The
European situation was, moreover, just at this time peculiarly favorable to
their interests. All the Powers were alarmed by the spectacular successes of
Russia in her war against the Turks, and by the danger to Europe involved in
Russia’s annexation of the vast territories conquered by her. The English
Minister, Pitt, had formed the Triple Alliance of England, Holland, and Prussia
in the interests of European peace, and he now planned to expand the alliance,
by the admission of Sweden, Denmark, and Poland, into a great federation
pledged to maintain the territorial integrity of its members. In a word, the
Federative System was to protect weak states against the policy of conquest and
annexation by which Catharine II and Frederick the Great had built up their
empires. It was really directed against the ambitions of Russia, and its
immediate purpose was to force Russia to relinquish all her Turkish conquests.
The
Prussian alliance, then, was to be for Poland only the door through which she
was to enter the Triple Alliance and Pitt’s great Federative System, where she
would find powerful allies in her inevitable struggle against Russia. But
Pitt’s plan for Poland did not stop here. Her trade with Russia was very
important to England, and before breaking with Russia it was necessary to
provide other sources of supply for the grain, timber, and other important
articles that England got there. Pitt saw that Poland could supply them, and
his idea was to strengthen Poland’s independence and to establish close
commercial relations between her and England. Commercial relations with
England, however, necessarily included Prussia, because, in the first place, Prussia
was England’s ally, and in the second, Prussia controlled Poland’s outlet on
the Baltic. Pitt proposed to meet this situation by a commercial treaty between
Prussia and Poland under the guaranty of England. Prussia was to free Polish
trade on the Vistula from all the restrictions which Poland had so deeply
resented, giving her practically free trade with Europe, and in return Poland
was to cede Danzig and Thorn to Prussia.
But
as in the earlier negotiation, the cession of Danzig and Thom was just what the
Poles could not bring themselves to accept. The Patriot leaders, who had
accepted the proposition as a necessary sacrifice, might have been able to
bring the Diet to their point of view had the Triple Alliance actually gone to
war with Russia and offered Poland the opportunity to join. But the war did not
come off. Though Catharine stood firm, and a conflict seemed in. . . evitable, at the last moment Pitt
himself was obliged to back down because the English Parliament refused to
support a war with Russia. Catharine was left free to make practically her own
terms with the Turks (Treaty of Jassy, January, 1792), and Prussia, completely
disgusted with England, resolved to get out of the Triple Alliance as soon as
she could. She resolved also to throw over her treaty with the Poles, and to
open negotiations with Russia for a new partition of Poland, as the only means
left of acquiring Danzig and Thom.
As
for Poland, her doom was sealed. She had staked her all and lost. Her refusal
to pay with her provinces for the Prussian alliance, and the failure of the
Federative System, destroyed her last chance of outside aid in her inevitable
struggle with Russia. She had now to fight it out alone — and lose.
But
for the moment this was not recognized at Warsaw. Prussia’s perfidy was not yet
known to the Polish Government, nor indeed to any one
but Russia, and meanwhile the success of the Patriot Party in making a new
Constitution for Poland, and the rallying of the country to its support, had
filled the whole nation with hope and faith in their future.
In
September, 1789, a committee was appointed by the Diet to draw up a constitution,
but it was not until 1791 that much more than the adoption of a statement of
principles was accomplished. The delay was due not only to the preoccupation of
the Assembly with other matters, — finance, the army, and the Prussian treaty
especially, — but also to the fact that it was only after nearly two years of
debate that the nation was sufficiently educated in political ideas and
possibilities to know what it really wanted. By the end of 1790, however, the
country had pronounced quite definitely in favor of the hereditary kingship
vested in the Elector of Saxony and his line, and the great majority in the
Diet recognized the necessity of a strong government, able to hold the country
together and protect it against attacks from without. In December the King, who
up to this time had held persistently aloof, finally accepted the Prussian
treaty and the Patriot programme. And now the
Patriots took a desperate resolve. Convinced that their wellbeing depended
upon having a constitution in actual operation before the end of the Russo-
Turkish War freed the hands of Russia, and realizing that it could never be done
by the slow method of Diet procedure, the leaders resolved to present a
constitution ready made, and force its adoption en bloc at a single session of the Diet. The King was
particularly interested in this plan. He himself drew up the project of a Constitution
modeled on English
lines,
which, being approved by his associates, he resolved to present to the Diet.
The time chosen was immediately after the Easter recess, when the attendance
would be small, and the conspirators, having sent secret word to their own
supporters to be present, could easily command a majority.
Accordingly,
the 3d of May, the Deputation on Foreign Interests reported alarming rumors of
a new partition of Poland, said to be under consideration by Russia and
Prussia. The King then produced the new Constitution and urged its immediate
acceptance, in the face of this new danger. After some very heated debate, in
which the majority were, however, distinctly on the side of the King, he took
the oath to support the new Constitution, the majority of the Nuncios or
Deputies taking part in it by holding up their right hands. Then, calling upon
all who loved their country to follow him, he went to the church, where they
all renewed their oaths upon the altar.
All
Warsaw then gave itself up to rejoicings “unalloyed by a single act or word
that might disgrace the auspicious occasion,” the only accident worthy of note
being that the King lost his hat — but even this was regarded by many as of
happy omen!
The
Constitution thus launched was a good one. The abolition of the old liberum
veto and of the right of “confederation” paved the way for a really strong
government, vested in an hereditary king with large powers, governing through a
Council of Ministers responsible to the Diet, which could remove them at any
time by a two-thirds vote. The legislature was bicameral, with the
preponderance of power in the lower House elected by the nation. A property
qualification for voting in the Dietines was
established, serfdom was abolished, and political rights were restored to the
towns and cities arbitrarily deprived of them for two hundred years.
Under
happier circumstances this Constitution might have saved Poland by bringing
her people under the discipline they needed so sadly. But it was too late.
Though forced for the moment to acquiesce in Poland’s reassertion of her
independence by her own absorption in the Turkish war, Catharine had neither
forgotten nor forgiven Poland for its break with Russia, and as soon as her
hands were free of the Turks, she turned to the task of its reconquest.
Through
Potemkin she opened negotiations with certain Poles who were opposed to the new
Government and Constitution, and wanted nothing more than the chance to replace
it with the old anarchy. The leaders of this party were Felix Potocki, Seweryn Rzewuski, and Ksawery Branicki. They assured the Empress that the whole country
was with them, and would rise as one man against the existing regime as soon as
the chance was offered. (They wanted, however, 100,000 Russian troops to aid
them in their enterprise!) They fell in very readily with the Empress’s plan to
form a “Confederation” which should overthrow the Royal Government, put in a
Constitution approved by the Empress, and conclude with Russia a treaty of
eternal alliance.
The
Empress meanwhile wrote to Prussia and Austria that she had determined to
destroy the innovations in Poland, so detrimental to the common interests of
the Powers, and suggested that Prussia and Austria join in this “regulation”
of Polish affairs. The King of Prussia saw his chance, and at once decided to
throw over the Polish treaty and make a new partition of Poland which should
give him Danzig and Thom and part of Great Poland as the condition of his alliance
with Russia. In March, 1792, Potocki, Rzewuski, Branicki, and a dozen
of their creatures came to Petersburg, where they were entertained and feted by
the Empress. These traitors claimed to be the representatives of the whole Polish
people, longing to return to a republican system of government. They drew up an
Act of Confederation which purported to have originated in Poland among the
Poles, and was falsely dated “Targowica, May 14,”
though it was really signed in Petersburg on April 27.
The
signers of this document declared their purpose to be the defense of the Roman
Catholic religion, the liberty and equality of the nobility, the territorial
integrity of the state, and the ancient republican form of government. The
statement that the control of the army by the “usurpers” at Warsaw had obliged
them to appeal for protection to the great Catharine, “whose grandeur of
character gave well-grounded hope of her disinterestedness,” was followed by a
formal request for aid addressed in the name of the “Confederated Polish
Nation” to Catharine as “that immortal sovereign who was the refuge of peoples
and kings,” and “the tutelary divinity” of Poland.1
The
fiction of legal right being thus created, the Empress on May 18, 1792, gave
warning at Warsaw that she intended to take action in behalf of violated
treaties, and on the same night sent her troops across the frontier.
The
Poles were wholly unprepared. They had refused to believe that there was
danger, trusting in the Prussian treaty and the very friendly attitude of
Austria, who really wished to befriend them and had tried to form an alliance
against Russia in their behalf. The Poles believed in this alliance long after
it had proved an impossibility.
On
May 21 the Diet met to hear the Russian note. It was received in silence,
except where the Empress said she was sending her troops to restore the
liberties of the Polish nation, when the Assembly burst into laughter and
groans. The King made a manly and spirited speech concerning defense, but hoped
that when better informed the Empress would stay her hand!
The
Diet voted a war-tax, appointed the King Commander-in-Chief of all the forces
of the Republic, — an unparalleled thing in Polish history, — and gave him
power to make a levee en masse if it should prove
necessary. Having taken these measures, all it could do to provide for Poland’s
fatal hour, the Four Years’ Diet adjourned May 29, 1792.
The
King then made a formal appeal to the King of Prussia to carry out their
treaty. It was a heavy blow when Prussia refused, on the quibble that the
Constitution of the 3d of May was subsequent to this treaty, and not guaranteed
by it!
Austria
was sympathetic, but was herself deeply involved in a war with Revolutionary
France, and could give no practical aid. Poland must fight alone against the
might of Russia, with a little army inadequately equipped, badly trained, and
led by a talented but entirely inexperienced general only twenty-nine years of
age, Prince Joseph Poniatowski, the nephew of King
Stanislaus. In General Thaddeus Kosciuszko, appointed to the chief subordinate
command, Poland had, however, an officer of talent, experience, and high
patriotism.
These
Polish leaders and their little army put up a splendid fight in the Ukraine
against overwhelmingly greater numbers. And they were not defeated. In fact,
after two months in the field the Polish army was in far better condition than
at the start, and was eager to continue the struggle. But the King surrendered
to Russia at this point, and all was lost. For a month he had been negotiating
secretly with the Empress, trying to get her to disavow the Confederation of Targowica and to accept the Constitution of the 3d of May
in a modified form, coupled with an “eternal alliance” between Poland and
Russia. When the Empress absolutely refused, and ordered him to accept the
Confederation, the King, though he professed himself overwhelmed with grief,
called the Council and laid the letter before them, and professing to believe
that the military defense of the country was hopeless, advised the acceptance
of the Empress’s terms.
Though
the King had taken pains to have present in the Council a majority of proRussian members, yet there were not wanting a few
patriots to protest against this betrayal of the country. Ostrowski urged the
King to emulate the courage and constancy of John Casimir, under whom Poland
had faced and conquered worse conditions even than the present ones, while Ignacy Potocki begged the King to
abdicate rather than submit to Russia. The King listened, but was unconvinced,
and finally announced his decision to accede to the Confederation.
Grief,
rage, and despair followed the announcement of his treachery to the country.
Kosciuszko, indeed, wished to abduct the King and hold him prisoner while they
continued the war in his name, but Prince Joseph had not the courage for this.
In the end Prince Joseph, Kosciuszko, and a score of other officers resigned
their commissions and left the country, as did many of the Patriot leaders in
civil positions, choosing exile rather than compromise with Russia.
Meanwhile,
after long negotiations, Prussia and Russia had agreed upon the terms of a
second partition of the country, and in January, 1793, a treaty was signed by
which Prussia was to have Danzig and Thorn, so long desired, all that was
left of Great Poland, and parts of Cujavia and Masovia — briefly the vast region known to-day as South
Prussia. The treaty gave Russia those parts of Podolia and the Ukraine not
already hers, together with parts of both Volhynia
and Podlesia. By the two partitions she had now
acquired all of Little Russia, all of White Russia, and part of Lithuania.
To
force Poland to ratify these arrangements was the final step, and one of the
Empress’s first official acts after her return to power in Poland was to
convene the Polish Diet for this purpose.
The
Diet met at Grodno, June 17,1793, but its coercion proved an unexpectedly
difficult task. The Russian representative, Baron von Sievers, had spent large
sums of money on this election, with the result that the great majority of the
deputies were ready to vote for Russia. There were, however, some honest,
patriotic men in this melancholy assembly, the so-called “Zealots,” who
opposed themselves uncompromisingly to a partition or even to a discussion of
“ indemnity ” with Russia and Prussia. “ If we perish,” they said, “let us
perish with honor, not with shame ”; and they fought desperately, eloquently,
and passionately over every inch of ground. They knew they could not save themselves,
but they fought for time, in the forlorn hope that some foreign power or some
fortunate accident might save them. The King at first took a brave position on
their side. In his opening speech he said he had acceded to the Confederation
of Targowica, because in so doing he thought to
assure the integrity and independence of Poland, and declared that he had
“resolved under no conditions to sign any treaty depriving the Republic of even
the smallest part of its possessions”! There is reason to believe, however,
that in spite of all this the King had decided beforehand to yield in the end.
Certain it is that as soon as Russia withheld the payment of his revenues his
opposition broke down completely, and he became the facile tool of Sievers. The
Zealots continued their struggle to the last ditch. Finally, however, after
four weeks of opposition to Russian violence, knowing themselves without the
means of defense, and wishing to avoid useless bloodshed, the Diet by a large
majority agreed to the treaty with Russia. The treaty with Prussia, whose
perfidy had brought them to this pass, they absolutely refused to accept. Even
after the Russian Ambassador had obliged Prussia to give up half of the
“rectified” frontier that the Prussians had occupied over and above the lands
included in their arrangement with Russia, and also to promise a commercial
treaty under Russian mediation which should reduce the exorbitant tariffs
levied by Prussia on Polish trade on the Vistula, the Poles still would not
yield. Finally, on September 23, the meeting-place of the Diet was surrounded
with soldiers and cannon, a Russian general and twelve officers took seats in
the Diet, and that body was informed that they were prisoners until the treaty
with Prussia was passed.
Having
tried in vain every other means of resistance, the Diet lapsed into complete silence.
For four hours the famous “Dumb Session” continued, the silence broken only by
the threats and blusterings of the Russian general.
At last, near four in the morning, at the insistence of the impatient Russians
the Marshal of the Diet put the question. It was twice repeated without
response, whereupon the Marshal declared that, since silence was a sign of
consent, and no one had spoken, the motion was unanimously carried! The session
was then declared closed, and, still in silence, the members left the hall.
There
were yet other humiliations in store for the defeated Poles. Although Poland
was now reduced to a very small state, — only about sixteen thousand square
miles contained in the three small provinces of Masovia,
Podlachia, and Samogitia, —
the Empress wished to take no chances regarding its submissiveness, and before
the Diet of Grodno was dissolved she forced it to ratify a treaty with Russia,
putting practically the entire control of the army and the foreign relations of
the country in the hands of Russia. This treaty, as one of the deputies of the
Diet remarked, made Poland a Russian province.
This
same Diet also was obliged to annul all of the acts of the Four Years’ Diet,
and to reenact all the evil features of the old constitution — the liberum
veto, the elective kingship, the privileges of the szlachta,
and the serfdom of the peasantry. Truly the vengeance of Catharine was
complete!
3.
The Revolution of 1794 and the Third Partition
At
first the Poles were stunned by the enormity of this latest calamity which had
befallen them. This feeling, however, soon gave place to an indignation and
hatred for Russia which was still further enhanced by the increasing harshness
of the Russian rule. Baron von Sievers, kindly and desirous of mitigating
Poland’s misfortunes wherever he conscientiously could, was succeeded by
General Igelstrom, an insolent and arbitrary despot.
The Poles would surely have been as unworthy of independence as their worst
critics make them out had they submitted without protest to this last ignominy.
But they had no thought of submitting. As all open means of protest were denied
them, they resorted to conspiracy. Secret societies were formed, plots for an
insurrection hatched under the very nose of General Igelstrom,
and the plotters at home were in constant correspondence with exiles abroad,
particularly a group in Saxony which included Kosciuszko and the leaders of the
Four Years’ Diet. These patriots did their best to find support for a Polish insurrection
among the states of Europe, but in vain.
Meanwhile
General Igelstrom, knowing that there were plots, but
unable to discover them, resolved to disband the greater part of the Polish
army, upon which the Poles must chiefly rely in any insurrection. Despair at
this move led a brigade commanded by General Mada- linski to refuse when ordered to disband. Instead, they
marched toward Cracow, where the citizens, encouraged by this news, rose en masse and expelled the Russian garrison. Kosciuszko, who
had hurried into Poland upon receiving news of the rising, was proclaimed Commanderin-Chief by the nobles in Cracow, and issued a
manifesto calling on all patriots to rally to his standard and to send him arms
and provisions. “Furnish men capable of bearing arms,” he says. “ Do not refuse
the necessary provisions of bread, biscuit, etc. Send horses, shirts, boots,
cloth, and canvas for tents. . . . The last moment is arrived, in which
despair, in the midst of shame and reproach, puts arms in our hands. Our hope
is in the contempt of death which can alone enable us to ameliorate our fate
and that of our posterity.”
The
conditions implied in this manifesto were far from hopeful for the Polish
cause, but the country responded splendidly. All classes rallied to
Kosciuszko’s standard, even the peasants coming in great numbers, armed, where
they had nothing else, with their scythe-blades. The King set the example of
giving all his plate and a large part of his income to the national cause, and
the nobles followed his example to such an extent that the army was soon abundantly
supplied.
At
Raslawice Kosciuszko met and defeated the Russian
detachment sent after Madalinski, and Warsaw
responded to General Igelstrom’s attempt to disarm
the Polish troops there by a rising which obliged Igelstrom
to evacuate the city (April 18). The insurgents then set up a provisional
government under the Constitution of the 3d of May, and recognized Kosciuszko
as Dictator. Five days later Wilna, the capital of
Lithuania, expelled its Russian garrison, other lesser towns followed its
example, and soon the Russians were in full retreat to the frontier. Poland was
once more free! She even began to dream of recovering her dismembered provinces
under Austrian and Prussian rule.
But
the moment of triumph was as brief as it was happy. The King of Prussia was
already on his way to Poland with an army, and Catharine of Russia was
collecting, for the same destination, every soldier that could be spared from
the south, where preparations were on foot for a great Turkish war. Catharine
was determined this time to be done with Poland. “The time has come,” she said,
“not only to extinguish to the last spark the fire that has been kindled in our
neighborhood, but to prevent any possible rekindling of the ashes.”
Against
such antagonists Kosciuszko’s position was hopeless from the first, but he
made a splendid fight. His army was small, badly equipped, and badly
disciplined. That unanimity in the cause of freedom which the nation had shown
in the first weeks of the rising had given way to the old suspicions and
dissensions so characteristic of the Poles and so fatal to their cause. The
democratic party in the towns, disciples of the French Jacobins, who wanted to
set up a Reign of Terror in Poland, the peasants who wanted to be freed from
serfdom, and the nobles, conservative to the core, who felt they had already
gone too far in agreeing to the provisions of the Constitution of the 3d of
May, all suspected one another, and agreed only in their suspicions of Kosciuszko.
The King had from the beginning been a negligible factor. Though kept under
constant surveillance for fear he would try to escape to Russia, he was
otherwise treated with respect, but on the understanding that he should take no
part in public affairs. Kosciuszko was the real ruler of the country.
The
arrival of the Russian troops from the south meant a speedy end to his power
and to all his hopes. Swiftly, surely, and ruthlessly the Russian general, Suviroff, cut to pieces the Polish forces who opposed his
march to Warsaw. Arrived there, he demanded the surrender of the city, and
being refused, the Russians captured Praga, a suburb
on the right bank of the river, massacred practically aill
the inhabitants, and burned the town. On November 8 they entered Warsaw, and
Poland’s freedom was ended.
The
capitulation of the capital without resistance had been accomplished, however,
only on condition that the soldiers of the garrison, who refused to lay down
their arms, should be allowed to march out. The Russian general, in giving the
permission, added that all those who chose this alternative might be sure of
not escaping elsewhere, and that, when overtaken, no quarter would be given
them. In spite of this threat, the whole garrison, to a man, marched out,
accompanied by civilians in such numbers that altogether their company counted
thirty thousand souls.
Kosciuszko
had been wounded and taken prisoner in a last vain attempt at Maciegowice, October io, to check the advancing Russians.
After his wound was healed he was sent to St. Petersburg, where he was kept a
prisoner until the death of the Empress in 1796.
The
political leaders of the revolution, including Count Ignacy
Potocki, Zakrezewsky, the
president of the Revolutionary Council, and three other of its members, shared
a like fate. The troops still in the field, however, were allowed to capitulate
on honorable terms. King Stanislaus, by Catharine’s orders, went to Grodno,
where he lived until her death, when the Emperor Paul invited him to St.
Petersburg, gave him an ample pension, and the Marble Palace for a residence,
where he lived in comfort, if not happiness, until his death in 1798. The
Emperor Paul also freed Kosciuszko and his fellow prisoners in 1796.
Kosciuszko, after visits to England and America, where he was received with
almost unparalleled enthusiasm, made his home in France until his death in
18'17.
Meanwhile
Russia, Prussia, and Austria divided the remaining territories of Poland between
them. Russia took in the south what remained of Volhynia
and Podlesia, thus extending her boundary to the
Bug; in the north Courland and Samogitia (thus giving
her all the southeastern Baltic coast), and all of Lithuania east of the river
Niemen. This partition, with the two earlier ones, thus restored to Russia all
the territories conquered from her by Lithuania during the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries, and gave her in addition the greater part of Lithuania
itself. Poland proper was divided between the German Powers. Prussia secured
what remained of Podlachia and of Masovia,
including the city of Warsaw, and all of Lithuania west of the Niemen — the
territories which to-day make up New East Prussia and New Silesia.
Austria
acquired the district between the rivers Pilica,
Vistula, and Bug, a region comprising all of Little Poland (the palatinates of
Cracow, Sandomir, and Lublin), as well as parts of
Red Russia (the Palatinate of Chelm) and of Podlachia.
The
formal abdication of King Stanislaus on November 25, 1795, completed the
process by which Poland was wiped off the map of Europe, and by a secret
agreement the three sovereigns, “recognizing the necessity of abolishing everything
which may recall the memory of the existence of the Kingdom of Poland,” pledged
themselves never to use the name of Poland in reference to any of the
territories acquired by them.
CHAPTER
VI
THE
GRAND DUCHY OF WARSAW
The years following the third partition
were bitter ones for Poland. Most of the nobles who had taken an active
interest in public affairs and had escaped imprisonment were in exile, chiefly
in Venice and Paris, engaged in the vain endeavor to enlist the interest of
some of the powers of Europe in the cause of Poland. France and Turkey were the
only powers that were favorably inclined toward Poland, and neither one was in
a position to take up her cause actively.
The
years 1796 and 1797, however, altered the situation materially in France.
Napoleon Bonaparte, sent into Italy by the Directory in 1796 to fight the
Austrians, in a campaign of surpassing brilliance had not only conquered them,
but the King of Sardinia1 and the Pope as well, and taken possession
of all northern Italy for France. Napoleon had thus made himself the military
hero of Europe, and was already well started on the road to empire. In him the
Poles saw a bright ray of hope for their future, and as early as 1796, through
Count Oginski, the Polish “Confederacy” at Paris
opened negotiations. Though telling them that the Poles must arm themselves and
not depend on foreign help, Bonaparte certainly led them to think that he would
aid their cause; with the result that the Polish general, Dombrowski, early in
1797 sought and received permission from the improvised government set up in
Italy by the French to raise a Polish legion to enter the French service; and
soon eight thousand Poles, forming two legions, were in arms, eager to enter
the fray against their old enemy, Austria, and in so doing, as they fondly
hoped, strike a blow for Polish independence. During the next few years the
Polish legions bore their part, and bore it gloriously, in the French campaigns
in Italy.
The
First Legion, under Dombrowski, marched into Rome with the French when they
turned out the Pope in 1798, and Dombrowski was allowed to take from Loreto the
trophies, the Turkish flag and saber, which the Polish King, John Sobieski, had
captured from the Turks after the siege of Vienna in 1683. The flag was
henceforth always with the First Legion, but the saber they sent to Kosciuszko,
the greatest Polish hero since Sobieski.
During
1799 the legions took part in the battles of the Trebbia, Novi, and Mantua
against the Austrians and their Russian allies. In these campaigns the legions
were almost annihilated, but they were quickly replaced by new volunteers, so
that in the campaign of 1800 nearly nine thousand Poles were engaged.
The
Peace of Lundville, February, 1801, which closed the
Italian campaign, was a profound disappointment to the Poles, as no mention
was made of them in it. Many of them quitted the French service in despair or
disgust, and the rest were sent with the French contingent under General
LeClerc, to reduce the island of St. Domingo, then in rebellion against the
French. Few returned from this expedition, yellow fever carrying off most of
those who were not killed in battle.
In
spite of this sad ending, the Polish legions had done a real service to the
Polish cause. They were the only representatives of their nation during those
dark years, and their valor alone kept alive and fresh in the minds of an
indifferent and forgetful Europe the memory of her great past.
Brighter
days seemed to dawn for Poland, however, in 1806. In that year Napoleon conquered
Prussia and took away from her all the Polish territories acquired by her at
the second and third partitions, together with Kulmer-
land, Cujavia, and the Netze
district acquired by the first partition, leaving her, of all her Polish lands,
only West Prussia north of the Netze. These
territories, with the exception of the district of Bialystok, ceded to Russia,
and Danzig, which was made a free city under the protection of Russia and
Saxony, were joined by Napoleon into the Duchy of Warsaw, an autonomous state
with a Constitution modeled on that of the Empire in France.
In
1809 Napoleon made a new treaty with Austria, the Treaty of Vienna, by which
Austria ceded to him all her Polish territories acquired by the third
partition; namely, western or New Galicia, including Cracow, and the southeast
comer of Old Galicia. The latter, Napoleon gave to his friend and ally, the Emperor
of Russia, while West Galicia was added to the Duchy of Warsaw, which was then
raised to the rank of a Grand Duchy. The King of Saxony was made Grand Duke,
and nominally ruled the country, with the cooperation of a Diet of two houses,
the lower House elected by the nobles and townspeople. The power of the Grand
Duke was greatly limited, however, by the fact that he was not allowed to
appoint a viceroy, so that in his absence he had no personal representative in
the duchy; and also by the fact that he had no control over the foreign
relations of the country, France alone having a representative Resident at
Warsaw. The real power, indeed, was vested in the hands of this Resident, who
was Napoleon’s personal representative.
The
Constitution abolished serfdom in theory, but as no land was given to the
peasants their condition was made worse thereby, rather than better, as they
remained economically entirely dependent upon their former owners, and the
legal fact of freedom released the latter from all responsibility for the
peasants, and enabled them to take away the land and lease it to others, as
well as to withdraw certain customary privileges, such as the use of the
owner’s wood and pasture land, from those who remained.
Civil
equality was also established by law, but the Polish nobility resented it, and
Napoleon did not care enough about it to oppose them, so the law was never
enforced. The introduction of the Code Napoleon, on the contrary, was a real
reform, and wrought a great amelioration in Poland, and has remained in force
ever since.
The
real interests of the French in Poland were military. The Poles were excellent
soldiers, and Napoleon gave just sufficient encouragement to their national
hopes to get their loyal and devoted service.
From
the first, however, there were many who had no faith in him, and held
persistently aloof. Kosciuszko was one of these. Napoleon, knowing that a
manifesto in his name would call the whole of Poland to the French colors, had
done his best to win the Polish leader to his side. But Kosciuszko refused to
come until Napoleon should actually annex the Russian provinces and declare the
old kingdom reestablished — which he never did.
Many
Polish landowners also resented bitterly Napoleon’s confiscation of their
estates for the benefit of his marshals and generals. No less than twenty-seven
of them were established in Poland, some of them on estates of enormous size.
Napoleon's
military demands upon the country, also, were a heavy burden, and created a
certain amount of disaffection. He made the country a vast recruiting ground,
from which he had taken by 1812 something like ninety thousand men. Ravaged by
war, its trade with England greatly reduced when not entirely cut off by the
Continental blockade, — and England was the chief market for the grain and
timber that were Poland’s great exports, — the country was in no condition to
bear the burden of raising and supporting so many troops. By 1811 the deficit
was twenty-one million francs, and M. de Pradt,
Napoleon’s Ambassador at Warsaw, reported a condition of general wretchedness.
Nothing, he says, could exceed the misery of all classes. The army was not
paid, the officers were in rags, the best houses were in ruins; the greatest
lords were compelled to leave Warsaw from want of money to provide their
tables. But in spite of doubts and disillusion, when Napoleon finally broke
with Russia, and in the early summer of 1812 invaded the country, the great
majority of the Poles still believed in him. The very existence of the Duchy of
Warsaw made this faith inevitable. Prince Czartoryski
said of it: “It is a sort of phantom of ancient Poland which produces an
infallible effect on all who regard that country as their real fatherland. It
is as if, after you had lost a dear friend, his shade should come to assure you
that he will soon be restored to you in person.”
Seventy
thousand Poles, under Prince Joseph Poniatowski,
formed the Fifth Corps of the Grande Arm&e when
it marched into Russia. They believed that they were about to conquer
Lithuania, add it to Warsaw, and thus create a reunited Poland. An
extraordinary session of the Diet of the Grand Duchy, called just before the
Russian invasion, gave official sanction to this view by declaring the Kingdom
of Poland reconstituted, recalling all Poles from the Russian service, and
declaring them absolved from their allegiance to the Russian Emperor.
The
defeat and retreat of Napoleon dashed all these hopes. By February, 1813, the
Russian army had driven the French from Lithuania, was invading the Grand Duchy
itself, and once again Poland’s capital city was in the hands of her old enemy,
and her people awaiting the vengeance of the Russian ruler.
CHAPTER
VII
THE
“ CONGRESS KINGDOM ” AND THE REVOLUTION OF 1830
The ruler of Russia at this time was the
Emperor Alexander I, and he had no thought of exacting vengeance from the
Poles. His policy was something very different, indeed, from vengeance. It was
nothing less than the restoration of an autonomous and liberal government to a
reunited Poland. This was an extraordinary policy for a Russian czar, — even
with his condition that Poland must always remain a part of the Russian Empire,
— and had indeed an interesting history.
Of
an open, impressionable, and somewhat sentimental nature, the Emperor had very
early become an ardent supporter of the principles of Rousseau, through the
influence of his Swiss tutor, La Harpe; and even
during the lifetime of his grandmother, the Empress Catharine, he had
expressed his hatred and horror of her principles and policy, and had declared
that when he came to the throne, he would give the subject peoples their
liberty. His interest had been especially attracted to the Poles by their
heroism
in the Revolution of 1794, and by the impression made upon his youthful imagination
by Kosciuszko, whom his father, the Emperor Paul, had visited in prison, and
on one occasion had taken his son with him. He was thus already strongly
inclined to the Polish cause, before the chief influence in that direction
came into his life in the person of young Prince Adam Czartoryski,
son of Prince Adam Casimir, and grandson of the old Prince Palatine. This
young man came to Petersburg in 1795 to beg the restoration of their estates to
his family, and was made aide-de-camp to the young Grand Duke Alexander by the
Empress. The two boys at once became the closest friends, and the outcome of
that friendship was that Alexander resolved to restore to the Poles their lost
territories and their lost liberties, and to rule them himself as a
constitutional king.
When
Alexander succeeded to the throne in 1801, he not only took measures to
ameliorate the conditions of his own people, but he called Prince Adam Czartoryski to Russia and made him Curator of the new University
of Wilna, which he made the center of Polish
influence and Polish political propaganda. In 1804 he made Czartoryski
Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and allowed him to work definitely (though
indirectly, on account of the opposition of Austria and Prussia to any such
measure) toward the restoration of Poland to her frontiers of 1772. Czartoryski did this very largely by his championship of
the principle of nationality, in order to accustom Europe to the idea as a
basis for European reconstruction after the defeat of Napoleon. He tried also,
in 1806, to draw Russia into a war with Prussia, by which Alexander might get
possession of Prussia’s Polish provinces and incorporate them in his Polish
kingdom. The Emperor, however, was not willing to go so far. Some years of
experience, and the councils of other ministers, to whom the Polish question
was only one, and not the chief one, of many considerations which should form
the policy of the Czar of all the Russias, had
somewhat cooled his ardor for the Poles, or had at least convinced him that for
the time being he could do nothing for them.
Instead,
he made an alliance with their worst enemy, Prussia, against Napoleon,
whereupon the Poles (even including Prince Adam Czartoryski)
lost all faith in him, and were thus the more ready to turn to Napoleon when,
after the defeat of the Prussians at Jena in 1806, he established the Duchy of
Warsaw.
Alexander,
however, had not lost interest in Poland, and when the events of 1812 made him
master of the Duchy, thus giving him control of nearly nine tenths of the
ancient Republic of Poland, he began at once to plan for the reunion of all
the Poles in an autonomous free state. Knowing, however, that Austria and
Prussia would hate his plan, and that the Russian people would oppose it
violently, he said nothing publicly about Poland until the War of Liberation
had overthrown Napoleon, and the Congress of Vienna had come together in 1814
to reorganize Europe. By that time his agents in Warsaw had already established
a provisional government in the Grand Duchy under Prince Adam Czartoryski, and a committee of Poles, under the Grand Duke
Constantine, was already at work on the reorganization of the Polish army. At
Vienna the Emperor announced his plan of keeping the Grand Duchy and making it
into a constitutional kingdom, ruled under a separate title by himself and his
successors on the Russian throne. He had gained the consent of the King of
Prussia to this plan by promising him all of Saxony in compensation. Saxony
was to be taken away from its own king to punish him for his faithful
friendship to Napoleon.
Austria,
France, and England were one and all strongly opposed to the plan, and the question
became one of the most difficult the Congress had to settle. At one time war
seemed unavoidable, as neither side was willing to yield. Finally, however, the
Emperor agreed to compromise regarding the territory to be included in his new
kingdom. He would not yield the point of the kingdom itself. By this compromise
only part of Saxony was sacrificed to Prussia, and instead of the rest, Prussia
received back the Polish province of Posen, comprising about one fourth of
the Grand Duchy of Warsaw. The Emperor also ceded back to Austria the province
of Tamapol, lost by her in 1809. The town of Cracow
and its environs was declared by the Congress a free city, called the “Republic
of Cracow,” because neither Austria nor Russia would let the other have it.
Out
of the remainder of the Grand Duchy , , of
Warsaw, a scant three quarters of it, which amounted to about one sixth only of
the old Republic of Poland, the Emperor made his new Kingdom or “Czardom” of Poland, the “Con- .
gress Kingdom.”
Alexander reserved the right to add to the territory of this Kingdom at his
pleasure, and undoubtedly intended to include a part if not the whole of
Lithuania in it
ultimately,
when he could see his way to do so without too great offense to his Russian subjects,
who would resent liberties granted to the Poles and not to them. The belief
that this would be done was the reason for the rejoicing of the Poles over the
formation of the Congress Kingdom, small as it was. The disappointment pf their
hopes was the chief reason for the Revolution of 1830. As a result of the
arrangements ofthe Congress of Vienna, the
territories of the ancient Republic of Poland were in 1815 under five distinct
administrations; namely, (1) Austrian Poland, (2) Prussian Poland, (3) the
Lithuanian territories incorporated in the Russian Empire, (4) the autonomous
Congress
Kingdom,
ruled by the Emperor as King, and (5) the Republic of Cracow.
The
Final Act of the Congress of Vienna stipulated that the Poles, in the
territories ceded to Prussia and Austria, should receive “a representation and
national institutions.” It guaranteed also the freedom of trade, of navigation,
and of intercommunication across the frontiers within the boundaries of the
Poland
of 1772.
These
provisions show that the Congress of Vienna had in mind, not merely the
division of Polish territory among the Powers, but made
L’raga
RUS
Lcmuurg
Bohemia
Tarnopoi
POLAND
IN
1815.
Congress
Kingdom (to Russia.) fM/M Western Provinces of
Russia.
Duchy
of Posen.
Illllllhlll'llll
Prussian Poland.
Igggggfl
Republic of Cracow.
WEST
THE
REVOLUTION OF 1830 253 an attempt to offer at least a partial solution of the
Polish problem by removing some of the chief grievances of the Polish people.
The
results of these arrangements were, however, far from satisfactory. It was in
Russia, where the ruler had a real and personal interest in Polish freedom,
that the hopes of the Poles were naturally centered. The Constitution granted
by the Emperor was a good one. It provided a Parliament of two houses, to meet
every two years; the lower House was elective, and the franchise was the most
liberal in Europe; the executive was vested in a Polish Council of State,
headed by a viceroy acting for the king; the ministers were responsible. Polish
was to be the official language, and all government officials were to be Poles.
Freedom of religion, freedom from arbitrary arrest, and liberty of the press
were guaranteed. This Constitution seemed to promise the development of a real
and healthy national life.
The
great difficulty was that all Russia was opposed to it. The Emperor was perhaps
the only man in the country thoroughly in favor of it. The Grand Duke
Constantine, the Emperor’s brother, in charge of the Polish army during the
period of provisional government, simply ignored the Constitution altogether,
pursuing his own autocratic way as though it did not exist. The Russian
Imperial Commissioner, Nicholas Novosiltsoff,
appointed to watch over Russian interests, was also wholly opposed to the
Constitution, and constantly usurped authority himself, as well as encouraged
and incited the Grand Duke in his course. Novosiltsoff,
indeed, was the evil genius of the Poles, hated by them as perhaps few men have
been. Clever, astute, and thoroughly informed, he concealed under an outward
profession of the most liberal opinions and enlightened aims the
characteristics of the most arbitrary and evil of Russian bureaucrats. As one
of the early friends of Alexander I, a confidant and, supposedly, a sharer of
his liberal views, Novosiltsoff had great influence
with him, and was probably one of those largely responsible for the fact that
after 1818 the Emperor began gradually but surely to abandon his liberal
ideas.
Though
ideally interested in liberalism, Alexander was temperamentally an autocrat,
and never really understood or liked constitutional government. He regarded
parliamentary opposition to his wishes as ingratitude, and was profoundly
displeased when government bills designed to destroy the liberty of the press
and the responsibility of ministers were defeated. He was also much concerned
over the bad financial conditions of the Kingdom. There was a large and
increasing deficit, at the same time that the taxes were levied with extreme
vigor and were deeply resented by the people. Novosiltsoff
was continually urging the financial situation as evidence of the incapacity
of the Poles for self-government. On the other hand, the Poles saw and pointed
out that it was the army which was eating up the income, and the Grand Duke
Constantine was constantly increasing both the equipment and the size of the
army without any regard to expense, and quite independently of the
constitutional budget. Added to this was also the fact that the original army,
before the Grand Duke’s additions, had been rather larger than the Kingdom
could well support, but had been accepted on the supposition that the Emperor
was going very shortly to add the Western Provinces to the Kingdom.
In
1821 Prince Xavier Lubecki was appointed Finance
Minister, and quite revolutionized the finances of the Kingdom, putting them in
a very prosperous condition in a very short time. But in order to do this he
had to use unconstitutional means. Lubecki was a
Pole, a constitutionalist and a patriot, and regretted the means he had to
employ, but he thought he saw the very existence of the Kingdom threatened by
her insolvency, and overrode the Constitution in order to save it.
1
he Polish people, however, were profoundly disillusioned by this disregard of
the Constitution by both friend and foe, as well as by the Emperor’s long
delay in creating a Greater Poland. Many of them believed that he was going to
do away with the Constitution altogether, and they began their traditional
secret revolutionary agitation. A secret society, the National Patriotic
Association, was formed in 1819 on the initiative of the Poles in the Prussian
province of Posen, and soon spread throughout Greater Poland, using the
Freemasons’ lodges as centers. In 1822 Novosiltsoff
ferreted out its existence, and got the leaders imprisoned or exiled, but it
was soon reorganized in different form, and flourished, as the Grand Duke
Constantine, who in his own autocratic and barbaric way loved the Poles (he
gave up his claim to the Russian throne in order to marry in 1820 a Polish
lady, Jeannette Grud- zinska,
afterwards Countess Lovicz), refused absolutely to
believe in their treachery, and the Emperor accepted his brother’s faith in
this matter.
Alexander's
death in December, 1825, at least put an end to all uncertainty as to Poland’s
future. The Emperor Nicholas I, who succeeded him, was reactionary and
anti-Western in his whole policy. He disliked constitutions, was entirely
unsympathetic with nationalist aspirations, and only wanted justification for
his conscience to abolish the separate administration of the Kingdom
altogether. The Poles realized this, and from the moment of his accession they
waited only the favorable moment for a revolution. The success of the revolutions
in France and Belgium gave them courage; they believed that France would help
them, and were goaded to fury by the report that the Polish army was to be
obliged to act with the Russians against Belgium and France. The result was
that at the end of November, 1830, a military insurrection broke out, in
which, to the surprise and grief of Constantine, practically all his beloved
army turned against him. Hated by the Poles, and hated scarcely less by the
Russians, who believed his blind faith in the Poles was responsible for the
whole affair, the unhappy man succumbed without resistance or regret to the
cholera in June, 1831. Meanwhile the Poles had their army (and thanks to Constantine
it was a good one) to use in the struggle against Russia. Their only hope lay
in striking at once, striking hard, and winning thereby assistance from
France, for only through outside aid was ultimate success against Russia
possible.
But
as always in Poland, divided counsels made united and prompt action impossible.
There were two parties in Poland at this time. The “Reds,” or “Patriots,”
members of the secret Patriotic Association mentioned above, were strongly
democratic and radical in their ideas of government, as well as strongly nationalist.
All the lesser nobles, or szlachta, as well as the
townspeople, belonged to this party, and they commanded a majority in the
Council of State. This majority had accepted the overthrow of the Constitution
of 1815, had constituted themselves a provisional revolutionary government,
and were in favor of fighting. They had with them the majority of the Diet, and
probably of the country. The historian Lelewel and
Count Wladislaus Ostrowski were the leaders of this
party.
The
“Whites,” on the other hand, though as strongly nationalist as the Reds, were
conservative and aristocratic in their ideas, and though they represented the
minority, had yet among their number all the leading personalities, including
Prince Adam Czartoryski, the head of the Council, and
General Joseph Chlopicki, the head of the army. This
party wanted compromise with Russia, realizing the hopelessness of a struggle
against her, on the one hand, and seeing no future for Poland except through
the Russian connection. They overthrew the provisional government of the Reds,
and set up General Chlopicki as Dictator, who at once
opened negotiations with Russia for a compromise. As a matter of fact,
however, no compromise was possible, since Whites as well as Reds stood firmly
by their demands of complete amnesty, maintenance of the Constitution, and
the reunion of Podolia, Volhynia, and the Ukraine
with the Kingdom. And the Emperor on his side would accept nothing but
unconditional surrender. Upon learning this, the Poles declared war in January,
1831. They were joined by the Poles in Russia’s Western Provinces, and though
they were no match for the might of Russia, yet their skill, bravery, and
enthusiasm kept the Russians busy for eight months, and convinced the Emperor
that the Poles were a dangerous people.
By
September, 1831, the Kingdom was unconditionally in the Emperor’s hands, and
in February, 1832, he issued an “ Organic Statute ” on the government of
Poland, to replace the Constitution. By this, Poland was declared an integral
part of the Russian Empire, and was to be governed by a Council of State appointed
by the Emperor.
Thousands
of Polish soldiers escaped to France, Prussia, and Austria, and became centers
of agitation for Polish liberty. As a concession to France and England, whose
governments were supporting the cause of the Poles very vigorously by all
peaceful means, the Emperor allowed Poland to keep its separate administration,
its own judiciary, its guaranty of freedom from arbitrary arrest, and a somewhat
limited freedom of opinion and of religion, as well as its old system of local
government.
The
Emperor, however, managed to make all these concessions nugatory in fact by
establishing at Petersburg the new Department of Affairs of the Czardom of Poland, with Paskievich
as its head. The real government of Poland was in the hands of this department.
Five of its members were Poles, Prince Lubecki among
them, but its influential members were Russians, and hostile to Poland, —as,
for example, Novosiltsoff, — and the Polish members
were regarded as traitors by their countrymen.
In
1833 risings in various parts of Poland led to the abandonment of all pretense
of government by the Organic Statute, though it remained nominally in force
until 1847, when it was abolished by imperial ukase.
CHAPTER
VIII
THE
REVOLUTION OF 1863
Since 1831 the Congress Kingdom has been
an integral part of the Russian Empire. Its territories form the ten
governments of the Vistula, and are ruled, as are the rest of the Russian
governments or provinces, by a governor appointed by the Emperor, and the
policy of Russia toward them has depended, first, on the general policy of the
ruling Emperor toward all his peoples, and secondly, on the degree of
revolutionary activity going on, or known to be going on, in Poland.
Russian
emperors in modem times have been of two general types — the followers of Peter
the Great, who wished to westernize Russia, to bring her in contact with the
life, thought, and institutions of western Europe, and to obliterate as far as
possible the differences, social and economic as well as political, that have
kept her since the thirteenth century a nation apart. The other party, the Old
Russian Party, has taken the position that Russia is, by her geographical
position and by her inherent characteristics, not a Western but an Eastern
Power; that she is essentially different from and in many ways superior to
western Europe, and that her true lines of development lie in quite other
directions. Russia should look within herself, and find there, in her own
traditions and in her own characteristic institutions, the ideals and principles
of her development. All else is imitation and superficial, and can never result
in a wholesome national life. By the early nineteenth century the Old Russian
idea had taken a slightly different form. The Old Russians had discovered that all
the essentially Russian characteristics were Slav characteristics, and
differentiated all Slavs equally with Russians from Western European and
non-Slav peoples. The Old Russian idea then became the Slavophil or Pan-Slav
idea — the preservation and development of a Slav civilization, which they
conceived could practically be carried out only by bringing all the Slav
peoples together in a strongly centralized, autocratic, Orthodox Empire, ruled
by the Russian Emperor. A Slavophil became thus practically a Russophil policy.
Liberals
of the type of the Emperor Alexander I, who had believed in decentralization,
and whose idea of the Russian Empire was a federation of autonomous states
organized along national lines, could encourage nationalist aspirations in
Poland with impunity. But the Emperor Nicholas I was a Slavophil, and between
1830 and 1840 the greater number of Russian intellectuals sympathized with this
view. The Slavophils could welcome the Poles to a
Pan-Slav state only after they had renounced their nationalism, and regarded
the Polish nationalist Revolution of 1831 as treachery to the Pan-Slav cause.
By
1840, however, the rigidly repressive government of the Emperor Nicholas had
alienated every type of liberal from his government, and had produced a new
type of Pan- Slavist, who saw that the Pan-Slav ideal
was not at all incompatible in its essentials with liberty and national
autonomy, and from this time on, the Russian liberals were generally
sympathetic and desirous of friendship with Poland.
Under
the Emperor Nicholas, however, there was no opportunity to carry out these
friendly ideas. He pursued undeviatingly and unflinchingly the impossible task
of destroying the very memory of Poland and of making good Russians out of the
Poles. He closed the great Polish universities of Wilna
and Warsaw, so that Poles would be obliged to send their sons to Russian
institutions, where the Polish language was never heard, the study of Polish
history was forbidden, and Polish youth were trained for the Russian service.
The youth of the lower classes were drafted into the Russian army in such
numbers that Poland was shorn of young men. In trade and commerce, also, the
attempt was made thoroughly to Russianize the country; the prohibitive Russian
tariff practically closed all Poland’s old markets to her, and contact with
foreigners was discouraged by a passport system which allowed practically no
one to leave the country. The press was absolutely under government supervision,
and a secret police filled the prisons with all who showed any opposition to
the system. All sorts of restrictions were put upon visitors to Poland, making
it difficult and uncomfortable for them to stay there. In short, Poland was
made to feel almost every hour of every day the grinding tyranny of Russian
rule.
But
it was all in vain. The heavier the oppression and the greater the indignities,
the hotter burned the flame of Polish patriotism. From the very moment the
Revolution of 1830 was over, the Poles began preparing by secret underground
intrigues for a new revolution.
These
intrigues were carried on, not only in the Kingdom but also in Posen, and
especially in the Western Provinces, where the landed proprietors, forming only
about ten per cent of the population, were Polish, and the rest of the
population Russians, Letts, or Jews. These landed proprietors made it
advantageous for their peasants to learn the Polish language, taught them
Polish history, influenced them against Russia, and finally taught them to
regard themselves as Poles, and in many cases to accept the Roman Catholic
religion of Poland. The Polish clergy were very active in both political and
religious propaganda, with the result that in 1855, when the Emperor Nicholas
died, the Western Provinces were far more Polish than they had been in 1830.
The
death of the Emperor Nicholas was a great relief to all his oppressed subjects,
especially to the Poles. His successor, the Emperor Alexander II, was a
liberal, and introduced liberal methods at once into the government of all
parts of his empire. He visited Poland shortly after his accession, and on this
occasion took the first steps toward establishing cordial relations between
himself and his Polish subjects. The suspension of recruiting, the pardon of
prisoners held for political offenses, an amnesty granted, with very few
exceptions, to all political exiles, by which all emigrant Poles of the Western
Province as well as of the Kingdom were allowed to return and were restored to
their civil rights, and the restoration of the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of
the Church, were the reforms that brought the greatest relief to the Poles.
Fully as important, however, was the appointment of a commission to make recommendations
as to the best way of dealing with the question of the peasants and the land,
and the formation with government permission, by certain landed proprietors, of
an Agricultural Society for the Kingdom.
The
relaxation of the oppressive tariff and passport systems opened the way for a
revival of trade and industry, which was almost immediately taken advantage
of, and in a very short time poverty and despair were giving way to prosperity
and hope.
Although
the Emperor had explicitly said that “for the good of Poland and for the good
of the Poles themselves, it is necessary that your country should remain ever
united to that of the great family of the Emperor of Russia,” and although he
had made no changes in government looking at all definitely toward autonomy,
yet many thoughtful and intelligent men believed that, by the development of
her economic resources and by the education of her people, Poland in a few
years might become so powerful and so important to Russia that political
concessions might be won from the Emperor, of far more permanence and value
than could be expected from a revolution.
Unfortunately
they formed but a small minority in the Kingdom. The majority were still in
favor of a revolution for independence, but were divided, as in 1830, as to the
methods of revolution and the character of the constitution which was to
follow success.
In
i860 as in 1830, the Whites desired more careful preparation and the assurance
of European assistance before they revolted, and favored an aristocratic
constitution, with powers practically confined to the great landed
proprietors, while the Reds stood for immediate action and an extremely
democratic form of government. The revolutionary element in each group was
greatly strengthened by the political exiles who flocked back to Warsaw as a
result of the amnesty. The majority of these exiles were Whites, though some of
them, the younger men chiefly, by contact in Paris or other places of their
exile with the great democratic movement going on all over Europe, hadbecome democratic, and were violently opposed to
revolution under aristocratic leadership. With Louis Mieroslawsjd
at their head they formed out of the various democratic elements in the Kingdom
a strong party, which at once began a campaign of “unarmed agitation,” whose
object was to arouse popular feeling against the Russians by constant appeals
to the Polish national spirit, and thus prepare for open, united revolution.
For this purpose they celebrated with great ostentation the anniversaries of
Polish national heroes, especially those most obviously connected with complete
Polish independence. The Polish national hymn was constantly sung in the
churches; Russians were ostracized socially, and attempts were constantly made
to put Russian officials in the wrong, to goad them to violence, and then point
to it as characteristic Russian conduct.
Of
this campaign of intrigue and underground revolutionary activity the
Agricultural Society soon became the center. Formed under the special sanction
of the Emperor himself, for the purpose of enlisting the best talent of the
country in the very vital task of improving the agricultural conditions in the
Kingdom, counting among its members the most illustrious and most enlightened
men in the country, it was the one place where all parties came together in a
common interest, and the Party of Action resolved to use it for its own ends.
The
majority of the original three or four hundred members were conservatives, most
of them Whites, but many of them, like the President, Count Andrew Zamoyski, were opposed to political opposition to Russia,
and relied on economic and social progress to regenerate their country, and few
of them, probably, favored the transformation of their society into a
political organ. In spite of this fact, however, the Society by 1861 had a
membership of four thousand drawn from Galicia, Posen, and the Western
Provinces as well as from the Kingdom and was so identified with disaffection
that the Government at Petersburg ordered its dissolution. Just before this
took place, however, the Society, knowing that its days were numbered, resolved
to mark its passing by issuing a plan for the settlement of the land question
extremely liberal to the peasants. As has been shown in previous chapters, the
condition of the peasants and their relations with the landed proprietors was
one of the great evils in Old Poland, and conditions had altered little by
i860.
Napoleon,
by the law of 1807, had indeed made the serfs personally free, but they had
received no land along with their freedom, and were therefore still in an
economic bondage to their old masters, in some respects worse than the old
slavery. The Polish peasant, therefore, had no love for his proprietor, and no
interest in joining a revolution to give him more power. On the contrary, he
saw in Russian rule his sole ray of hope. Alexander II had already freed the
Russian serfs, and his Government was at that very moment at work on a similar
plan for Poland — which the peasants knew full well. Yet the fact remained that
the success of the projected revolution depended upon peasant support, and the
great question for the upper class was how to get it. They knew it could be won
only through concessions regarding the land, and they resolved to offer through
the Agricultural Society a plan for peasant ownership, far more liberal than
anything to be expected from the Russian Government, and to offer it first. In
a word, they meant to outbid the Government for peasant allegiance.
The
plan did not succeed. The peasants understood the motives of the “reformers,”
distrusted their good faith, and remained loyal to the Russian Government.
The
policy of the Emperor Alexander toward the Poles during these years was lenient
and considerate in the extreme. He continued his policy of gradually
liberalizing the Polish Government, in spite of the hostile attitude shown in
the unarmed agitation. In March of 1861 the Council of State for Poland,
abolished by the Emperor Nicholas in 1841, was reestablished ; all the
remnants of military rule in Poland were abolished, and the whole country came
under civil administration. The most important branches of the Polish
administration were made quite distinct from the Russian,— as for instance,
the Post-Office, Public Works, and Highways, — and with very few exceptions all
civil officials were Poles. By 1863 there were scarcely a dozen Russians in
official positions in the whole Kingdom. Local selfgovernment
also was introduced, and a national system of education started, the
development of which, together with all educational matters, was put into the
hands of the revived Polish Commission on Education and Religion, abolished in
1839. These concessions were not only very important in themselves, but full of
hope for the future, as showing the direction in which the Emperor’s policy was
moving.
Perhaps
it was natural, however, that these measures should seem of little importance
to the majority of Poles. A profound hatred and distrust of Russia, bred of the
long and bitter tyranny of Nicholas I, made it difficult for them to see
anything but weakness and self-interest in Russian reforms. The experience of
the Congress Kingdom had convinced them that a Russian might grant, but would
never observe, a constitution, and that what one emperor gave the next would
take away. But even had they been able to get more or less liberal institutions
from Russia, and some reasonable guaranty of their permanence, it would not
have satisfied them. They wanted nothing less than complete independence from a
detested foreign government, and the reunion of all the territories of their
ancient state.
Under
such conditions a revolt against Russia was inevitable sooner or later, as even
the Poles most opposed to such a revolt recognized. All they could hope to do
was to put it off until such time as the people were better prepared for it
materially, and more united in their ideas as to what should follow it.
The
Marquis Wielpolski was one of those who held the view
noted above, and as Chief Minister of the Grand Duke Constantine, who was made
Governor of Poland in 1862, had the opportunity to be of great service to his
country, and save her from a fatal mistake, by uniting all the moderates in a
party of opposition to immediate revolution. Unfortunately, however, he was
not only unable but unwilling to form a party or to cooperate with any one. Haughty and self-sufficient, he stood alone, disliked
and distrusted by all. Keenly intelligent as well as deeply patriotic, he had
come to believe that an independent Poland was an impossibility, and he saw
in union with Russia, the other great Slav state of the North, her best chance
of strength and freedom in the future. But he was no statesman; he understood
ideas better than men. He failed to see that his policy needed friends and
could not succeed by being forced upon the Poles arbitrarily; and in 1863, in
attempting to prevent immediate revolution, he himself committed the very act
which precipitated it.
The
law in force in Poland from 1815 to 1859 put the selection of military recruits
in the hands of the police, with the result that recruiting had been the
method by which the Government got rid of politically inconvenient subjects. In
1859 a new law had been passed, abolishing this method of choice and substituting
the fairer and more usual choice by lot. Since the passage of the law, however,
no conscription had been necessary, and the new law had thus never been used.
In 1862 the army needed renewal, and a conscription was ordered. The Marquis Wielpolski resolved to ignore the new law, and use the old
system which, by drafting into the Russian army all the youth of the
Revolutionary party, would destroy its power. To prevent agitation the lists
were kept secret, and the conscripts were seized by the police at dead of
night, and hurried away to the frontiers without warning. Three days later the
whole country was in revolution.
But
the Poles had no independent organization as in 1830, no army, and no money.
They could carry on guerrilla warfare only, and were bound in time to be
crushed by Russia’s superior numbers and organization. Their early successes
were due to the fact that Russia had not expected the revolt — Wielpolski had assured the Emperor that nothing would
happen —and the Russian troops were scattered. Their only real hope was in
outside aid, which did not come. France and England protested, indeed, but were
unwilling actively to intervene. Russia, seeing that they did not mean to act,
and supported by Prussia, who regarded the crushing of the Poles as a matter
of vital importance to her, put down the rebellion with a strong hand. In this
policy the Emperor had the support of a unanimous public opinion, Russians of
all parties being deeply stirred by events in Poland, especially by the
rejection on the part of the Revolutionary Central Committee of the Emperor’s
offer of amnesty (March 31, 1863), when the Polish cause was clearly hopeless,
and by a manifesto from this same Revolutionary Government, in which they
declared that they would be satisfied with nothing less than the conquest of
the Western Provinces from Russia and the cession to them of Galicia and Posen
by Austria and Prussia.
There
is no doubt at all that the Revolution of 1863 was a colossal mistake, and that
its failure was followed by the most unfortunate consequences for the Poles.
But deplorable as failure was, success might have been more deplorable still.
Nothing but anarchy could have resulted from the success of a people fundamentally
divided. Reds and Whites were hopelessly at odds in their ideas of a
government for Poland. The Reds would never have accepted a Czartoryski, for example, as king, while the magnates and
great proprietors would never have consented to be governed by a constitution
dictated by the Reds and based on democratic principles; and the peasants held
aloof from both parties, knowing the democrats too little to trust them, and
the nobles far too well.
Meanwhile
in Austrian and Prussian Poland and the little Republic of Cracow, conditions
since 1815 had been almost equally discouraging. The provisions of the Final
Act of the Congress of Vienna remained practically a dead letter. The Powers
were not interested in carrying them out, and the Poles were so divided that
they were nowhere strong enough to make effective protest.
The
Republic of Cracow received, indeed, a constitution, guaranteed by Austria,
Russia, and Prussia, according to which the government was carried on by a
Senate of twelve members, and a Representative Assembly, meeting each year to
consider legislation. Three permanent Residents, representing the three
guaranteeing Powers, had “supervision” over the Government. These Residents
became very soon the real governing power, and when, after 1835, Cracow became
the center of secret societies and revolutionary agitation, the Residents, by
mutual agreement, suspended the Constitution and governed directly until 1846.
In that year, after an unsuccessful attempt at independence, Cracow was annexed
to Austria.
In
the Grand Duchy of Posen, between 1815 and 1830, a sincere attempt was made to
conciliate the Poles. The Grand Duchy was, indeed, incorporated in the
Kingdom of Prussia, but the Polish nationality and the Polish language were
given official recognition, and the administrative officials were either Poles
or were chosen for their Polish sympathies. A Diet was established in 1822,
with the privilege of laying grievances before the king. From the economic
point of view the administration between 1815 and 1840 resulted in nothing but
good. The serfs were freed and made into peasant proprietors; roads were built,
better methods of agriculture encouraged, industries introduced, and all with
true Prussian thoroughness and efficiency. The peasants, among whom there was
almost no Polish national feeling, accepted these reforms gladly, and were
fairly contented with their Prussian rulers; but the Polish nobles and the
Roman Catholic clergy were irreconcilable from the first. They were in constant’and close communication with the revolutionists in
Austrian and Russian Poland, and twelve thousand of
them crossed the border into the Congress Kingdom and took part in the
Revolution of 1830. It was this fact that decided the Prussian Government to change
its policy to one of severe repression and Germanization, which continued for
ten years. Under Frederick William IV, who came to the throne in 1840, it was
somewhat relaxed, with the result that political agitation at once began, and
prepared the country to take part in the Revolution of 1845. In that year,
under the leadership of Mieroslawski, the head of the
Polish revolutionaries in Paris, a National Government was set up in Cracow,
which called upon all Poles everywhere to rise. The arrest and imprisonment of Mieroslawski in Posen prevented the participation of the
Grand Duchy in the rising, and kept the country quiet until 1848. That year was
marked by successful popular risings all over Europe.
In
Berlin the liberal populace rose, demanding the constitution promised them in
1815, but never granted. The King, alarmed at the prospect of civil war, and
believing apparently that the insurgents were far stronger than they really
were, granted everything asked of him, including a general amnesty for all
political prisoners.
In
Posen a national committee, headed by Mieroslawski,
who was released from prison by the amnesty, set up a Polish provisional government
for the Grand Duchy, and demanded from the King an autonomous administration.
Here also the King yielded, but the Prussian troops in Posen and the German
inhabitants refused to accept the King’s concessions, and in an orgy of cruelty
that offended even the German officials, they quickly reduced the country to
submission.
From
1848 to 1863 the Government in Posen was conservative and arbitrary, but not
particularly severe. The sympathies of the Prussian liberals were with the
Poles, and the Poles were represented in the Prussian parliament, where they
aired their grievances and through publicity maintained a measure of good
government for their country. The revolutionary propaganda was constantly
carried on in Posen as in the Congress Kingdom, and along very much the same
lines. There was constant communication between the revolutionists of both
countries, and Posen made all her preparations to take part in the Revolution
of 1863. But Bismarck, now at the head of the Prussian Government, had no
intention of allowing this to take place, and a wall of troops along the frontier
kept Posen out of it, while Russia and Prussia reduced the Congress Kingdom to
submission.
In
Galicia, between 1816 and i860, conditions were little better. While there is
no such thing as an Austrian nation or race, — the Austrian state being made up
of many nationalities, the majority of them Slav, and the Germans forming a
minority, and a lessening minority, of the population, — yet the dynasty is
German, and until 1866 the German minority was the dominating influence. The
Austrian ruler also was head of the Germanic Confederation, and as such was the
official leader of Germany. Austria, therefore, regarded herself as a German
state, and carried on a policy of Germanization toward the Poles that, until
1848 certainly, was quite as rigorous as that of Prussia.
The
Polish rising of 1846 was suppressed with special severity in Galicia, the
Austrian Government inciting the Ruthenian serfs to rise against their Polish
landlords, and race-war with all its horrors was thus made the weapon with
which Polish nationalism was beaten. In 1848 Austria freed the serfs, and gave
them their land free of all redemption dues, a reform which they regarded as a
reward for their services in 1846, and which resulted in binding them closely to
Austria.
After
1848 Prussia became Austria’s serious rival for German leadership, and by i860
the conflict which was to decide between them was imminent. Austria was forced
to recognize the possibility of her defeat in this struggle, and to meet the
new situation she inaugurated a new policy in her empire; namely, the
neutralization of German influence by the development of the Slavs.
Germanization stopped, and each Slav nation was allowed a certain measure of
self-government, and was left free to develop along its own lines, within the
limits of imperial unity.
As
trouble with Russia over the Balkan situation loomed large on the Austrian
horizon, the support of the Poles of Galicia was of special importance, and
accordingly a constitution was granted to the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria in February, 1861, which contained more liberal
concessions than were granted to any other people.
With
the tacit consent of the Austrian Government, Galicia became the headquarters
of the Polish revolt against Russia in 1863. In 1864 the Revolutionary National
Government at Warsaw tried, most foolishly and with total misunderstanding of
the situation, to stir up a revolt in Galicia. As a result, the Constitution
was withdrawn for a year, and the country put under martial law, with its
attendant severities; but even so, Galicia suffered far less than the other
Polish territories from the revolution, and was in a much better position,
both economically and as regards its political relations, than either of the
others, when peace was restored.
CHAPTER
IX
POLAND
SINCE 1863
1. Prussian Poland
For eight hundred years the Germans have
been fighting the Slavs on their eastern border and colonizing their conquered
lands; the Mark of Brandenburg came into existence for this purpose, the
Knights of the Sword and the Teutonic Order carried on the struggle for nearly
five hundred years, and when the Brandenburg Hohenzollems
succeeded to the Duchy of Prussia they simply inherited the age-old task of maintaining
and extending German influence on the Vistula. The method of carrying out this
task has been the same throughout the centuries. The “peaceful penetration” of
German traders and of subsidized German settlers has prepared the way for
conquest and after conquest the steady pressure of a German administration and
continued colonization have made the Slav territories one after another completely
German. The Kingdom of Prussia, which grew out of the union of the Duchy with
the Brandenburg Electorate, became great and powerful by the Prussianization of
conquered peoples, chiefly Slavs, and the partitions of Poland formed only one
step, though it was a long step, in this process. Expansion at the expense of
the Slavs is thus a basal fact in Prussian history, the fact to which she owes
her greatness and, hence, her leadership in modem Germany. Under Prussian
leadership this policy of “Drang nach
Osten” has become an imperial policy and one with
which the future as well as the past existence of the Empire is very closely
bound up.
It
was a disappointment to Prussia that the Warsaw region, the region of the
Middle Vistula, which was hers by the partition of 1795, but was lost during
the Napoleonic wars, was not restored to her in 1815. Her control of this part
of the great Polish waterway would not only be an important economic advantage,
but would give her a strategic frontier. In Russian hands this region forms a
great salient into Prussian territory. An autonomous Poland under Russian rule
would carry forces friendly to Russia into the heart of Germany, and would
inevitably in time result in the amalgamation of much if not all of Prussian
Poland with this autonomous state. Friendship between Russia and Poland would
thus be fatal to German policy, and for this reason the Prussian Government
has been the steady and consistent opponent of Polish freedom, both in Russia
and at home. In Russia she has used all her diplomatic skill to keep up bad
feeling between Russians and Poles, and at home she has adopted a policy of
ruthless and systematic Germanization. The necessity for this policy is found
in the fact that the Germans as a race are not very tenacious of their
nationalism. They succumb rather easily to alien civilizations with which they
come in contact and among the Poles were gradually becoming Polonized; or if
not they were boycotted and ostracized by their Polish neighbors until they
were forced to leave, and were replaced by Poles. The result of this process
was that the Poles were gradually bringing under Polish influence, not only the
land of their old Kingdom, but also regions hitherto wholly German, and the
purpose of the Government was to counteract this development and restore German
control.
For
the first few years after 1863 the absorption of Prussia in the events leading
to empire in 1870 necessitated leaving the Poles much to themselves, but
shortly after 1871 the Polish policy began to stiffen under Bismarck, who
believed that Polish nationalism was "successfully undermining the
foundations of the Prussian state.” The use of the Polish language was
forbidden; towns and streets received German names; letters and telegrams,
addressed in Polish to Polish places, were not delivered; very few Poles were
retained in public office, and those few were obliged to Germanize their names;
officers and employees of the state were forbidden to live in houses owned by
Poles, and in the schools even religion was taught in the German language.
But
though it was enforced with much rigor for fifteen years, this policy did not
achieve its purpose. The great economic and especially the great industrial
forces which had transformed Russian Poland 1 had also been at work
here, but the transformation had been more rapid as a result of effective and
intelligent government assistance. Here as there by 1885 a new Polish middle
class and an industrial proletariat had come into existence and had become
enthusiastic supporters of Polish nationalism, which, thus reinforced, had
become a far more serious danger than the old nationalism of the Polish
nobility. Everywhere the Germans continued to lose to the increasing numbers,
wealth, and intelligence of the Poles.
The
best evidence of this is that in 1885 and 1886 it was thought necessary to
introduce more drastic measures.
In
1885 thirty thousand Slav immigrants were expelled from the Polish provinces,
and in 1886 the famous Colonization Commission (Anseidelungs
Kommission) was founded. The Commission bought out,
with funds supplied by the Government, the Polish nobles who were willing to
sell their land, and the land thus acquired was sold only to Germans, and only
on condition that it was not to be resold to Poles. At first the Poles were very
ready to sell, but after they saw the results and realized the purpose of the
law, they not only kept what land they had, but formed societies to buy up all
the land on the market and sell it to Poles, and thus prevent the Commission
from getting hold of it. Poles also, who sold to the Commission, were regarded
as traitors to their nation, with the result that the Commission found it difficult
to get land while competition forced the price up to a prohibitive figure.
The
failure of its policy only drove the Government to still more drastic methods.
In 1904 a law was passed forbidding the erection of buildings in Poland without
the permission of the Commission. Only when the Polish proprietor agreed to
dispose of his land to Germans was permission to build given him, with the
result that the Poles could rarely sell their land to Poles, as few people want
to buy land on which they cannot build. The final step in this process was
taken when in 1908 the Polish Expropriation or Dispossession Act was passed,
for the compulsory purchase of what land the Commission wanted.
And
how did the Poles meet this last and most hostile of all attacks on their
national existence? They simply settled on the nearest Polish estate, or they
went to the cities, where they swelled the numbers of that great industrial
class which was steadily forcing the Germans out of all the small business
positions. In both cases they have become more ardently anti-Prussian than
ever. The boycott, complete separation, and the ostracism of the Germans and
of all things German have been their only means of opposition; but their use,
pursued relentlessly and unitedly by the Poles, though resulting in
persecution, has united all classes as they were never united before and has
also beaten the Germans. Economically the Commission has improved the country
enormously. It has broken up large estates, reclaimed waste land, built model
villages, and established a prosperous German peasantry which presents a sharp
contrast to the estates of the poor Polish peasant, with no government behind
him. But these poor Polish peasants are holding their own, and learning all the
time from their German enemies. Not only are they more prolific than the
Germans, but they never lose their nationality; whereas, as has been said
above, the German is rather easily denationalized. In spite of the efforts of
the Government to keep them apart, he often marries a Polish wife and comes
under the powerful influence of the Catholic priesthood. If he does not completely
succumb to the influences surrounding him, at any rate his children do. They
are Catholics and Poles from birth. In self-defense they Polonize their name,
and make a point of forgetting that they have any German blood.
Prince
von Bulow, Imperial Chancellor from 1900 to 1908, in his recent book 1
claims that the Government’s policy is only incidentally and negatively
anti-Polish. “The aim of Prussian policy in the Eastern Marches has always
been to reconcile subjects of Polish nationality to the Prussian state and the
German nation. Nothing is further from the aims of our policy . . . than a fight against the Poles; its object isto protect, maintain, and strengthen the German
nationality among the Poles. Consequently it is a fight for German
nationalism.” Whatever the motive, the result is pretty clearly a war of
extermination, as the Prince admits when he says: “In the struggle between nationalities
one nation is the hammer and the other the anvil. One is the victor and the
other the vanquished.” He admits also that up to date (1914) the policy has
failed, but he believes that steady pressure unflinchingly applied for many
years will ultimately attain their end.
And
after ultimate success what? The Poles in Posen as well as in the Kingdom have
long believed that the object of Germany’s “protectorate” in Turkey and her
close and dominating alliance with Austria is expansion into the east of
Europe, where, in the empires of Turkey and Russia, vast stretches of undeveloped
country, sparsely populated by backward peoples, offer a great field for
economic enterprise as well as for the spread of that German “culture” which
Germany regards it as her mission to carry to the uttermost parts of the earth.
Dmowski states the situation very well when he says,
“Just as it was the fall of Poland that gave Prussia special importance in
Europe and made possible her leadership in modern Germany, so the renascence of
Poland as a political factor would mean an end to the domination of Prussia in
the German Empire.” 1 Prussia understands this perfectly and it
makes any compromise between herself and her Poles impossible.
The
significance of the struggle is also perfectly understood by the Poles. They
are the outposts, planted right in the enemy’s country, of the great army of
all Slavdom lined up to battle for its existence against the advancing might of
Germanism. But by the very fact of their position they can only retard, not definitely
check, the German advance. That must be the task of the lines farther back in
Russian Poland, where the real strength of the Slav cause, if strength it has,
must be found.
2.
Russian Poland
Immediately
the Revolution of 1863 was crushed, the Russian Government put into operation
in Poland the plan of agrarian reform which it had been about to introduce when
the revolution broke out. The new law gave the peasants entire personal freedom,
nearly half of the arable land of the nobility in freehold, and the right to
continue to use the forests and the pastures of their former masters; on the
other hand, they were expressly freed from any and all obligation to cultivate
the lands remaining in the possession of the nobility. The punishment of the
nobility for rebellion was one purpose of the new law, but its chief object
was to perpetuate the old antagonism between nobles and peasants (whom the
Russians feared common misfortune might bring together), and attach the
peasants permanently to Russia.
A
new system of local administration introduced at the same time put the
management of all village affairs into the hands of a village assembly composed
exclusively of peasants, even the szlachta, many of
whom were economically of the peasant class, being excluded together with the
magnates and the clergy. In the district, which was composed of a group of
villages, the governing body was an elected council on which all landowners
were represented. Here the peasants sat side by side and shared power with
their former owners. The object of these arrangements was to keep the peasant
independent and protect him from the strongly anti-Russian influence of the Polish
nobility and the Roman Catholic priesthood.
But
the Polish peasant was not able to use the independence thus offered him.
Accustomed to being led, and deprived of his traditional leaders, the nobles
and the clergy, he turned almost inevitably to the representatives of the
central government in his district, and very soon, in spite of a law expressly
forbidding it, these representatives were in full control of the peasant
communes or villages, and with the tacit consent of the central authorities
were carrying out a drastic and oppressive policy of Russification.
The
Polish revolution had marked a crisis in the policy of the Emperor Alexander
II. He had been for some time under strong reactionary influences, and,
discouraged by the failure of many of his liberal plans, he was, even before
1863, quite undecided about carrying them further. The revolution precipitated
his decision and a reactionary policy slowly but surely made itself felt
throughout his Empire. In Poland it meant that the policy of Russification
proceeded apace. The use of the Polish language in any public place was
absolutely forbidden; in business, church, and school only Russian was
permitted; newspapers could be printed, religious instruction could be given,
only in Russian; and only those persons especially authorized by the Russian
central authorities could teach in the schools.
Alexander
II was assassinated in 1881, and his son Alexander III who succeeded him was a
far more throughgoing reactionary than his father. He was in fact a Slavophil
of the old extreme Russophil type. His ideal was the
reduction of every one in the Empire to one pattern,
Russian in nationality, Orthodox in religion, and in politics wholly and humbly
submissive and obedient to an autocratic emperor. The alien and the Orthodox
were especially the objects of his severity, and in Poland the church and the
school were made the instruments of a Russifying policy so persistent, so
unbending, and so ruthless that it defeated its own ends. On the surface the
policy was a success, but underneath was an intense though silent hatred of
Russia and all her works, which was easily made the basis for a Polish national
revival. The sympathies of intelligent Russians were wholly with the Poles during
this period; the better class of Russian bureaucrat refused to serve in Poland,
and the governors-general themselves saw the evil and folly of such extreme
measures and advised a milder policy, but without avail. Contrary to liberal
hopes the accession of Nicholas II in 1894 made no change in policy. It was not
until the Revolution of 1904, which followed the defeats of Russia in the
Japanese war, wrung reluctant concessions everywhere from a powerless
Government that the situation in Poland improved.
In
the Western Provinces, where only the upper class and a small proportion of the
peasants were Polish and the mass of the population either Lithuanian, White
Russian, or Little Russian, the attempt was made, not only to stamp out all
traces of revolution, but to stamp out the Polish people themselves. Whole Polish
villages were burned and the inhabitants sent to Siberia; lands and fortunes of
Polish nobles were confiscated, Catholic churches were closed, as were also all
Polish theaters, and the Polish language, either written or spoken, was
forbidden in all public places. With the object also of replacing Poles by
Russians as rapidly as possible the Government in 1865 limited very strictly
the amount of land that could be purchased in this region by persons of Polish
origin. The local authorities in carrying out the law made religion the test of
nationality, and Catholic peasants, whatever their parentage, found it
extremely difficult, when it was not impossible, to get the land they needed
and were financially well able to buy.
As
the Western Provinces were fundamentally Russian and had been merely
superficially Polonized during the few centuries of Polish rule, and
particularly as many of the inhabitants were Orthodox in religion, the
Russification policy was largely successful in this region. The task was more
difficult where the people were Lithuanian by race and Catholic by religion,
or where, as in certain places, Poles formed the majority of the population.
But even there, at least superficially, the policy succeeded, and no one
passing through the country would have thought of its being Polish.
The
Little Russians of the southeast were most of them Uniates, that is, Catholic
in creed and government, but Orthodox in rite. The Government of Nicholas I
abolished the Uniate Church in the Western Provinces and forced the Uniates of
Lithuania and the Ukraine into the Orthodox Church. Persecution of the most
cruel and persistent sort, however, failed to “convert” many, who remained
secretly Catholic and became more strongly Polish than ever. In classifying individuals
any one whose ancestors had been Uniate was classed by the Russian Government
as Orthodox, even though the family had since become entirely Roman Catholic.
Such persons were counted among those “converted” to Orthodoxy!
But
in spite of repression and persecution a new and better Poland came into
existence in the fifty years following the Revolution of 1863. Such progress
was made in economic and social directions that the old Poland of 1863, then as
in 1772 a backward, undeveloped country of nobles, priests, and serfs, gave
place to a thickly populated, industrially prosperous, thoroughly modern and
democratic country. The land legislation of 1864, which broke up the great
estates, was the beginning of peasant prosperity, and the measures of Alexander
III, who did much in all parts of his Empire to encourage and make possible
progress in agriculture and industry, helped them further. The peasants made
money, saved it, and were able to buy more land even at the high prices at
which the nobles held it, so that when the present war broke out in 1914
considerably more than half the land was held by small peasant or szlachta proprietors. The population of the Kingdom more
than doubled between 1863 and 1914 and a large proportion of the increase went
to the towns, where it formed, with the Jews, a great industrial proletariat.
Young Poles of the upper class also, barred from public life after 1863, turned
to business with all their energies, and have played a leading part in the
great commercial and industrial development that has gone on all over the
Russian Empire during the last half-century. There was thus formed in Poland a
native middle class, prosperous, intelligent, and progressive, destined to be
a factor of enormous importance in the Poland of the future.
These
two classes feel very differently about Russia from the older generation of
Poles, on account of the fact that industrial Poland finds her chief market in
Russia and is therefore economically dependent upon her. The industrial
classes in Poland have therefore long since ceased to favor an independent
Polish state, as independence would inevitably mean a hostile high tariff in
Russian markets which would be their ruin.
There
are other reasons, also, why the old ideal of their fathers, of an independent
Polish state as the only adequate expression of Polish nationalism, has failed
to commend itself to great numbers of modern Poles. First of all is its utter
impracticability. The Poles of 1830 and 1863 were theorists and dreamers. Divided,
undisciplined, and unprepared, they flung their feeble armies against the might
of Russia with sublime patriotism and selfsacrifice,
it is true, but with a blind disregard of facts and possibilities. The Poles of
the twentieth century are modem business men accustomed to direct dealing with
hard facts and priding themselves on clear thinking. They have come to see that
not only is revolution against Russia practically impossible, but that it is
also inadvisable. They are no less patriotic than their fathers, and no less
tenacious of their nationalism, but they recognize that under twentieth-century
conditions the only way to preserve their nationalism is to “rest it against
the great Slav Empire of Russia”; in other words, to create a free, autonomous
Poland within the Russian Empire and supported by Russian friendship.
This
idea is not a new one in Poland. As has been shown in previous chapters there
has been ever since 1815 a small group of practical politicians whose idea was
to cooperate with Russia as the only possible way of securing that minimum of
local autonomy essential to any national development. Francis Lubecki and the Marquis Wielpolski
were notable representatives of this type of thought, but like others of the
same type they were always unpopular, partly, perhaps, because in a nation of
theorists and dreamers they were hard-headed workers for practical results, and
were willing to use whatever means came to hand to obtain their ends; partly
also because they were aristocrats and as such not trusted by the masses of
the people. After 1863 this group, under the name of the Party of Conciliation,
made attempts in all three divisions of Poland to carry out its policy, but
without any success except in Galicia where the circumstances were particularly
favorable to it. In Russian Poland it was not until new leaders with thoroughly
democratic ideals had taken up the policy, and until a radical change in the European
situation of both Russia and Poland had taken place, that the thought of the
country turned in this direction. In 1902 the National Democratic Polish Party,
having fought both Socialists and Conciliators and spent nearly twenty years in
educational work, openly proclaimed that the fundamental idea of the
Conciliators, the autonomy of Poland based on Russian friendship, was the goal
for which it was working. To understand this change some knowledge of the
intellectual history of these years is necessary.
The
new generation growing up after 1863 was dominated by the resolve to know the
facts about themselves and their past. They studied and analyzed the history of
the old Poland which their fathers had glorified and idealized, and they found,
in her own institutions and traditions, the cause of that bitter class-hatred
and disunion which had caused her fall. They saw that it was serfdom, Jesuit
intolerance, and aristocratic privilege that had ruined Poland, and they set
themselves the task of building up a new, united Poland on the solid
foundations of civil equality, free thought, and democratic principles of
government. In 1886 the Polish League (known after 1895 as the National League)
was formed to teach this new democratic nationalism to the peasants, since the
first and most necessary part of the new task was to win over the peasants whom
the habits of centuries of serfdom had kept entirely aloof from public life. By
teaching them their own history and literature the League tried to awaken their
national feeling, to make them realize that they too were Poles, that Poland’s
interests were their interests, and thus make them intelligent and patriotic supporters
of the new nationalism. From 1886 to 1896 the League worked, from necessity, as
a secret society and under many difficulties, but it had the support and
cooperation of many of the country nobility and the policy of the Russian
Government had predisposed the peasants to any anti-Russian propaganda. By 1897
it was so well supported that it abandoned its secrecy and came out publicly as
the National Democratic Polish Party, under the leadership of M. Ramon Dmowski, who almost since its foundation had directed its
work.
From
1897 to 1904 the party waged an unresting campaign
against the repressive policy of the Government. The peasant communes were the
centers, the peasants the most active supporters of the party, and during these
years it became abundantly clear that the age-old gulf between nobles and
peasants was being bridged. By the end of 1903 the party had in its ranks most
of the gentry and middle class, practically all the peasants, and a large
section of the working men, and when in the elections to the first Russian Duma
the party captured all the seats assigned to both the Kingdom and the Annexed
Provinces, it could justly claim to represent the views of the majority of
Poles.
During
these critical years of Poland’s internal regeneration a great change in the
European situation of both Poland and Russia had come about as a result of the
establishment of the German Empire in 1870. Before 1870 the Poles, like other
Europeans, had regarded the menace of Russian aggression on the west as the
greatest danger to western Europe. An independent Poland would have a very real
European importance as a barrier against such aggression, and it was on this
fact that the Poles based their hopes of European assistance in their revolutions.
After 1870, however, the danger of German pressure toward the east became a far
greater danger than Russian pressure toward the west and one which Poland
shared with Russia and the whole Slav world. By the end of the nineteenth
century Russia was the only Slav state which was not keenly alive to the danger
for Slavdom in the growth of the German influence in the east of Europe. The
Slavs saw in the close union of Austria and Germany a far more dangerous enemy
to their cause than their old traditional enemy Turkey, because of the far
greater intelligence and efficiency of the new foe. The union of all Slavs
against advancing Germanism they felt to be their first and greatest duty. In
this battle against Germanism the Poles form the first line of defense. Not
only is their country the most western of all Slav lands and thus geographically
directly in contact with Germany, making their conquest the first step in
German advance, but their civilization, also, is the only one that has
withstood the eastward march of Germanism. To make it strong still to withstand
and ultimately to conquer became the great aim of Polish nationalism, the goal
toward which the Poles regard it as their mission to Europe and to Slavdom, to
struggle with all the forces of their being.
But
to struggle effectively, they need to develop themselves both economically and.
politically to the highest possible point, and for this they need autonomy in
government and, at the same time, Russian friendship. The Russian attempts at
government in Poland have never met the most primary economic and social needs
of the people. They have, on the contrary, brought about an internal condition
little short of social anarchy, thus exposing the country to economic conquest
by Germany, which is her first step toward political conquest. The desire of
the Poles for autonomy is thus prompted, not merely by national pride, but by
the imperative necessity for good government, and government on the lines of
least resistance, which will set free the maximum of national energy for other
purposes. To forget the wrongs and injustice suffered at the hands of Russia in
the past and to make peace with her on the basis which will best serve their
common interests — that is, autonomy within the Empire — seemed to the National
Democrats the course dictated by the most practical statesmanship as well as
by the highest patriotism, and since 1902 it is for this reconciliation that
they have worked.
Up
to 1914 their efforts to get the Russian Government to see their point of view
had been wholly unavailing. Berlin had seen to that. German diplomacy has
worked unceasingly to keep up the enmity between Russia and her Poles and thus
prevent their combination against her; and as Russia has never had either a
constructive Polish policy or even any clear thought on Polish affairs, Germany
has been successful. Russian Liberals, indeed, favored the autonomy of Poland,
realizing that Germany alone benefited by the policy of Russification, but
they were themselves in opposition to the Government and could exert no influence.
Another group of Russians who warmly approved the objects of the National Democratic
Party were the “Neo-Slavs,” who were Pan-Slavists of
a new type. Their idea was decentralization in government, local autonomy for
all the various nationalities in the Empire, and their federation on the same
general lines as the British Empire. But they also had no government influence,
and it was not until the defeats of Russia in the Japanese War led to revolts
at home which resulted in the calling of the first Russian Duma, that these
parties of opposition had a chance to express themselves.
With
the opening of the first Duma the Polish question entered a new phase. The
Ukrainian question had by that time reached a somewhat critical stage and was a
potent influence, perhaps the decisive influence, in drawing together into
close coOperation the Polish group or “Club” in the
Duma and the Russian National Democrats or “Cadet Party.” The Ukrainian
question as a question of European importance originated in Austria and its
understanding necessitates a consideration of the history of Austrian Poland
since 1863.
3.
Austrian Poland
While
Prussia and Russia were carrying out a policy which meant practically a
constant state of war between the governments and their Polish subjects, the
Austrian Poles were not only on terms of peace and friendship with the Austrian
Government, but for many years acted as the very pillars of the monarchy. .
After 1863 the Poles in Galicia, like those in Posen and the Kingdom,
definitely gave up the idea of independence as their national programme, accepted the hard fact of political division
and alien rule, and turned their energies to preserving and strengthening
their unity as a nation and their national culture under the three monarchies.
The Polish national movement thus became a cultural, social, and economic
movement, not a political one. Freed thus from fear of a Polish insurrection,
and having no nationalism to maintain at all costs as had Germany and Russia,
the Austrian Government could afford to make friends with its Poles, and there
were a number of reasons why their friendship was advantageous.
In
1866 Austria was defeated in the war brought about by Prussia to decide the
question, long contested between them, of the leadership of Germany. Prussia’s
victory meant Austria’s exclusion from the new Germany of 1870 and the end, for
the time being anyway, of her distinctively German policy. She was obliged to
consider the possibility of making her Slav subjects the prop of her Empire.
But Austria’s Slav peoples were, with the single exception of the Poles, all
more or less under the influence of the Pan-Slav idea with Russia as their
leader. They were also agitating for a reorganization of the Empire on a
federal basis which would give freedom to each nationality to develop along its
own lines. The Austrian Government feared and opposed both these movements and
found in the Poles much the same feelings, and consequently, a readiness to
support the Government — but always at the price of concessions to them,. The
Pan-Slavism of this period was the early Pan-Russian form of the movement,
bound up with autocracy and Orthodoxy, to which the Poles were always opposed,
because it meant giving up their nationalism and their Catholicism, which they
could never do, and also because it meant the recognition of Russia as the
chief of Slav peoples which the Poles believed themselves to be. Their
objection to the federal system of government was that, if they accepted it and
became a part of it, they would be bound to the Habsburg monarchy by a bond
which it would be difficult to break and which would, therefore, prevent their
ultimate political union with the rest of their nation — that union whose
realization sometime, somehow, is, and has always been, the deep, often hidden,
but abiding hope of every Pole.
They
chose, therefore, to remain a people apart and to support the Government and
the centralized system in opposition to a form of government which, under
happier circumstances and different leadership, they would have delighted to
champion.- But they asked large rewards for their support. When in 1867 the new
constitution or Ausgleich establishing the so-called
Dual Monarchy of Austria- Hungary came into existence, the Poles consented to
support it only in return for very important concessions; a special minister
for Galicia in the new Government, a separate board of education for Galicia, a
greatly extended use of Polish in the schools and its exclusive use in all
branches of the administration. 1
In
the Reichsrath, the lower legislative house of the
new Government, the Poles had 57 votes, which made them often the controlling
factor in giving the Government a majority, and like the Irish under similar
conditions, they bought their freedom with their votes, supporting the
Government only in return for concessions, which, in the course of a few years,
amounted to practically complete administrative autonomy. By 1873 this process
was about complete, and since that date the Poles have had the administration
of Galicia in their hands and have been able to govern it in their own
interests. It has meant a great increase in Polish national feeling, a revival
of Polish culture, and a considerable economic advance, especially in West
Galicia.
All
this has been, however, almost exclusively for the upper governing class,
though the Polish peasantry in West Galicia have shared slightly in its
benefits. In East Galicia the condition of the peasantry has remained deplorable,
and even in West Galicia there has been no such economic reform as has transformed
peasant conditions in Prussian and Russian Poland. The peasants were indeed
emancipated from serfdom and given their land after the Revolution of 1848, but
they remained uneducated and economically backward, their trade was hampered by
artificial restrictions, their towns were small and poor, and the Jews, just as
in Old Poland, formed the middle class. The chief reason for the difference
between the two parts of the country and for the poverty and backwardness of
East Galicia was the difference in race between the peasants and the governing
class. East Galicia, the old principality of Halisch,belongs
racially with the Russian Ukraine. Its people are Ruthenians or Little
Russians, or, as they prefer to be called, Ukrainians, and are a part of that
great people who with Kiev as their capital were Russia from the tenth to the
fourteenth century. Most of them are Uniate by religion (a minority are Orthodox)
and have a distinct race-consciousness which during the past seventy-five years
has expressed itself in a strong national movement for the preservation of
their language and the development of their national culture. The Poles, who
form only twenty-four per cent of the population, are the large landowners and
the governing class, and, with the Roman Catholic clergy, have systematically
oppressed the Ukrainians, forcing upon them the use of the Polish language, the
Polish culture, and the Roman Catholic religion. Of this aristocratic minority
the Little Russian nobles form an indistinguishable part. They were completely
Polonized soon after the Polish conquest of Galicia and have been almost
entirely unaffected by the modern Ukrainian national movement, which is thus
of necessity essentially a peasant and working man’s movement. It has
identified itself with Socialism and other forms of radicalism, but has never
lost its distinctively national characteristics. That the Polish nobles hated
and opposed these radical ideas as much as she did herself was one of the chief
reasons why Austria was willing to turn the government of Galicia over to the
Poles and was willing to pay for their support in the Reichsrath,
where the Liberal German majority often seriously hampered the autocratic
policies of the Government, as, for example, when they unitedly opposed the
annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908.
On
the other hand, opposition to Ukrainian nationalism has been one of the few
matters regarding which Poles and Russians were agreed. The Russian Government,
in pursuance of its traditional Pan-Russian policy, has always refused to
recognize its thirty million Little Russians as a separate race: “There never
has been and never will be a Ukrainian language or nationality” a Russian
minister of state declared in 1863, and Russia has labored as steadily to
Russianize the Ukrainians in the Russian Ukraine as the Poles have to Polonize
them in Galicia.
But
in spite of all these efforts the Ukrainian national movement has continued to
grow, and in the last twenty-five years has become a factor of importance in
European diplomacy. Bismarck saw the possibilities of the movement as a means
of opposition to Russia, and when he succeeded in drawing Austria away from
Russia and into alliance with Germany he got her to change her policy and to
take measures to conciliate her Ukrainian subjects. A Ukrainian University at
Lemberg, Ukrainian schools in East Galicia where the Ukrainian language was
used and Ukrainian nationalism openly cultivated, as well as increasing
toleration for the Ukrainian (Uniate) Church, were Austria’s somewhat
half-hearted concessions to this new policy, while politically she was holding
out hopes of an autonomous Ukrainian state within the Austrian Empire after the
defeat of Russia by Austria and Germany should have made possible the inclusion
of the Russian Ukraine in such a fetate. Austria thus
tried to use Ukrainian nationalism in her own interests just as she had so
successfully used Polish nationalism. Her success was sufficient distinctly to
alarm the Poles. By 1891 there was a Ukrainian group in the Reichsrath, and in the elections of 1895 to the Galician
Diet Ukrainophil deputies only were elected in all
the electoral districts (curia) where Ruthenians predominated. This meant that
many of the so-called “Old Ruthenes,” who were
Orthodox in religion and inclined to cherish the Russian connection formed by
their racial and religious unity with her, were won over to the national
movement. Meanwhile, in southern Russia Germany was secretly but effectively
helping on the Ukrainian movement, and during the early years of the twentieth
century, as the Austro-German union grew closer and closer, Austro-German
encouragement of Ukrainian aspirations became increasingly alarming, not only
to the Poles, but to many Russians as well, and disposed them to consider
reconciliation with the Poles more seriously than ever before.
This
was the situation when the first Russian Duma came together in 1906 and
explains why the Russian Cadet Party was ready to meet the Polish National
Democrats halfway, particularly as the latter were ready to abandon the policy
of Polonizing the Ukrainians of Galicia and to let Russia absorb them, regarding
this as preferable to the establishment of a Ukrainian state under
Austro-German protection, which seemed to be the alternative. The Archduke
Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne, was generally regarded as a
strong supporter of Ukrainian autonomy, and it was believed by the Poles that
the German Emperor had promised the crown of the projected Ukrainian state to
the children of the Archduke’s morganatic marriage with the Duchess of
Hohenberg.
The
Poles of Galicia quite naturally regarded these developments with extreme
concern. In spite of her efforts to reassure them, a profound suspicion of
Austria’s good faith in the Ukrainian matter opened a breach between them that
widened rapidly as the Austro-German alliance tightened, and Austria’s
subservience to Germany awakened the gravest fears in regard to her future
policy toward the Poles themselves. The result was that some years before the
present war broke out the alliance of half a century between Austria and her
Polish subjects was at an end. A large number of them had definitely turned
against her. When the assassination of the Archduke occurred in June, 1914,
they as well as other Poles regarded it with rejoicing as removing one of the
most determined enemies of their nationalism, and when war followed the
assassination they were ready to throw in their lot with Russia, seeing in her
their only hope, even if not a very bright hope, of Slav freedom.
CHAPTER
X
THE
POLES AND THE WAR
The years 1905 to 1914 were years of
great importance in the rapprochement of Russia and the Poles. In the First
Russian Duma the Polish National Democrats carried all the seats assigned to
the Kingdom as well as twenty assigned to the Annexed Provinces. In the Second
Duma practically the same thing happened in the Kingdom, but in the Annexed
Provinces government pressure during the elections reduced the Polish
representatives to twelve. But as they formed a solid unit acting always in
harmony with the Polish Club from the Kingdom, the Poles still had forty-six
votes and complete solidarity. It resulted from these conditions that in both
Dumas the National Democrats were able to bring before the public of Russia and
Poland, in a way never possible before, both their ideals and their accomplishments.
Their
policy in both Dumas was the same: to form a group apart, a strictly national
group, cooperating with other groups on the basis of common interests, but
never identifying themselves with any and acting always in the interests of
Polish autonomy and nationalism. In the First Duma, aside from putting in a
claim to autonomy when they first took their seats, the Poles did not
aggressively champion their cause. In the Second Duma the Government, having
got control of the revolution, was ready to resume its reactionary policy and
put itself on record as opposed to the recognition of alien nationalities. This
obliged the Poles to come forward with their programme
of an entirely national regime. They also demanded the immediate introduction
of the Polish language into all the Polish schools. Just at this time the Prime
Minister Stolypin had a government programme before
the Duma which the Duma either had to pass in its essentials or be dissolved.
They knew.it and were divided on the matter into two nearly equal parts, so
nearly equal that the votes of the Polish group would decide the question. The
most important parts of the government programme were
an increase in the army and the approval of the budget. The Poles voted for the
Government in regard to the army, to show, as they said, that they were ready
to do their duty by the Government, but they expected national recognition in
return. They also used the occasion to say that they wished to see Russia with
an army strong enough to enable her to play an independent part in foreign
affairs, which meant that the Poles were opposed to Russia’s acceptance of
German dictation in regard to Russian policies.
On
the question of the budget the Poles declared that they regarded the budget as
the expression of a system of government opposed to their national interests.
But recognizing that it could not be immediately changed, they agreed to vote
the budget on condition that the Government would show its good intentions by
making a public statement in the Duma in favor of the use of Polish in the
schools. Stolypin, however, refused to compromise with the Poles even in order
to get his bills through, but instead dissolved the Duma and ordered a new
election. In the new, the Third, Duma, the Polish representation was reduced to
a third of its former size and thus made too small to play a decisive part.
This blow, heavy as it was, was not without its advantages for the Polish
cause. It brought the logic, intelligence, and practical efficiency of the
Polish programme into sharp contrast with the entire
absence of any constructive Polish policy on the part of the Russian
Government, and considerably increased the respect felt for Polish aims and
methods among Russian Liberals.
By
this time also the Pan-Slavists were keenly alive to
the dangers for the Slav cause resulting from the close union between Austria
and Germany, and also to the great service a Russo-Polish understanding would
do to that cause, and a series of Pan-Slav Congresses held during 1908 had for
their object the creation of such a union. At the Congress held at Petersburg
early in the year M. Charles Kramarz, the Bohemian
leader of the Pan-Slav movement, stated that the most important question of the
moment was the reconciliation of Russia and Poland that they might unite in the
All-SIav struggle against Germanism. The Polish representatives
replied to this by the statement that they considered themselves at a
turning-point in their history. After many centuries of struggle against
peoples to the east of them — Tartars, Turks, and Russians — they now saw
Poland’s destiny to be to return to the earliest of all her tasks, the struggle
against Germanism. In this struggle the Poles regarded all Slavs as their
allies and placed themselves at the service of the great Slav cause.
In
the second Slav Congress, which met later in the same year at Prague, all the
Slav nations except the Ukrainians were represented and the new Slav movement
was put on foot. At this congress the Russian Neo-Slav Party and the Polish
National Democrats united in common opposition to the Ukrainian movement and
took up with zeal the persecution of these unfortunate people. This persecution
took the form of a religious missionary movement. Russia sought, with Polish
sanction, to “convert” the Ukrainian Uniates to Orthodoxy and to bring the
“Old Ruthenes” who were Orthodox but Ukrainophil to the support of Russian political domination.
Austria and Germany meanwhile supported the Uniate Church and dangled before
the eyes of the Ukrainians the hope of autonomy and freedom.
Up
to the outbreak of the Great War in August, 1914, the Russian Government remained
firm in its traditional policy of refusing to recognize any nationality but
Russian as existing within the Empire. When the war actually came, however, the
Government made a prompt decision to win Polish support and on August 14, 1914,
the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian arms, issued the
following proclamation: —
Poles!
The hour has struck in which the sacred dream of your fathers and forefathers
may find fulfillment. A century and a half ago the living flesh of Poland was
torn asunder, but her soul did not die. She lived in hope that there would come
an hour for the resurrection of the Polish Nation and for sisterly
reconciliation with Russia. The Russian Army now brings you the joyful tidings
of this reconciliation. May the boundaries be annulled which cut the Polish
Nation to pieces! May that nation reunite into one body under the scepter of
the Russian Emperor. Under this scepter Poland shall be reborn, free in faith,
in language, in self-government. One thing only Russia expects of you: equal
consideration for the rights of those nationalities to which history has linked
you. With open heart, with hand fraternally outstretched, Russia steps forward
to meet you. She believes that the Sword has not rusted which, at Grtinewald, struck down the enemy. From the shores of the
Pacific to the North Seas, the Russian armies are on the march. The dawn of a
new life is breaking for you. May there shine, resplendent above that dawn,
the sign of the Cross, symbol of the Passion and Resurrection of Nations!
(Signed)
Commander-in-chief General Adjutant, Nicholas.
In
Russian Poland the proclamation met with an immediate and enthusiastic
response. The Polish Club in the Duma had already at the outbreak of the war
taken part in that most remarkable demonstration of loyalty, unique in Russian
history, when all parties hitherto irreconcilable pledged their support to the
Government. The Club used the occasion of the proclamation, however, again to
attest its loyalty and to express its confidence in the Government’s good
faith. On the day following the proclamation also the representatives of the
four most important political parties met in Warsaw and issued the following
statement: —
The
representatives of the undersigned political parties assembled in Warsaw on 16
August, 1914, welcome the proclamation issued to the Poles by His Imperial
Highness the Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Forces as an act of the foremost
historical importance, and implicitly believe that upon the termination of the
war the promises uttered in that proclamation will be formally fulfilled, and
that the dreams of their fathers and forefathers will be realized, that
Poland’s flesh, torn asunder a century and a half ago, will once again be made
whole, that the frontiers severing the Polish Nation will vanish.
The
blood of Poland’s sons shed in united combat against the Germans will serve
equally as a sacrifice offered upon the altar of her Resurrection.
(Signed)
The Democratic National Party. The Polish
Progressive Party. The Realist Party.
The Polish Progressive Union.
But
there were many Poles who took no part in this rallying to Russia and who, on
the contrary, opposed it bitterly. It is not an easy matter for a people to
forget a long history of tyranny, oppression, and humiliation such as the Poles
have suffered at the hands of Russia, and it is not remarkable that there were
many in the Kingdom and many more in Galicia who could not bring themselves to
support her. Almost all the Socialists and the members of other radical
political organizations not countenanced by the Russian Government, who had
suffered under the heavy hand of the Russian police, belonged to this group, as
did also many Jews. A large number of the Jews of Poland were unwilling to call
themselves Poles, but desired the recognition of their existence as a separate
national as well as religious group. The National Democrats had opposed such
recognition just as strenuously as they had opposed Ukrainian nationalism, and
their antiSemitic attitude, as well as the
traditional anti-Semitic attitude of the Russian Government, had inclined the
Jews to support Austria. Many Poles also still clung to the idea of an
immediate independent Polish state and believed that their only chance of
getting it lay in supporting Austria, the only power who since 1830 had given
any official recognition to Polish nationalism.
During
the Balkan wars the Independence groups both in Galicia and in the Kingdom,
seeing that the greater war was coming, prepared for it. Old organizations for
military, training, some of them in existence, secretly if not openly, since
1876, took on new life, and new ones for the same purpose came into being.
Their object was the creation of a Polish military organization quite separate
and distinct from those of any of the ruling governments. Such an organization,
wherever it fought, would remind the world of Poland’s existence as a nation
and prepare the way for its official recognition after the war. The plans had
been matured and the officers trained in Galicia, but the leaders counted on
getting the greater part of their recruits from Russian Poland, where the
slowness of mobilization and the lack of efficiency in the system made it far
easier to escape mobilization orders than in either Austria or Prussia. As soon
as war was declared, therefore, a “Secret National Government” was formed in
Warsaw, where on August 3, 1914, notices were posted calling on the Polish
nation to rise against Russia and join the revolutionary army coming from
Galicia. On August 5,. the first section of this “ army ” left Cracow and under
the leadership of Joseph Pilsudzki, a Russian
subject, crossed the border into Kielce, where, in the interval between the
strategic retreat of the Russian armies to their first prepared lines and the
arrival of the armies of Austria-Hungary, the independence of Poland was
proclaimed and publicly celebrated. The Polish volunteers who had escaped
Russian mobilization were organized into a “Polish Legion” which joined the
armies of the Central Powers and took part in their first advance on Warsaw.
I In Galicia, where all the political parties were
in touch with the “Secret National Government” in Warsaw, the influence of
these events, together with the proclamation of the Austrian Government
promising, with German cooperation, to restore “Liberty and Independence” to
Poland, seemed to have destroyed all the Russophil
tendencies so obvious before the war. Germany made no official promises, but it
was freely stated, and generally believed in Galicia that the Kaiser had
unofficially promised a restored Poland under a Habsburg prince, possibly the
Archduke Charles Stephen, whose two daughters are both married to Poles
connected with the old Polish royal house of Jagiello
— one to Prince Jerome Radziwill and the other to
Prince Alexander Olgierd Czartoryski.
For a time these influences seemed decisive and it looked as if the Galician
Poles would side solidly with Austria. On August 16, the day following the
Grand Duke’s proclamation, all the Polish groups in the Galician Diet and in
the Austrian Reichsrath held a conference, where they
passed a unanimous resolution to support Austria and appointed a “Supreme
National Committee” -to raise legions, to succeed the “Secret National Government”
of Warsaw as the representative of the cause of Polish independence, and to
form after the war the “nucleus of the Polish State.”
In
spite of this unanimity the East Galician section of the committee was from the
first suspected of treachery by the Ukrainians because of the presence among
its members of several men who before the war had been distinctly and
conspicuously pro-Russian. Their suspicions were justified when after the
Russian occupation of Lemberg the East Galician legion disbanded and was found
never to have taken the oath of allegiance to Austria, and East Galicia
proclaimed itself, through its PanPolish newspapers,
in full sympathy with the Russian occupation. Perhaps its “treachery” was the
only method by which any Polish organization could get into existence to fight
anywhere.
Having
thus thrown in their lot with Russia, the vital question then was whether
Russia would keep faith and grant the liberty she had promised. For a time it
looked very doubtful. There was no change in the old autocratic methods of
government in Russian Poland and the new Russian governor of Galicia inaugurated
a Russifying policy which caused intense disappointment and led to vigorous
protest both in the press and in the Duma. To Russia's credit be it said the
situation improved very much in a short time. The bureaucrats in control of the
administrative machinery were entirely opposed to the new policy, and with
powerful influences behind them refused to make any change until they were sure
of both the determination of the Government and the good faith of the Poles.
But they were obliged finally to give way, and even those who had criticized
most freely admitted later that Russia was doing all that could be expected
under very difficult circumstances.
On
the other side Austria had rewarded the services of her Polish legions by
officially recognizing them as combatants in a note to the neutral Powers in
October, 1914. But the terrible sufferings of the Poles during the German
invasion and occupation — sufferings perhaps greater than anything this most
terrible of wars has caused elsewhere, even in crucified Belgium — roused all
the old Polish antagonism to Germany and increased it a thousand fold, while
the dominance of Germany over Austria has convinced even those most friendly to
Austria that nothing more can be expected from her.
Meanwhile
the wholesale destruction of the Poles during the repeated invasions and
retreats of the contending armies across their country has raised the very
grave question whether there will be a Polish nation or the materials for a
Polish state after the war. The American representative of the Trans-Atlantic
Food Fund claims that most of the Poles under six and over sixty years of age
have died during the war. As the majority probably of those who survive are
living in concentration camps, with insufficient food and under other bad
hygienic conditions, it is almost inevitable that a large proportion of them
also will die.
If
any considerable number of the Polish people are still alive when the end of
the war finally comes and a congress meets to arrange the terms of peace, it
seems almost certain that national freedom will reward their sufferings and
crown the hopes of many centuries. But just what territories will go to form
the new state the congress alone can decide. It is quite improbable, however,
that much more than the Kingdom of 1815 will be included. Undoubtedly there
are Poles not a few who dream of a revival of the old Polish Empire including
Lithuania, Little Russia, White Russia, and West if not East Prussia, but no
such revival is within the realm of practical possibilities, nor indeed would
it be anything but a disadvantage to the Poles themselves. The argument of
nationalism which gives Poland herself her chief claim to freedom is entirely
against it, and the argument from history is a weak one. The union between the
old Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania with its Russian
provinces was never so close or so wholehearted as its creators desired or its
official terms made it appear, and its duration was too brief to make any
change in the national sentiments of the great masses of the population. From
the practical point of view, also, the revival of a Polish Empire, even if it
excluded East and West Prussia, would yet, even before the war, have meant the
inclusion of a dangerously large non-Polish population with all its attendant
religious complications. Since the war has decimated the Polish population, the
chances of Polish nationalism holding its own in the midst of so large an alien
population, even granting the latter’s inevitable depletion by the war, would
be slight and the chances of ultimate German control greatly enhanced. Neither
the Poles nor the Allies can afford to take the risk.
The
creation of an independent Polish state seems also at present a somewhat remote
possibility. Even if such a state were limited to the boundaries of the
Kingdom of 1815, where the Poles formed before the war the vast majority of the
population, it is doubtful if it would be a success. The division of the Poles
between Russia and Austria in the present war is the result, not of the accident
of government merely or chiefly, but of radical differences of feeling and of
policy among the Polish people. It shows that the internal divisions so characteristic
of Old Poland in a measure still exist and will exist for some time in the
future. Splendid as her progress has been, Poland is not yet sufficiently
regenerated to be an independent state. Her best chance of a safe future lies
within the Russian Empire. That the Russian bureaucracy, German in origin, in
tradition, and containing a large German element in its personnel, the last
stronghold of Germanism in Russia, will not outlast the present war, is the
opinion of all well-informed observers of Russian conditions. A liberal,
middle-class influence is almost certain to follow the war, and under such a
regime Poland will be secure in her autonomy and able to educate and prepare
herself for a possible independence in a brighter future.
THE
END