READING HALL |
BLESSED BE THE PEACEFUL BECAUSE THEY WILL BE CALLED SONS OF GOD |
THE HISTORY OF POLANDCHAPTER I.THE EARLIEST YEARS OF POLAND, TILL 1382 d.
Amidst the incessant influx of the Asiatic nations into Europe, during the slow
decline of the Roman Empire and the migrations occasioned by their arrival, we
should vainly attempt to trace the descent of the Poles. Whether they are
derived from the Sarmatians, who, though likewise of Asiatic origin, were
located on both sides of the Vistula long before the irruptions of the kindred
barbarians, or from some horde of the latter, or, a still more probable
hypothesis, from an amalgamation of the natives and newcomers, must forever
remain doubtful. All that we can know with certainty is that they formed part
of the great Slavonic family which stretched from the Baltic to the Adriatic,
and from the Elbe to the mouth of the Dnieper (ancient Borysthenes).
As vainly should we endeavour, from historic
testimony alone, to ascertain the origin of this generic term “slav,” and the universality of its application. Conjecture
may tell us that, as some of the more powerful tribes adopted it to denote
their success in arms (its signification is glorious), other tribes, conceiving
that their bravery entitled them to the same enviable appellation, assumed it
likewise. It might thus become the common denomination of the old and new
inhabitants, of the victors and the vanquished; the more readily as most of the
tribes comprehended under it well knew that the same cradle had once contained
them.
Other people, indeed, as the Huns or the Avars, subsequently
arrived from more remote regions of Asia, and in the places where they forcibly
settled introduced a considerable modification of customs and of language;
hence the diversity in both among the Slavonic nations—a diversity which has
induced some writers to deny the identity of their common origin. But as, in
the silence of history, affinity of language will best explain the kindred of
nations, and will best assist us to trace their migrations, no fact can be more
indisputable than that most of the tribes included in the generic term “slavi” were derived from the same common source, however
various the respective periods of their arrival, and whatever changes were in
consequence produced by struggles with the nations, by intestine wars, and by
the irruption of other hordes dissimilar in maimers and in speech. Between the
Pole and the Russian is this kindred relation striking; and though it is
fainter among the Hungarians from their incorporation with the followers of
Attila, and among the Bohemians from their long intercourse with the Teutonic
nations, it is yet easily discernible.
The Lithuanians, though their history is so closely connected
with that of the Muscovites and Poles, are not originally Slavonic, a fact
sufficiently clear from their language. By some they have been deemed of
Gothic, by others of Alanic descent. Many Gothic
words, indeed, are to be found in their language, but more Latin and Greek; the
basis, however, is none of the three, but something perhaps resembling the
Finnish.
Of these Slavonic tribes, those which occupied the country
bounded by Prussia and the Carpathian Mountains, by the Bug and the Oder—those
especially who were located on both banks of the Vistula—were the progenitors
of the present Poles. The word Pole is not older than the tenth century, and
seems to have been originally applied not so much to the people as to the
region they inhabited; polska in the Slavonic tongue
signifying a level field or plain.
EARLY RULERS
The Poles as a nation are not of ancient date. Prior to the
ninth century they were split into a multitude of tribes independent of each
other, and governed by their respective chiefs; no general head was known
except in case of invasion, when combination alone could save the country from
the yoke. Like all other people, however, they lay claim to an antiquity sufficiently
respectable; their old-writers assure us that one of the immediate descendants
of Noah colonised this part of ancient Sarmatia. But
the absurdity of the claim was too apparent to be long supported, and less
extravagant historians were satisfied with assigning the period of their
incorporation as a people to Leszck or Lech I, who
reigned, say they, about the middle of the sixth century. As the laws of
evidence became better understood, even this era was modestly abandoned, and
the authentic opening of Polish history was brought down three
centuries—namely, to the accession of Semowit, 860 a.d. Finally,
it was reserved for the Polish writers of our own day to abstract another
century from the national existence, and hail Mieczyslaw I as the true founder
of the monarchy.
But though the severity of historical criticism has rejected
as fabulous, or at least doubtful, the period antecedent to Mieczyslaw I, many
transactions of that period are admitted as credible. Tradition, indeed, is the
only authority for the existence of preceding rulers, but it cannot be wholly
disregarded : its first beams are visible through the darkness of time, and
enable us to perceive that some of those rulers existed, whatever we may think
of the events recorded concerning them. For this reason they may properly
occupy
Of the immediate descendants of Leszek nothing is known. We
are told only that their sceptre was one of iron, and
that the indignant natives at length abolished the ducal authority, and
established that of voivodes, or palatines, whose functions appear to have been
chiefly, if not wholly, military. Experience, however, taught that one tyrant
was preferable to twelve; they accordingly invested with the supreme power one
of the palatines and deposed the rest—one whose virtues and genius rendered
him worthy of the choice. Cracus repressed the
licentious, encouraged the peaceable, established tribunals for the
administration of justice, and triumphed over all his enemies, domestic and
foreign. He founded Cracow, whither he transferred the seat of his government.
His son, Leszek II, ascended the ducal throne by a fratricide: he assassinated
his elder brother in a wood, but he had the address to conceal for a time his
share in that dark deed. But divine justice slumbered not—his crime was
discovered, and he was deposed and banished by his indignant subjects. The
tender affection, however, which they bore to the memory of Cracus induced them to elevate his daughter Wanda to the throne.
This princess was of surprising beauty, of great talents, and
of still greater ambition. Power she deemed too sweet to be divided with
another, and she therefore resolutely refused all offers of marriage. Incensed
at her haughtiness, or in the hope of accomplishing by force what persuasion
had attempted in vain, Rudiger, one of her lovers, who was a German prince,
adopted a novel mode of courtship. At the head of an army he invaded her
dominions. She marched against him. When the two armies met, Rudiger again
besought her to listen to his suit, and thereby spare the effusion of blood.
The maiden was inexorable; she declared that no man should ever share her
throne; that she would never become the slave of a husband, since, whoever he
might be, he would assuredly love her person much less than her power.
Her answer, being spread among the officers of Rudiger,
produced an effect which he little foresaw. Filled with admiration at the
courage of the princess, whom they perceived hurrying from rank to rank in the
act of stimulating her followers to the combat, and convinced that all
opposition to her will would be worse than useless, they surrounded their
chief, and asked him what advantage he hoped to gain from such an expedition. “
If thou shouldst defeat the princess, will she pardon
thee the loss of her troops? If thou art subdued, will she be more disposed to
love thee?” The passion of Rudiger blinded him to the rational remonstrances of
his followers; he persisted in his resolution of fighting; they refused to
advance; in utter despair he laid hands on himself, and turned his dying looks
towards the camp of the Poles. Wanda, we are told, showed no sign of sympathy
at the tragical news, but returned triumphant to Cracow. Her own end was not
less violent. Whether, as is asserted, to escape similar persecution, or, as is
equally probable, from remorse at her own cruelty, having one day sacrificed to
the gods, she threw herself into the waters of the Vistula and there perished.
With this princess expired the race of Cracus.
Again, it is said, the fickle multitude divided the sovereign power, and
subjected themselves to the yoke of twelve palatines. The two periods have
evidently been confounded; either the power never existed, or—an hypothesis,
however, not very probable—as this form of government was common to the
Slavonic tribes, it may have been the only one admitted in Poland prior to the
domination of the Piasts. Anarchy, we are told, was
the immediate effect of this partition of power. The new chiefs were weak,
indolent, and wicked, the tyrants of their subjects and enemies of each other.
In vain did the people groan; their groans were disregarded, and their efforts
to shake off the bondage they had imposed on themselves were rendered abortive
by the power of their rulers, who always exhibited considerable energy when
their privileges were threatened.
The general wretchedness was increased by an invasion of the
Hungarians, who had sprung from the same origin As the Poles, and who were
inclined to profit by the dissensions between the chiefs and people. The palatines,
whose duty it was to defend the country which they oppressed, were too
conscious of their own weakness, and still more of their unpopularity, to risk
an action with the enemy. Nothing but subjugation and ruin appeared to the
dismayed natives, when both were averted by the genius of one man.
Though but a simple soldier, Przemvslaw aspired to the glory of liberating his country. One dark night he adopted an
expedient which had the merit of novelty at least to recommend it, and which
has never since been imitated by any other general. With the branches and barks
of trees he formed images of men with lances, swords, and bucklers; these he
smeared with certain substances proper to reflect the rays of the sun and
render the illusion more striking. He placed these on a hill on the border of a
forest directly opposite to the Hungarian camp. The stratagem succeeded; the
following morning some troops of the enemy were despatched to dislodge the audacious few who appeared to confide in the excellence of
their position. As the assailants approached the plain, the reflection ceased,
and they were surprised to find nothing but fantastic forms of trees. The same
appearance, however, of armed soldiers was discovered at a distance; and it was
universally believed that the Poles had fallen back to occupy a more tenable
post. The Hungarians pursued until, artfully drawn into an ambuscade, they
were enveloped and massacred.
How to insure the destruction of the rest was now the object
of Przemyslaw; it was attained by another stratagem
scarcely less extraordinary. He clothed some of his followers in the garb and armour of the slain Hungarians, and marched them boldly
towards the enemy’s camp, while another body of Poles, by circuitous paths,
hastened towards the same destination. Having thus reached the outposts, the
former suddenly fell on the astonished Pannonians; while the latter, rushing
forwards from another direction, added to the bloody horrors of the scene. In
vain did the invaders attempt a combined defence;
before they could be formed into anything like systematic order they were cut
off almost to a man, notwithstanding individual acts of bravery which called forth the admiration of the assailants.
The victor was rewarded with a sceptre;
the twelve palatines were deposed, and he was thus confirmed in an authority
undivided and absolute. Under the name of Leszek I, which he assumed from
reverence to the celebrated founder of Gnesen, he reigned with equal glory and
happiness. Unfortunately, however, for the natives, he left no children; the
palatines armed, some to enforce the restitution of their alleged rights,
others to seize on the supreme power. But the voice of the country, to which
experience had at length taught a good lesson, declared so loudly against a
partition of sovereignty that the chiefs ceased to pursue a common interest;
each laboured for himself. According to ancient
usage, the people were assembled to fill the vacant throne by their suffrages.
But to choose, where the pretensions of the candidates were, to outward
appearance, nearly balanced, and yet where the consequences of an improper
choice might be forever fatal to liberty, was difficult. Where the risk was so
great, they piously concluded that it was safer to leave the event to the will
of the gods than to human foresight.
A horse-race was decreed, in which the crown was to be the
prize of victory. One of the candidates had recourse to artifice: the course,
which lay along a vast plain on the banks of the Pradnik,
he planted with sharp iron points, and covered them with sand. In the centre, however, he left a space over which he might pass
without danger; but lest he should accidentally diverge from it, he caused his
horse to be shod with iron plates, against which the points would be harmless.
Everything seemed to promise success to his roguish ingenuity, when the secret
was discovered by two young men, as they were one day amusing themselves on the
destined course. One of them was silent through fear, the other through
cunning. On the appointed day the candidates arrived, the race was opened, and
the innumerable spectators waited the result with intense anxiety. The inventor
of the stratagem left all the rest far behind him except the youth last
mentioned, who kept close to his horse’s heels; and who, just as the victor was
about to claim the prize, exposed the unworthy trick to the multitude. The
former was immediately sacrificed to their fury; and the latter, as the reward
of his courageous conduct, notwithstanding the meanness of his birth, was
invested (804) with the ensigns of sovereignty [with the title of Lesko II].
The new duke was humble enough to remember and rational
enough to acknowledge his low extraction. He preserved with religious care the
garments which he had worn in his lowly fortunes, and on which he often gazed
with greater satisfaction than on his regal vestments. His temperance, his love
of justice, his zeal for the good of his people, are favourite themes of the old chroniclers. Leszek III (810) inherited the virtues no less
than the name of his father; for though of his
twenty-one sons one only was legitimate, incontinency would scarcely be
considered a blemish in a pagan and a Slav. After a short but brilliant reign,
ennobled by success in war and wisdom in peace, he divided his dominions among
his sons, subjecting all, however, to the authority of his lawful successor, Popiel I (815). Of this prince little is known beyond his
jealousy of his brothers and his addiction to debauchery. After a base and
ignoble life he was succeeded by his son, Popiel II,
while yet a child.
The fostering care of the uncles, whose fidelity appears to
have been as rare as it was honourable, preserved the
throne to the chief of their house. But the prince showed them no gratitude; he
was, indeed, incapable of such a sentiment; every day he exhibited to his
anxious guardians some new feature of depravity, which, with a commendable
prudence, they endeavoured to conceal from the
nation, in the hope that increasing years would bring reformation. Their pious
exhortations were in vain; he proceeded from bad to worse; he associated with
none but the dissipated—“with drunkards, spendthrifts, and fornicators,” or
with mimics and jesters. To correct one of his vices at least, a wife was
procured for him: the expedient failed; it had even a mischievous effect,
since his consort was avaricious and malignant, and was but too successful in
making him the instrument of her designs. On reaching his majority his passions
burst forth with fury; no woman was safe from his lust, no man from his
revenge. His extortions, his debaucheries, his cruelty at length exhausted the
patience of his people, who resolved to set bounds to his excesses. The
formidable confederacy was headed by his uncles, who sacrificed the ties of
blood to their patriotism or their ambition. To dissolve it, and at the same
time to gratify his revenge, he was stimulated alike by his own malignity and
by the counsels of his wife. He feigned sickness, sent for his uncles, as if to
make his peace with them, and poisoned them in the wine which was produced for
their entertainment. He even carried his wickedness so far as to refuse the
rites of sepulture to his victims.
But, say the chroniclers, divine justice prepared a fit
punishment for this Sardanapalus and Jezebel. From the unburied corpses sprang
a countless multitude of rats, of an enormous size, which immediately filled
the palace and sought out the guilty pair and their two children. In vain were
great numbers destroyed : greater swarms advanced. In vain did the ducal family
enclose themselves within a circle of fire; the boundary was soon passed by the
ferocious animals, which, with unrelenting constancy, aimed at them and them
alone. They fled to another element, which availed them as little. The rats
followed them to a neighbouring lake, plunged into
the water, and fixed their teeth in the sides of the vessel, in which they
would soon have gnawed holes sufficient to let in the water and sink it, had
not Popiel commanded the sailors to land him on an
island near at hand. In vain; his inveterate enemies were on shore as soon as
he. His attendants now recognised the finger of
heaven, and left him to his fate. Accompanied by his wife and children, he now
fled to a neighbouring tower; he ascended the highest
pinnacle: still they followed; neither doors nor bars could resist them. His
two sons were first devoured, then the duchess, then himself, and so completely
that not a bone remained of the four.
With Popiel was extinguished the legitimate
race of royalty; but the sons of the murdered uncles remained, the eldest of
whom, with the aid of his brother, aspired to the throne. Again the palatines
stepped forth to vindicate the ancient form of government. The two parties
disputed, quarrelled, and, lastly, armed their
adherents to decide the question by force; but the more enlightened portion of
the nation was not convinced that a problem affecting the happiness or misery
of millions ought to be resolved in such a way. Two assemblies were
successively consulted at Kruswick, to discuss the
respective claims of monarchy and oligarchy; but the forces, if not the
arguments, of the two parties were so nearly equal that nothing was decided.
Both were preparing to try the efficacy of arms, when heaven, in pity to the
people, again interfered, and miraculously filled the vacant throne.
FOUNDATION OF THE HOUSE OF PIAST [842-892 A.D.]
There dwelt in Kruswick a poor but
virtuous man, named Piast—so poor, indeed, that his
wants were but scantily supplied by a small piece of ground which he cultivated
with his own hands, and so virtuous that the blessings of thousands accompanied
his steps. He had a wife and a son, both worthy of him. He lived contented in
his poverty, which he had no wish to remove, since he had wisdom enough to
perceive that the state most exempt from artificial wants is the most favourable to virtue, and consequently to happiness. When
the time arrived that his son should be first shorn of his locks of hair and
receive a name—a custom of great antiquity among the pagan Slavs—he invited, as
was usual on such occasions, his neighbours to the
ceremony. On the day appointed two strangers arrived with the rest, and were
admitted with the hospitality so honourable to the
people. Piast laid before his guests all he could
furnish for their entertainment: that all, he observed, was little, but he
hoped the spirit with which it was offered would compensate for the lack of
good cheer. They fell to the scanty stock of viands and meal, when, lo—a
miracle!—both were multiplied prodigiously; the more they ate and drank, the
more the tables groaned under the weight of the viands. The portent was spread
abroad with rapidity. Numbers daily flocked to the peasant’s house to share his
hospitality and to witness the miraculous increase of his provisions.
A scarcity of these good things at that time afflicted the
place, through the influx of so many thousands who met for the choice of a
government. All hastened to Piast, who entertained
them with princely liberality during several successive weeks. “Who so fit to
rule,” was the universal cry, “as this holy man, this favourite of the gods?” Prince and palatine desisted from their respective pretensions,
and joined their suffrages to that of the people. Piast was unanimously elected, in the year 842, to the vacant dignity; but so great
was his reluctance to accept the glittering honour that he would have remained forever in his then humble condition, had not the
two identical strangers, whom he found to be gods, and whom later Christian
writers consider two angels, or at least two blessed martyrs, again favoured him with a visit, and prevailed on him to
sacrifice his own ease to the good of the nation. The reign of Piast was the golden age of Poland. No foreign wars, no
domestic commotions; but respect from without, abundance and contentment
within, signalised his wise, firm, and paternal
administration. The horror with which he regarded the scene of Popiel’s guilt and punishment made him abandon the place of
his birth and transfer his court to Gnesen, which thus became a second time the
capital of the country.
Semowit’s was no less
glorious. He was the first chief who introduced regular discipline into the
armies of Poland. Before his time they had fought without order or system;
their onset had been impetuous, and their retreat as sudden. He marshalled them
in due array; taught them to surrender their own will to that of their
officers; to move as one vast machine obedient to the force which rules it; and
whenever fortune was adverse, to consult their safety not in flight, but in a
closer and more determined union, in a vigorous, concentrated resistance. The
Hungarians, the Moravians, the Russians, who had insulted the country under
the feeble sway of Popiel, and who had despised the
inexperience of the, son of Piast, were soon taught
to fear him and to sue for peace. Semowit was
satisfied with the terror produced by his arms; he thirsted not after conquest;
he loved his subjects too well to waste their blood in gratification of a
selfish ambition. Their welfare was his only care, their gratitude and
affection his only reward. An able captain, an enlightened statesman, an
affable, patriotic sovereign, his person was adored during life, and his memory
long revered after death.
His son and successor, Leszek IV (892), successfully imitated
all his virtues but one. This prince refrained from war, making all his glory
to consist in promoting the internal happiness of the people. His moderation,
his justice, his active zeal, his enlightened care, were qualities, however,
not very acceptable to a martial and ferocious people, who longed for war, and
who placed all greatness in conquest. Of the same pacific disposition, and of
the same estimable virtues, was Semomyslaw (921), the
son and successor of Leszek. For the same honourable reason, the reign of this prince furnishes no materials for history. The
tranquil, unobtrusive virtues must be satisfied with selfapprobation,
and a consciousness of the divine favour; only the
more splendid and mischievous qualities attain immortality. That men’s evil
deeds are written in brass, their good ones in water, is more than poetically
just. Semomyslaw, however, has one claim to
remembrance which posterity has not failed to recognise:
he was the father of Mieczyslaw, the first Christian duke of Poland, with whom
opens the authentic history of the country.
MIECZYSLAW I, BOLESLAW I, AND MIECZYSLAW II
This fifth prince of the house of Piast is entitled to the remembrance of posterity, not merely from his being the
first Christian ruler of Poland, but from the success with which he abolished
paganism and enforced the observance of the new faith throughout his
dominions. He who could effect so important a
revolution without bloodshed must have been no common character.
When the duke assumed the reins of sovereignty both he and
his subjects were strangers to Christianity, even by name. By the persuasion of
his nobles, he demanded the hand of Dabrowka,
daughter of Boleslaw, king of Hungary. Both father and daughter refused to favour so near a connection with a pagan; but both declared
that if he would consent to embrace the faith of Christ his proposal would be
accepted. After some deliberation he consented; he procured instructors, anil
was soon made acquainted with the doctrines which he was required to believe
and the duties he was bound to practise. The royal
maiden was accordingly conducted to his capital (965), and the day which
witnessed his regeneration by the waters of baptism also beheld him receive
another sacrament, that of marriage.
The zeal with which Mieczyslaw laboured for the conversion of his subjects, left no doubt of the sincerity of his own.
Having dismissed his seven concubines, he issued an order for the destruction
of the idols throughout the country. He appears to have been obeyed without
much opposition.
While he was occupied in forwarding the conversion of the
nation, he was not unfrequently called to defend it against the ambition or the
jealousy of his neighbours. In 968 he was victorious
over the Saxons, but desisted from hostilities at the imperial command of Otto
I, whose feudatory he acknowledged himself. Against the son of that emperor,
Otto II, he leagued himself with other princes who espoused the interests of
Henry of Bavaria; but, like them, he was compelled to submit, and own not only
the title but the supremacy of Otto, in 973. He encountered a more formidable
competitor in the Russian grand duke, Vladimir the Great, who after triumphing
over the Greeks invaded Poland in 986, and reduced several towns. The Bug now
bounded the western conquests of the descendants of Rurik, whose object
henceforth was to push them to the very confines of Germany. But Mieczyslaw
arrested, though he could not destroy, the torrent of invasion; if he procured
no advantage over the Russian, he opposed a barrier which induced Vladimir to
turn aside to enterprises which promised greater facility of success. His last
expedition (989-991) was against Boleslaw, duke of Bohemia. In this contest he
was assisted with auxiliaries furnished by the emperor Otto III, whose favour he had won, and by other princes of the empire.
After a short but destructive war the Bohemian, unable to oppose the genius of
Mieczyslaw, sued for peace; but this triumph was fatal to the peace of the two
countries. Hence the origin of lasting strife between two nations whose
descent, manners, and language were the same, and between whom, consequently,
less animosity might have been expected.
But contiguity of situation is seldom, perhaps never, favourable to the harmony of nations. Silesia, which was
the frontier province of Poland, was thenceforth exposed to the incursions of
the Bohemians, and doomed to experience the curse of its limitrophic position. Mieczyslaw died in 999, universally regretted by his subjects.
BOLESLAW (999-1025 A.D.)
Boleslaw I, surnamed Chrobry, or
the “lion-hearted,” son of Mieczyslaw and Dabrowka,
ascended the ducal throne in 999, in his thirty-second year, amidst the acclamations
of his people.
From his infancy this prince had exhibited qualities of a
high order—great capacity of mind, undaunted courage, and an ardent zeal for
his country’s glory. Humane, affable, generous, he was early the favourite of the Poles, whose affection he still further
gained by innumerable acts of kindness to individuals. Unfortunately, however,
his most splendid qualities were neutralised by his
immoderate ambition, which, in the pursuit of its own gratification, too often
disregarded the miseries it occasioned.
The fame of Boleslaw having reached the ears of Otto III,
that emperor, who was then in Italy, resolved on his return to Germany to take
a route somewhat circuitous, and pay the prince a visit. He had before vowed a
pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Adalbert, whose hallowed remains had just been
transported from Prussia to Gnesen. He was received by Boleslaw with a magnificence
which surprised him, and a respect which won his esteem. No sooner were his
devotions performed than he testified his gratitude, or perhaps consulted his
policy, by elevating the duchy into a kingdom, which he doubtless intended
should forever remain a fief of the empire. Boleslaw was solemnly anointed by
the archbishop of Gnesen; but the royal crown, it is said, was placed on his
head by imperial hands. To bind still closer the alliance between the two
princes, Rixa, a niece of Otto, was affianced to the
son of the new king. The emperor returned home with an arm of St. Adalbert,
which he probably considered as cheaply procured in exchange for a woman and a
title.
The king was not long allowed to wear his new honours unmolested; he soon proved that they could not have
been placed on a worthier brow. His first and most inveterate enemies were the
Bohemians, who longed to grasp Silesia. Two easy triumphs disconcerted the duke
of that country, who began to look around him for allies. The same disgrace
still attended his arms; his fields were laid waste, his towns pillaged, his
capital taken, with himself and his eldest son; the loss of sovereignty, of
liberty, and soon of his eyes, convinced him, when too late, how terrific an
enemy he had provoked. For a time his country remained the prey of the victor;
but the generosity or policy of Boleslaw at length restored the ducal throne
to Ulrich, the second son of the fallen chief. All Germany was alarmed at the
progress of the Polish arms. Even the emperor, Henrv of Bavaria, joined the confederacy now formed to humble the pride of Boleslaw.
Superior numbers chased him from Bohemia, dethroned Ulrich, and elevated the
elder brother, the lawful heir, to the vacant dignity. The king returned to
espouse the interests of Ulrich ; but, though he was often successful, he was
as often not indeed defeated, but constrained to elude the combined force of
the empire. Ulrich did at length obtain the throne, not through Boleslaw but
through Henry, whose cause he strengthened by his adhesion.
Peace was frequently made during these obscure contests, and
the king was thereby enabled to repress the incursions of his enemies on other
parts of his frontier; but none could be of long continuance, where, on both
sides, the love of war was a passion scarcely equalled in intensity even by ambition. In one of his expeditions Boleslaw penetrated as
far as Holstein, reducing the towns and fortresses in his way, and filling all
Germany with the deepest consternation. His conquests, however, were but
transiently held; if he found it easy to make them, to retain them in
opposition to the united efforts of the princes of the empire required far more
numerous armies than he could raise. He fell back on Silesia to repair the
disasters sustained by the arms of his son Mieczyslaw, whose talents were
inadequate to the command of a separate force.
To recount the endless alternations of victory and failure
during these obscure contests would exhibit a dry record—dry as the most
lifeless chronicle of the times. It must be sufficient to observe that what
little advantage was gained fell to the lot of Boleslaw until the Peace of
Bautzen, in 1018, restored peace to the lacerated empire.
But the most famous of the wars of Boleslaw were with the
dukes of Russia. After the death of Vladimir the Great, who had imprudently
divided his estates among his sons, the eldest, Sviatopolk,
prince of Tver, endeavouring to unite the other principalities under his sceptre,
was expelled the country by the combined forces of his enraged brothers. He
took refuge in Poland, and implored the assistance of the, king. Boleslaw
immediately armed, not so much to avenge the cause of Sviatopolk as to regain possession of the provinces which Vladimir had wrested from
Mieczyslaw. He marched against Iaroslav, who had
seized on the dominions of the fugitive brother, and whom he encountered on the
banks of the Bug.
For some time he hesitated to pass the river in the face of a
powerful enemy; but a Russian soldier from the opposite bank one day deriding
his corpulency, he plunged into the water with the most intrepid of his
followers, and the action commenced. It was obstinately contested, but victory
in the end declared for the king. He pursued the fugitives to the walls of
Kiev, which he immediately invested and took. Sviatopolk was restored, but he made an unworthy return to his benefactor; he secretly
instigated the Kievans to massacre the Poles, whose
superiority he envied, and whose presence annihilated his authority. His
treachery was discovered, and his capital nearly destroyed by his incensed
allies, who returned home laden with immense plunder. The Russians pursued in a
formidable body, and the Bug was again destined to behold the strife of the two
armies. Again did victory shine on the banners of Boleslaw, who, on this
occasion, almost annihilated the assailants. Thus ended this first expedition;
the second was not less decisive. Iaroslav had
reduced the Polish garrison left by the king in Kiev, had seized on that
important city, and penetrated into the Polish provinces, which submitted at
his approach.
A third time was the same river to witness the same
sanguinary scenes. As usual, after a sharp contest, the Russians yielded the honour of the day to their able and brave antagonist, who
hurried forward in the career of conquest; but his name now rendered further
victories unnecessary; it struck terror in the hearts of the Russians, who
hastened to acknowledge his supremacy. On this occasion he appears to have
conducted himself with a moderation which does the highest honour to his heart: he restored the prisoners he had taken, and, after leaving
garrisons in the more important places, returned to his capital to end his days
in peace.
Towards the close of life Boleslaw is said to have looked
back on his ambitious undertakings with sorrow; they had added nothing to his
prosperity, but had exhausted his people. lie now began to regret that he had
not devoted his time and talents and means to objects which would have secured
for them happiness, for himself a glory far more substantial than his brilliant
deeds could bestow. Perhaps, too, he began to be apprehensive of the account
which a greater potentate than himself might exact from him. Certain it is that
the last six years of his reign were passed in the most laborious efforts to
repair the evils he had occasioned—to improve alike the temporal and moral
condition of his people. He administered justice with impartiality. Delinquents
he punished with inflexible severity; the meritorious he honoured and enriched. Knowing the infirmity of his own judgments, he associated with
him twelve of his wisest nobles. With their aid he redressed the wrongs of his
subjects, not only in his capital but in various parts of his kingdom, which he
traversed from time to time to inquire into the way justice was administered by
the local magistrates. Nothing escaped his activity; it destroyed oppression
and insured triumph to innocence.
Perhaps the severity of his labours,
which allowed of no intermission by day, and which were often continued during
the silence of night, hastened his end. Having convoked an assembly at Gnesen,
in which his son was nominated his successor, he prepared for the approaching
change. With his dying breath he exhorted that prince to favour the deserving, by conferring on them the distinction of wealth and honours; to love his God; to reverence the ministers of
religion; to cherish virtue; to flee from pleasure; to reign by justice, and to
inspire his subjects with love rather than fear. He died shortly afterwards, in
1025, leaving behind him the reputation of the greatest sovereign of his age;
and, what is far more estimable, the universal lamentations of his subjects
proved that he had nobly deserved their affectionate appellation, Father.
Poland had never seen such a king as the last six years of his life exhibited:
he was the true founder of his country’s greatness.
Mieczyslaw II ascended the throne of his father in 1025, in
his thirty-fifth year—an age when the judgment is reasonably expected to be
ripened and the character formed. But this prince had neither; and he soon
showed how incapable he was of governing so turbulent a people as the Poles, or
of repressing his ambitious neighbours. Absorbed in
sloth, or in pleasures still more shameful, he scarcely deigned to waste a
glance on the serious duties of royalty, and it was soon discovered that his
temperament fitted him rather for the luxurious courts of southern Asia than
for the iron region of Sarmatia.
Iaroslav, the restless duke
of Kiev, was the first to prove to the world how Poland had suffered by a
change of rulers. He rapidly reduced some fortresses, desolated the eastern
provinces, and would doubtless have carried his ferocious arms to the capital,
had not the Poles, without a signal from their king, who quietly watched the
progress of the invasion, flocked to the national standard and compelled this
second Sardanapalus to march against the enemy. The duke, however, had no wish
to run the risk of an action; with immense spoil, and a multitude of prisoners,
he returned to his dominions in the consciousness of perfect impunity.
Mieczyslaw, thinking that by his appearance in the field he had done enough for
glory, led back his murmuring troops to his capital; nor did the sacrifice of
his father’s conquests draw one sigh, even one serious thought, from the
confirmed voluptuary, who esteemed every moment abstracted from his sensual
enjoyments as a lamentable loss of time and life—a loss, however, that he was
resolved to repair by more than usual devotion to the only deities he
worshipped. For the mead of Odin, the purple juice of Bacchus, and the delights
of the Cytherean goddess he deemed no praise too
exalted, no incense too precious.
From this dream of sensuality he was at length rudely
awakened, not by the revolt of the Bohemians or that of the Moravians, whose
countries his father had rendered, for a short time, tributary to Poland; not
by the reduction of his strongest fortresses, nor even by the escape of whole
provinces from his feeble grasp, but by the menaces of his people, who
displayed their martial lines in front of his palace, and insisted on his
accompanying them to crush the widespread spirit of insurrection. He
reluctantly marched, not to subdue, but to make an idle display of force which
he knew not how to wield. The Bohemians were too formidable to be assailed; the
Moravians easily escaped his unwilling pursuit, and suffered him to wreak his
vengeance—if, indeed, he was capable of such a sentiment—on a few miserable
villages, or on such straggling parties of their body as accident threw in his
way. As the enemy no longer appeared openly, he naturally wished it to be
believed that none existed, and his discontented troops were again led back
from the inglorious scene. He now hoped to pass his days in unmolested
enjoyment; but—vexation on vexation!—the Pomeranians revolted. His first
impulse was to treat with his rebellious subjects, and grant them a part at
least of their demands, as the price of the ease he courted; but this
disgraceful expedient was furiously rejected by his nobles, who a third time
forced him to the field. In this expedition he was accompanied by three
Hungarian princes, who had sought a refuge in his dominions from the violence
of an ambitious kinsman. Through their ability, anil the valour of the Poles, victory declared for him. With all his faults he was not, it
appears, incapable of gratitude, since he conferred both the hand of his
daughter and the government of Pomerania on Bela, the most valiant of the three
princes. Now he had surely done enough to satisfy the pugnacious clamours of his people. The Bohemians, the Moravians, and
the Saxons, whom Boleslaw the Great had subjugated, were, indeed, in open and
successful revolt; but he could safely ask the most martial of his nobles what
chance existed of again reducing those fierce rebels. And though his cowardice
might be apparent enough, no wise man would blame the prudence which declined
to enter on a contest where success could scarcely be considered possible.
But Mieczyslaw was indifferent to popular opinion. To avoid
the grim visages of his nobles, which he hated no less than he feared, he
retreated wholly from society, and, surrounded by a few companions in
debauchery, abandoned himself without restraint to his favourite excesses. The consequences were such as might be expected. Already enfeebled in
the prime of life, this wretched voluptuary found his body incapable of
sustaining the maladies produced by continued intemperance, his exhausted mind
still less able to bear the heavy load of remorse which oppressed it. Madness
ensued, which soon terminated in death.
Fortunately for humanity, there are few evils without some
intermixture of good. If Micczyslaw the Idle was
cowardly, dissipated, and despicable, there were moments when he appeared
sensible of the duties obligatory on his station. To him Poland was indebted
for the distribution of the country into palatinates, each presided over by a
local judge, and consequently for the more speedy and effectual administration
of justice. He is also said to have founded a new bishopric.
THE INTERREGNUM; CASIMIR I
Poland was now doomed to experience the fatal truth, that any
permanent government, no matter how tyrannical, weak, or contemptible, is
beyond all measure superior to anarchy. Mieczyslaw the Idle left a son of an
age too tender to be intrusted with the reins of the
monarchy, and his widow Rixa was accordingly declared
regent of the kingdom and guardian of the prince. But that queen was unable to
control the haughtiness of chiefs who despised the sway of a woman, and who
detested her as a German—of all Germans, too, the most hated, as belonging to
the archducal house of Austria. She added to their discontent by the evident
partiality she showed towards her own countrymen, of whom it is said numbers
flocked to share in the schools of Poland. Complaints followed on the one side,
without redress on the other; these were succeeded by remonstrances, then by
menaces, until a confederacy was formed by the discontented nobles, whose
ostensible object was to procure the dismissal of foreigners, but whose real
one was to seize on the supreme authority. They succeeded in both: all
foreigners were expelled the kingdom, and with them the regent. Whether
Casimir, her son, shared her flight or immediately followed her is uncertain,
but Europe soon beheld both in Saxony, claiming the protection of their
kinsman, the emperor Conrad II.
The picture, drawn even by native historians, of the miseries
sustained by the country after the expulsion of the queen and prince, is in the
highest degree revolting. There was, say they, no authority, no law, and
consequently no obedience. Innumerable parties contended for the supreme power,
and the strongest naturally triumphed, but not until numbers were exterminated.
As there was no tribunal to which the disputants could appeal, no chief, no
council, no house of legislature, the sword only could decide their
pretensions. The triumph was brief: a combination still more powerful arose to
hurl the successful party from its blood-stained pre-eminence; and this latter,
in turn, became the victim of a new association, as guilty and as short-lived
as itself. Then the palatines or governors of provinces asserted their
independence of the self-constituted authority at Gnesen. The whole country,
indeed, was cursed by the lawless rule of petty local sovereigns, who made an
exterminating war on each other, and ravaged each other’s territories with as
much impunity as greater potentates. One Masos, who
had been cup-bearer to the late king, seized by force on the country between
the Vistula, the Narew, and the Bug, which he governed despotically, and which
to this day is named from him, Masovia.
But a still greater evil was the general rising of the
peasants, whose first object was to revenge themselves on the petty tyrants
that oppressed them, but who, through the very success of the attempt, were, as
must in all times and in all places be the case, only the more incited to
greater undertakings. However beautiful the gradation of ranks which law and
custom have established in society, the lowest class will not admire it, but
will assuredly endeavour to rise higher in the scale,
whenever opportunity holds out a prospect of success. Hence the necessity of
laws backed by competent authority to curb this everlasting tendency of the
multitude. Let the barrier which separates the mob from the more favoured orders be once weakened, and it. will soon be
thrown down to make way for the most tremendous of inundations, one that will
sweep away the landmarks of society, level all that is noble or valuable, and
leave nothing but a vast waste, where the evil passions of men may find a fit
theatre for further conflict.
Such, we are told, was the state of Poland during the
universal reign of anarchy. The peasants, from ministers of righteous justice,
became plunderers and murderers, and were infected with all the vices of human
nature. Armed bands scoured the country, seizing on all that was valuable,
consuming all that could not be carried away, violating the women, massacring
old and young; priests and bishops were slain at the altar, nuns ravished in
the depths of the cloisters. To add to horrors which had never before, perhaps,
been paralleled among Christian nations, came the scourge of foreign invasion,
and that, too, in the most revolting forms. On one side Predislaw,
duke of Bohemia, sacked Breslaw, Posnania,
and Gnesen, consuming everything with fire and sword; on another advanced the
savage Iaroslav, who made a desert as he passed
along. Had not the former been recalled by preparations of war against his own
dominions, and had not the latter thought proper to return home when he had
amassed as much plunder as could be carried away, and made as many captives (to
be sold as slaves) as his followers could guard, Poland had no longer been a
nation. Even now she was little better than a desert. Her cities exhibited
smoking .ruins, and her fields nothing but the furrows left by “the plough of
desolation.” Countless thousands had been massacred; thousands more had fled
from the destroying scene. Those who remained had little hope that the present
calm would continue; the evil power was rather exhausted than spent. But the
terrific lesson had not been lost on them; they now looked forward to the
restoration of the monarchy as the only means of averting foreign invasion, and
the heavier curse of anarchy. An assembly was convoked by the archbishop at
Gnesen. All, except a few lawless chiefs who hoped to perpetuate a state of
things where force only was recognised, voted for a
king: and, after some deliberation, an overwhelming majority decreed the recall
of Prince Casimir.
But where was the prince to be found? No one knew the place
of his retreat. A deputation waited on Queen Rixa,
who was at length persuaded to reveal it. But here, too, an unexpected
difficulty intervened: Casimir had actually taken the cowl in the abbey of
Cluny. The deputies were not dismayed; they proceeded to his
cloister, threw themselves at his feet, and besought him with tears to have
pity on his country: “We come unto thee, dearest prince, in the name of all the
bishops, barons, and nobles of the Polish kingdom, since thou alone canst
restore our country and thy rightful heritage.” They prayed him to return them
good for evil, and drew so pathetic a picture of the woes of his native land that
he acceded to their wishes. He allowed an application to be made to Benedict IX
to disengage him from his monastic engagements, who, after exacting some
concessions from the Polish nobles and clergy, absolved him from his vows. He
accordingly bade adieu to his cell, and set out to gratify the expectations of
his subjects, by whom he was received with the most enthusiastic demonstrations
of joy, and justly hailed as their saviour.
Casimir, surnamed the Restorer, proved himself worthy of the
confidence reposed in him by his people; no higher praise can be given him than
that he was equal to the difficulties of his situation. His first care was to
repair the evils which had so long afflicted the country. The great he reduced
to obedience—some by persuasion, others by firm but mild acts of authority;
and, what was more difficult, he reconciled them to each other. The affection
borne towards his person and the need which all had of him rendered his task
not indeed easy, but certainly practicable. The submission of the nobles
occasioned that of the people, whose interests were no less involved in the
restoration of tranquillity and happiness. Where
there was so good a disposition for a basis, the superstructure could not fail
to correspond. The towns were rebuilt and repeopled, industry began to
flourish, the laws to resume their empire over brute force, and hope to animate
those whom despair had driven to recklessness.
Nor was this politic prince less successful in his foreign
relations. To conciliate the power of Iaroslav, the
fiercest and most formidable of his enemies, he proposed an alliance to be
still more closely cemented by his marriage with a sister of the duke. His
offer was accepted, and he was also promised a considerable body of Prussian
auxiliaries to assist him in reconquering Silesia, Pomerania, and the province
of Masovia, which still recognised the rebel Masos.
This adventurer gave him more trouble than would have been
anticipated. Though signally defeated by the king, he had yet address enough to
assemble another army, chiefly of pagan Prussians, much more numerous than any
he had previously commanded. Casimir was for a moment discouraged; his forces
had been weakened even by his successes, and he apprehended that, even should
victory again declare for him, he would be left without troops to make head
against his other enemies. At this time he is said to have looked back with
sincere regret to the peaceful cloister he had abandoned. But this weakness
soon gave way to thoughts more worthy of him: he met the enemy on the banks of
the Vistula, when a sanguinary contest afforded him an occasion of displaying
bis valour no less than his ability. He fought like
the meanest soldier, was severely wounded, and was saved from destruction by
the devotion of a follower. But in the end his arms were victorious: fifteen
thousand of the rebels lay on the field; Masos was
glad to take refuge hi Prussia, by the fierce inhabitants of which he was
publicly executed as the author of their calamities.
The rest of the reign of Casimir exhibits little to strike
the attention. Bohemia was restrained from disquieting him, rather through the
interference of his ally the emperor Henry III than by his own valour. Silesia was surrendered to him; Prussia
acknowledged his superiority, and paid him tribute; Pomerania was tranquilliscd, and Hungary sought his alliance. But signal
as were these advantages, they were inferior to those which his personal character
and influence procured for his country. Convinced that no state can be happy,
however wise the laws that govern it, where morality is not still more
powerful, he laboured indefatigably to purify the
manners of his people, by teaching them their duties, by a more extended
religious education, and by his own example as well as that of his friends and
counsellors. For the twelve monks whom he persuaded to leave their retirements
at Cluny, to assist him in the moral reformation of his subjects, he founded
two monasteries, one near Cracow, the other on the Oder, in Silesia. Both
establishments zealously promoted his views; instruction was more widely
diffused, and the decent splendour of the public
worship made on the minds of the rude inhabitants, not yet fully reclaimed from
paganism, an impression which could never have been produced by mere preaching.
Before his death this excellent prince could congratulate himself that he had
saved millions, and injured no one individual; that he had laid the foundation
of a purer system of manners; that he was the regenerator no less than the
restorer of his country. His memory is still dear to the Poles.
BOLESLAW II (1058-1082 A.D.)
Boleslaw II, surnamed the Bold, was only sixteen when he
assumed the reins of government. But long before that period lie had exhibited
proofs of extraordinary capacity, and of that generosity of sentiment
inseparable from elevation of mind. Unfortunately, however, he wanted the more
useful qualities of his deceased father; those which he possessed were splendid
indeed, but among them the sparks of an insatiable ambition lay concealed,
which required only the breath of opportunity to burst forth in flames.
That opportunity was not long wanting. A few years after his
accession, three fugitive princes arrived at his court, to implore his aid in
recovering their lost honours. None indeed of the
three had any well-grounded claim to sympathy, since all had forfeited the privileges
of their birth by misconduct of their own; but the “protector of unfortunate
princes” was a title which he most coveted, and all were favourably received.
The first of these, Jaromir, brother of Wratislaw,
duke of Bohemia, had early entered the church, allured by the prospect of the
Episcopal throne of Prague; but he soon became disgusted with a profession
which set a restraint on his worst passions, and ambitious of temporal
distinctions, he left his cloister, plunged into the dissipations of the world,
but was soon compelled by his brother to return to it. He escaped a second
time, and endeavoured to gain supporters in his wild
attempts to subvert the authority of Wratislaw; but
finding his freedom, if not his existence, perilled in Bohemia, he threw himself into the arms of Boleslaw. The result was a war
between the two countries, which was disastrous to the Bohemians, but to which
an end was at length brought by the interference of the Germanic princes.
Jaromir was persuaded to resume his former vocation, and to bound his ambition
within the limits of a mitre; the marriage of Wratislaw with the sister of the Polish king secured for a
time the blessings of peace to these martial people.
The second expedition, in favour of
B6la, prince of Hungary, who aspired to the throne of his brother Andrew, was
no less successful. Andrew was defeated, and slain in a wood, probably by his
own domestics, and Bela was crowned by the conquering Boleslaw. This was not
all. Seven years afterwards he again invaded Hungary, to espouse the interests
of Geisa, the son of Bela, who had been killed in a
hut which the violence of a storm had tumbled on the royal guest. Solomon, the
son of Andrew, had been crowned by the influence of the emperor Henry III.
Again was he joined by numerous partisans of the exiled prince. Solomon fled
into lower Hungary, but he there occupied a position so strong by nature as to
defy the force of his enemies. In consternation at the evils which impended
over the kingdom, some prelates undertook the appropriate task of effecting an
accommodation between the contending princes. Through their influence an
assembly was held at Mofo, which was attended by the
rival claimants; and it was at length agreed that Solomon should retain the
title of king; that Geisa and his brothers should be
put into possession of one-third of the country, to be governed as a duchy; and
that the Polish monarch should be indemnified by both for the expenses he had
incurred in the expedition. The reigning king was to be crowned anew, and to
receive the ensigns of his dignity from the hands of Geisa.
But the most splendid of the warlike undertakings of Boleslaw
was his expeditions into Russia. His ostensible object was to espouse the cause
of Iziaslav. “I am obliged to succour that prince,” said he, “by the blood which unites us, and by the pity so justly
due to his misfortunes. Unfortunate princes are more to be commiserated than
ordinary mortals. If calamities must necessarily exist on earth, they should
not be allowed to affect such as are exalted for the happiness of others.” This
show of generosity, however, though it had its due weight with him, was not the
only cause of his arming. The recovery of the possessions which his
predecessors had held in Russia and of the domains which he conceived he had a
right to inherit through his mother and his queen (like his father, he had
married a Russian princess) was the aim he avowed to his followers. He
accordingly marched against Ucheslav, who had
expelled Iziaslav from Kiev; both were sons of Iaroslav, who had committed the fatal but in that period
common error of dividing his dominions among his children, and thereby opening
the door to the most unnatural of contests.
The two armies met within a few leagues of Kiev. The martial
appearance and undaunted mien of the Poles struck terror into Ucheslav, who secretly fled from his tent. He had not gone
far before his pusillanimity made him despicable even in his own eyes; he
blushed and returned. Again was he seized with the same panic fear; he fled
with all haste towards Polotsk, and his army,
deprived of its natural head, disbanded. Kiev was invested; it surrendered to
the authority of Iziaslav; Polotsk followed the example, but Ucheslav first contrived to
escape. Boleslaw remained some time at Kiev, plunged in the dissipation to
which his temperament and the loose morals of the inhabitants alike inclined
him. He was not, however, wholly unmindful of his military fame, since he
forsook the luxurious vices of that city for the subjugation of Przemyslaw, an ancient dependency of Poland. Probably he
would at the same time have amplified his territories by other conquests, had
he not been summoned into Hungary to succour, as
before related, the son of the deceased Bela.
On the pacification of that kingdom he returned to Russia, to
inflict vengeance on the brothers of Iziaslav, whom
they had again expelled from Kiev. Though he was resolved to restore that
prince, he was no less so to make him tributary to Poland. He speedily
subjugated the whole of Volhinia, with the design of
having a retreat in case fortune proved inconstant. Such precautions, however,
were useless; in a decisive battle fought in the duchy of Kiev, he almost
annihilated the forces of the reigning duke Vsevolod.
Kiev was again invested; but as it was well supplied with provisions, and still
better defended by the inhabitants, it long set his power at defiance. Perhaps
Boleslaw, who was impetuous in everything, and with whom patience was an
unknown word, would soon have raised the siege, and proceeded to less tedious
conquests, had not a contagious fever suddenly broken out among the besieged,
and driven the greater portion of them from the city. Those who remained were
too few to dream of defending it any longer; they capitulated, and admitted the
victor just as the fury of the plague had exhausted itself. Iziaslav was restored, and the other provinces of the dukes given to his children.
Boleslaw might have held them by the right of conquest, but
he preferred leaving friends rather than enemies behind him; he preferred
having these territories tributary to him, and dependent on him as sovereign
paramount, rather than incorporating them at once with his dominions, and
thereby subjecting himself and successors to the necessity of perpetually
flying to their protection against the inevitable struggles of the Russians for
freedom. Even this advantage he must either have perceived would be transient,
or he must have had little sagacity. Ambition, however, seldom reasons; and Boleslaw,
from his great success, might almost be justified in believing that for him was
reserved a fortune peculiar to himself.
The generosity with which he behaved to the Kievans, the affability of his manner, and a mien truly
royal soon rendered him a favourite with them. He
plunged into dissipation with even more than his former ardour.
Ere long his officers, then his meanest followers, so successfully imitated his
example that, according to the statements of both Russian and Polish
historians, all serious business seemed suspended, and pleasure was the only
object of old and young, of Pole and Muscovite. Iziaslav,
from gratitude no less than policy, endeavoured to
make the residence of his benefactor as agreeable as he could. On one occasion,
when desirous of a visit from Boleslaw, he offered to the king as many marks of
gold as the royal horse should take steps from the palace of the king to that
of the duke—a distance, we are told, considerable enough to enrich the
monarch.
The cruelty of the king is said to have sunk deep into the
hearts of his subjects. There is more reason for believing that the excesses
to which he abandoned himself after his return to Poland produced that effect.
His character—outwardly at least—had changed; his industry, his love of
justice, his regal qualities, had fled. His virtuous counsellors were
dismissed, and none were retained near his person but such as consented to
share his orgies. To increase the general discontent, impositions, arbitrary
and enormous, were laid on an already burdened people.
Had conduct such as this been practised by almost any other sovereign of Poland, the popular indignation would have
been appeased only by his deposition. But the son of Casimir, independently of
his former merit and of his splendid deeds in war, required to be treated with
greater indulgence. His reformation, not his ruin, was the prayer of his
subjects. Such was the impetuosity of his disposition, and such the cruelties
he had practised since his fatal residence at Kiev,
that Stanislaus, bishop of Cracow, was the only man whom history mentions
courageous enough to expostulate with him on his excesses and to urge the
necessity of amendment. Mild and even affectionate as was the manner of this
excellent prelate, the only effect which it had was to draw on him the
persecution of the king. But persecution could not influence a man so
conscious of his good purposes and so strong in his sense of duty. He returned
to his exhortations; but finding that leniency had no good result, he excommunicated
the royal delinquent. Rage took possession of the soul of Boleslaw.
Stanislaus had now recourse to one of the last bolts which
the church held in the storehouse of her thunders: he placed an interdict on
all the churches of Cracow—a measure at all times more violent than just, and
in the present case not likely to have any other effect than to harden
impenitence. Now no longer master of his fury, the king swore the destruction
of the prelate, whose steps he caused to be watched by his creatures. Hearing
one day that Stanislaus was to celebrate mass in a chapel situated on a hill
beyond the Vistula, he took with him a few determined followers, and on
reaching the extensive plain in the centre of which
the hill lay he perceived from afar his destined victim ascending to the
chapel. He was at the doors of the sacred edifice before the conclusion of the
office; but, eager as was his thirst for instant vengeance, he forbore to
interrupt the solemn act of worship in which Stanislaus and the attendant
clergy were engaged. When all was over, he ordered some of his guards to enter
and assassinate the prelate. They were restrained, say the chroniclers, by the
hand of heaven; for in endeavouring to strike him
with their swords, as he calmly stood before the altar, they were miraculously
thrown backwards on the ground. They retreated from the place, but were again
forced to return by Boleslaw. A second and a third time, we are told, was the
miracle repeated, until the king, losing all patience, and fearless alike of
divine and human punishment, entered the chapel himself, and with one blow of
his ponderous weapon dashed out the brains of the churchman. If the miracle be
fabulous, the tragedy at least was true.
Neither Boleslaw of Poland nor Henry of England could murder
an ecclesiastic with impunity; and, enemies as we must all be to the
extravagant pretensions of the church in these ages, we can scarcely censure
the power which was formidable enough to avenge so dark a deed. Gregory VII,
who then filled the chair of St. Peter, hurled his anathemas against the
murderer, whom he deposed from the royal dignity, absolving his subjects from
their oaths of allegiance, and at the same time placing an interdict on the
whole kingdom. The proud soul of Boleslaw disdained submission to the church;
he endeavoured to resist the execution of its
mandates; but he speedily found that, in an age when the haughtiest and most
powerful monarchs were made to bend before the spiritual throne, such
resistance could only seal the. fate denounced against him. He was now regarded
with horror by clergy and people. In daily fear of assassination by his own
people, who universally avoided him, he fled into Hungary, accompanied by his
son Mieczyslaw, in the hope of interesting in his behalf the reigning king of
that country. But Wladyslaw, the brother of Geisa,
who had succeeded Solomon, though he pitied the fugitive, had no wish to bring
down on his own head the thunders of Gregory; and Boleslaw, after a short stay,
was compelled to seek another asylum. His end is wrapped in great obscurity.
One account says that he retired to a monastery in Carinthia, to expiate his
crime by penance; another, that his senses forsook him, and that in one of his
deranged fits he destroyed himself; a third, that he was torn to pieces by his
own dogs when hunting; and a fourth, that, being compelled to occupy a mean
situation, he preserved his incognito until the hour of death, when he
astonished his confessor by the disclosure of his birth and crimes. Of these
versions of the story it need scarcely be added that the first is the only one
probable.
Had Boleslaw known how to conquer his own passions with as
much ease as he conquered his enemies, he would have been one of
the greatest princes that ever filled a throne. His character differed at
different periods. Before his expedition to Russia he was the model of
sovereigns; active, vigilant, just, prudent, liberal, the father of his
subjects, the protector of the unfortunate, the conqueror and bestower of kingdoms.
Afterwards his elevation of mind gave way to meanness, his valour to cowardice, his justice to tyranny, his boundless generosity to a pitiful
selfishness, which valued no person or thing except in so much as its own
gratification was concerned. At one time he was the pride, at another the
disgrace, of human nature.
WLADISLAW I, SURNAMED THE CARELESS (1082-1102 A.D.)
After the disappearance of Boleslaw and his son the state
remained almost a year without a head; perhaps it would have remained so much
longer but for the incursions of two neighbouring powers, the Russians and the Hungarians, the latter of whom reduced Cracow. In
great consternation the nobles then raised to the throne Wladislaw, son of
Casimir, and brother of the unfortunate Boleslaw.
The first act of Wladislaw was to despatch a deputation to Rome to procure a reversal of the interdict. The churches were
in consequence opened, and permission given that Poland should again be ranked
among Christian nations; but the royal dignity was withheld. Wladislaw was
allowed to reign as duke, but no prelate in Poland dared to anoint him king. It
cannot but surprise us, in these times, that the chief of a great people should
have incurred the humiliation of submitting to the papal pretensions; but
perhaps Wladislaw expected the return of his brother, over whose fate a deep
mystery was believed to hang, and had no very strong wish to assume a title
which he might hereafter be compelled to resign. The example, however, was
disastrous for the country; during more than two hundred years the regal title
was disused; nor could the rulers of Poland, as dukes, either repress anarchy
at home or command respect abroad so vigorously as had been done by the kings
their predecessors.
But whether Boleslaw should return or not, Wladislaw,
sensible that he had a powerful party in his interests, resolved to marry, and
perpetuate his authority in his offspring. Judith, daughter of Andrew, king of
Hungary, was selected as the duchess of Poland. As, however, in two years from
her arrival this princess exhibited no signs of pregnancy, both Wladislaw and
his clergy were apprehensive that she was cursed with barrenness, and no less
so of the consequences which such a misfortune might produce. Recourse was had
to the interference of heaven; prayers, alms, pilgrimages, were employed in
vain, until the bishop of Cracow advised her to implore the intercession of St.
Giles, who had done wonderful things in this way. Pilgrims with rich presents
were accordingly sent to a monastery in Lower Languedoc, where that saint had
spent and ended his days. Her prayers were heard; for who could doubt that the
son which she afterwards brought forth was miraculously vouchsafed to her? Her
child was christened Boleslaw; but the mother did not long live to enjoy her
happiness.
Soon after his marriage Wladislaw surprised his subjects by
the recall of his nephew, Mieczyslaw. By some this step was imputed to
magnanimity, by others to policy. Certain it is that the young prince was very
popular in Hungary, and the duke might have reason to fear for the prospects of
his infant son should the interests of the exile be espoused by that country.
However this be, he received Mieczyslaw with much apparent cordiality, and, in four
years from his arrival, procured him the hand of Eudoxia, a Russian princess:
but the prince became a greater idol in Poland than he had ever been in
Hungary’, and the apprehensions of the duke naturally acquired threefold
strength. Things were in this state when news of the sudden death of Mieczyslaw
was spread over the country, and caused a sincerer national grief than had ever
been felt since the loss of Casimir. That his death had been violent was the
general impression, and suspicion pointed to the duke as the murderer, merely
because no other man was supposed to be so deeply interested in his removal.
Wladislaw, however, was not a man of blood; on the contrary, he was remarkable
beyond any prince of his age for the milder virtues of humanity; and some
better foundation than suspicion must be found before impartial history will
allow his memory to be stained with so dark a crime.
It was the misfortune of Wladislaw that, during the greater
part of his reign, his dominions were exposed to the incursions of his fierce neighbours; and a still heavier one that he had neither the vigour nor the talents to repress them. The Russians
were the first to revolt; the conquests made by Boleslaw the Bold were lost
with greater rapidity than they had been gained. Before the duke could think of
recovering them (if such, indeed, was ever his intention), the Prussians, a
people more savage, though much less stupid, perhaps, than the ancient
Muscovites, prepared to invade his dominions. With great reluctance he marched
against them. The steady valour of his followers
enabled him, or rather his general, Sieciech, to triumph over the undisciplined
bravery of these pagan barbarians. But no sooner did the victors retire from
the forests of Prussia than the natives again rose, massacred the garrisons
which had been left in their fortresses, and joined in pursuit of the Poles. An
obstinate and bloody battle ensued on the banks of the Netze,
which arrested the advance of the enemy, but so weakened the invaders that they
were compelled to return in search of fresh reinforcements.
Having gained these (chiefly Bohemian mercenaries), they
again directed their march to the Netze, and assailed
the strong fort of Nackel on the bank of that river;
but on this occasion, we are told, they were seized with an unaccountable
dread: they stood so much in fear of an irruption into their tents by the wild
defenders of the fort that they could scarcely be persuaded to snatch a few
moments of repose. Every bush, every tree, every rocky height to their alarmed
imaginations seemed peopled with the terrific enemy; and one night, when it had
covered the plain before them with these visionary beings, they left their
tents to run the risk of an action. The besieged, in the meantime, penetrated
to their tents, which they plundered and set on fire, and massacred all whom
the light attracted to the place. The loss of the Poles in this most inglorious
scene was so severe that they were compelled to retreat. To veil their
cowardice, they averred that they had been driven back by supernatural means;
that armies of spectres had arisen to oppose them.
Absurd as was their plea, it was generally believed; the pagans were thought to
be in league with the powers of darkness; so that in the following year, when
Wladislaw returned to vindicate the honour of his
arms, not a few wondered at his temerity. This time he was more successful;
Prussia and Pomerania submitted, but with the intention of revolting whenever
fortune presented them with the opportunity.
The wars of the duke with Bohemia were less decisive.
Bretislaw, duke of that country, resolved to claim the rights which the emperor
Henry, in a fit of displeasure with Wladislaw, had a few years before pretended
to bestow on his father—rights involving even the possession of the Polish
crown, which Henry, as lord paramount, claimed the power of
transferring—invaded Silesia, and wrapped everything in flames. By the duke’s
command reprisals were made in Moravia, a dependency of the Bohemian crown. The
Pomeranians advanced to the assistance of Bretislaw and threw themselves into
the strongest fortress in Silesia. They were reduced by Boleslaw, son of
Wladislaw, who, though only in his tenth year, began to give indications of his
future greatness. The army indeed was commanded by Sieciech, the Polish
general, but the glory of the exploit belonged only to the prince. It is
certain that from this time jealousy took possession of the general’s heart,
and that he did all he could to injure the prince in the mind of Wladislaw,
over whom his influence was without a rival—an influence which he exerted
solely for his own advantage, and very often to the detriment of the people.
Hence the dissensions which began to trouble the peace of the
duke—-dissensions, too, in which another individual was destined to act not the
least prominent part.
Before his marriage with the princess Judith the duke had a
natural son named Sbigniew, whose depravity is represented as in the highest
degree revolting, and who became a dreadful scourge to the kingdom. The youth,
indeed, owed little gratitude to a parent by whom he had been grossly neglected.
From a peasant’s hut, in a mean village, he had been sent to a monastery in
Saxony, where it was intended he should assume the cowl. During his seclusion
in the cloister the tyrannical conduct of Sieciech, to whom the duke abandoned
the cares and the rewards of sovereignty, forced a considerable number of Poles
to expatriate themselves and seek a more tranquil settlement in Bohemia. With
the view of disquieting Poland, Bretislaw persuaded these emigrants to espouse
the cause of Sbigniew, whom he drew from the monastery to procure for him the
sovereignty of Silesia. The hope of crushing the haughty favourite,
and of living in peace under the sway of one of their native princes, made them
readily join the standard of the new chief.
At the head of these men, Sbigniew boldly advanced to the
gates of Breslau, the governor of which he knew to be unfriendly to the favourite. As his avowed object was merely to effect the
removal of an obnoxious minister, the city at length received him. Wladislaw
advanced to support his authority: Sbigniew fled, collected an army of
Prussians, and again took the field. The father conquered; the rebellious
prince fell into the hands of Sieciech, his greatest enemy, by whom he was
thrown into a dreary dungeon; but the advantage was counterbalanced by the
incursions of the Bohemians, who ravaged Silesia, and whom the duke was too
timid or too indolent to repress; and ere long the bishops procured the liberation
of Sbigniew, whose influence they well saw would soon annihilate that of the
detested favourite.
The youth, indeed, was more than pardoned; he was raised to
the highest honours, and associated with his brother
Boleslaw in the command of an army which was despatched against those inveterate rebels, the Pomeranians. The two brothers, however,
disputed and effected nothing, when Wladislaw, alarmed at the prospect of the
civil wars which might arise after his decease, took the fatal resolution of
announcing the intended division of his states between his two sons: to
Boleslaw he promised Silesia, the provinces of Cracow, Sendomir,
and Sieradz, with the title of duke of Poland; to
Sbigniew', Pomerania, with the palatinates of Leuszysa, Cujavia, and Masovia. This
expedient, which he adopted in the belief that it would prevent all further
contention between the princes, became the source of the worst troubles; the
example, as we shall hereafter perceive, proved fatal to the prosperity and
even threatened the existence of Poland.
For a time, indeed, the two youths were united. Both burned
for the destruction of Sieciech, and each had need of the other to secure the
common object. With the troops which they had obtained to oppose a pretended
invasion of the Bohemians, they forced the feeble and infirm Wladislaw to exile
his favourite to a distant fortress. But even this
did not satisfy them; they besieged the place. Wladislaw, by means of a
disguise, threw himself into it, resolved to share the fate of his favourite. His unnatural sons had the army and, what was
more, the hearts of the Poles in their favour; nor
would they lay down their arms until the odious minister was banished the
country; they then submitted to their parent.
During the few remaining months of this feeble duke’s life
Poland was governed by the two princes. Its frontiers were frequently a prey to
the Pomeranians and Prussians; the valour of
Boleslaw’ chastised their presumption. As for Sbigniew, his ambition indeed was
boundless and his disposition restless; but his abilities were slender, and
his weakness betrayed him into situations from which he found it hard to
escape. There is reason to believe he was meditating the means of weakening, if
not of supplanting, his brother, when the death of the aged duke suspended for
a moment his criminal designs.
Wladislaw deserved a better fate. He appears to have been a
Christian and a patriot, a mild and benevolent monarch. That his weakness of
mind rendered him the instrument of others, and his infirmity of body prevented
him from long enduring the iron labours of war, can
scarcely be attributed to him as a fault, however disastrous both proved to his
subjects. Even for the fatal division of his dominions between his
children—fatal more as an example to others than for the positive evil it
produced in this case, though that evil was great—he had precedents enough, not
only in the early history of Poland but in the neighbouring country of Russia.
BOLESLAW III, SURNAMED THE WRY-MOUTHED (1102-1139 A.D.)
Scarcely were the last rites paid to the deceased duke than
Sbigniew began to show what the nation had to expect from his perversity, and
from the imprudence which had left him any means of mischief. He forcibly
seized on the ducal treasures at Plock, which, however, the authority of the
archbishop of Gnesen compelled him to divide with his brother Boleslaw. He
hoped, too, to usurp the provinces and title of that prince, whose assassination
he had probably planned; and his rage may be conceived on learning that
Boleslaw was about to marry a Russian princess, to perpetuate the hereditary
dignity in the legitimate branch of the family. Instead of attending the
nuptials, he proceeded into Bohemia, and at the head of some troops, furnished
him by the duke of that country, he invaded Silesia. But his followers, who
neither respected nor feared him, soon abandoned him and returned to their
homes, before Boleslaw could march to the defence of
that province. The latter despatched one of his
generals to make reprisals in Moravia, and after the conclusion of his marriage
feasts he himself hastened to humble the presumption of the Bohemians. But they
fled before him, and left him nothing but the satisfaction of laying everything
waste with fire and sword.
Though Sbigniew had thus signally failed, his disposition was
too restless to suffer him to remain long at peace either with his country or
his brother. In the Pomeranians, whose spirit was in many respects kindred to
his own, he found ready instruments. They armed with the intention of
retreating to their forests whenever a large Polish force appeared on their
frontiers, and of emerging from their recesses on its departure. Boleslaw’,
however, took a circuitous route, and fell by surprise on their town of Colberg. The place was valiantly defended, and the duke was
obliged to raise the siege.
A second expedition was not more decisive: the barbarians
fled before him. Soon he was constrained to make head a third time against not
only them and his rebellious brother, but the Bohemians, the cause of whose
exiled duke he had espoused. The latter retreated; their cowardice ashamed him,
since it rendered his success too easy. He now marched into Pomerania and
furiously assailed Belgard. The place was defended with great obstinacy; even
women and children appeared on the walls to roll stones or pour boiling pitch
on the heads of the Poles. The duke was undaunted; with a buckler in one hand
and a battle-axe in the other, he hastened to one of the gates, passed over the
ditch by means of long planks, and assailed the ponderous barrier with the fury
of a demon. Boiling water, pitch, stones, missiles, fell on him in vain : he
forced the door, admitted his soldiers, and with them made a terrible
slaughter of the people, sparing neither age nor sex, and desisting only from
the carnage when their hands were tired with the murderous work. No people in
Europe, not even excepting the Russians, have shown themselves so vindictive in
war as the Poles. The fall of this town was followed by that of four others no
less considerable, and by the submission of the whole country.
In this expedition Boleslaw exhibited another proof of his
fearless intrepidity. He had been invited to pass a few days at the house of a
noble in the country, to be present at the consecration of a new church. Whilst
there he set out early one morning for the chase, accompanied by eighty horse.
He was suddenly enveloped by three thousand Pomeranians. He tranquilly drew his sabre, and, followed by his heroic little band,
speedily fought his way through the dense mass which encompassed him. This was
not all: disdaining to flee, he turned round on the enemy and again passed
through them. His followers were now reduced to five; yet he was foolhardy
enough to plunge a third time into the middle of the Pomeranians. This time,
however, he was well-nigh paying dear for his temerity: his horse was killed;
he fought on foot, and was on the point of falling, when one of his officers
arrived with thirty horse, and extricated him from his desperate situation. Is
this history, or romance ?
Sbigniew, disconcerted at the success of his brother, now
sued for pardon through the duke of Kiev, father-in-law of Boleslaw. He readily
procured it on engaging to have no other interests, no other friends or enemies
than those of his brother. Yet at this very moment he was in league with the
Bohemians to harass the frontiers of Poland. He had scarcely reached his own
territories when, on Boleslaw’s requesting the aid of his troops, he refused it
with expressions of insult and defiance; he knew that both Bohemia and
Pomerania were arming in his cause. The patience of Boleslaw was worn out. With
a considerable body of auxiliaries from Hungary and Kiev he invaded the territories
of his brother, whose strongest places he reduced with rapidity; all were ready
to forsake the iron yoke of a capricious, sanguinary, and cowardly tyrant.
Sbigniew implored the protection of the bishop of Cracow, and by the influence
of that prelate obtained peace, but with the sacrifice of all his possessions
except Masovia. He was too restless, however, to
remain long quiet; so that, in the following year, an assembly of nobles was
convoked to deliberate on the best means of dealing with one who violated the
most solemn oaths with impunity. It was resolved that he should be deprived of Masovia, and forever banished from Poland.
At this time Boleslaw was engaged in a serious war not only
with the Bohemians but with Henry V, emperor of Germany, who espoused their
interests. He was victorious; but, like the enemy, having occasion to recruit
his forces, he abandoned the field. Hearing that the town of Wollin in Pomerania had revolted, he marched to reduce it.
He had invested the place, when he was suddenly assailed in his rear by a troop
of the natives, whom he soon put to flight, several prisoners remaining in his
hands. One of these refused to raise the visor of his helmet; it was forcibly
unlaced, and then was discovered Sbigniew! A council of war was assembled, and
the traitor was condemned to death; but he was merely driven from the country
by Boleslaw, who warned him, however, that his next delinquency—nay, his next
appearance in Poland—should be visited with the last punishment. But Gnievomir, one of the most powerful Pomeranian chiefs, who
had some time before embraced Christianity, had sworn fealty to Boleslaw, and
had now both abjured his new religion and joined the party of Sbigniew, was not
so fortunate as that outlaw; he was hewn to pieces in presence of the Polish
army—a barbarous act, but one which had for a time a salutary effect on the
fierce pagans.
In the war which followed with the imperialists, who were
always ready to harass a power which refused to acknowledge the supremacy of
the empire, which they hated and dreaded at the same time, nothing is more
deserving of remembrance than the heroic defence made
by the city of Glogau against the power of Henry. The
women and children shared in the toils and the glory of the men. The emperor
was often driven from the walls, his works demolished, the breaches repaired;
but he as often returned, and vowed he would never leave the place until it
fell into his power. At length both sides agreed to a suspension of
hostilities, on the condition that if Boleslaw did not relieve the place within
five days it should be surrendered to Henry, to whom hostages were delivered.
The Polish duke was not far distant; but he was waiting for
the arrival of his reinforcements from Russia and Hungary, without whose aid he
durst not attack the combined force of the empire; he exhorted the inhabitants
to hold out at the expiration of the period limited, assuring them that he
would hang them if they surrendered. The time expired; the citizens refused to
fulfil their engagements. The indignant Henry moved his legions to the walls,
placing in front the hostages he held. Not even the sentiments of nature
affected them so powerfully as their hatred of the German yoke and their apprehensions
of Boleslaw; they threw their missiles, beheld with indifference the deaths of
their children transfixed by their own hands, and again forced the imperialists
to retire from the walls. Boleslaw now approached; he enclosed the Germans
between himself and the ramparts, and held them as much besieged in the plain
as were his subjects in the city. For several succeeding days his cavalry
harassed them in their intrenchments, but no general engagement took place.
Irritated at the delay, he had then recourse to a diabolical
expedient: he procured the assassination of the Bohemian chief for whose cause
Henry had armed, and in the very tent of that emperor. The Bohemians, as he had
foreseen, now insisted on returning to their homes. Henry, weakened by their
desertion, slowly retreated; the Poles pursued until both armies arrived on the
vast plain before Breslau, where the emperor risked a battle. It was stoutly
contested; but in the end the Germans gave way, and the Poles committed a
horrible carnage on such as were unable to flee. Peace was soon after made
between the emperor and duke; the latter, who was a widower, receiving the hand
of Adelaide, and his son Wladislaw that of Christina (or Agnes), the one
sister, the other daughter, of Henry.
During the following four years Boleslaw was perpetually engaged in war, either with the Bohemians or the Pomeranians, or, as was more frequently the case, with both at the same time. His own ambition was as often the cause of these wars as the restlessness of the enemy. He appears, indeed, to have been so far elated with his successes as to adopt a haughty, domineering tone towards his neighbours—a tone to which they were never willing to submit. Yet he had many great traits of character; he often behaved nobly to the vanquished Bohemian duke; and he even so far mastered his aversion as to recall his exiled brother, who never ceased either to importune for his return or to plot against his peace. Sbigniew made a triumphal entry into Poland—the very reverse
of one that became a pardoned criminal. Every man who considered his ungrateful
character, his insolence, his incorrigible depravity, and the irascible
disposition of the duke, foresaw the fatal termination of his career. In a few
short months Boleslaw yielded to the incessant arguments of his courtiers, and
Sbigniew was assassinated.
During the succeeding years of his life Boleslaw endeavoured to stifle his remorse by such works as he hoped
would propitiate the favour of heaven. Having quelled
repeated insurrections in Pomerania, he undertook to convert it to the true
faith. His efforts were to a certain extent successful, not, perhaps, so much
through the preaching of his ecclesiastics, especially of Otto, bishop of
Bamberg, as through the sums which he expended in disposing the minds of the
rude but avaricious chiefs to the doctrines of Christianity. Many towns
publicly embraced the new religion. For a time Stettin stood out; but the
golden argument, or at least the promise of an exemption from imposts, brought
about its conversion. Idols were in most places demolished, churches erected,
priests ordained, and bishops consecrated.
Still the voice of inward conscience spoke out too loud to be
silenced, and the unhappy duke had recourse to the usual expedient of the
times. He built churches and monasteries, fasted, subjected himself to rigorous
acts of penance, and visited, in the garb and with the staff of a pilgrim, the
shrines of several saints. Not only did he thus honour the relics of St. Adalbert at Gnesen, and the tomb of St. Stephen of Hungary,
but it is said he ventured on a long and painful pilgrimage to the shrine of
St. Giles in Languedoc, the efficacy of whose intercession had been so signally
experienced by his mother. On his way he relaxed not from the severe
austerities he had imposed; with naked feet he daily stood in the churches,
joining with the utmost fervency in the canonical hours, in the penitential
psalms, and all other offices of devotion; at every chapel or
oratory he turned aside to repeat his prayers or offer gifts; he relieved all
the poor he approached, and wasted himself with vigils. On reaching the end of
his journey he practised still greater austerities;
during fifteen successive days he lay prostrate before the tomb of St. Giles.
Such, indeed, was his abstinence, his contrition, his humility, that the monks
were as edified by his visit as he himself. He returned safely to his country,
lightened, in his own mind at least, of no small burden of his guilt, and
purified completely in the eyes of his subjects. If his reformation was in some
respects mistaken, it was certainly sincere, and charity may hope availing.
But a mortification more bitter than any which religious
penance could inflict awaited him. Until within four years of his death his
arms were almost invariably successful. He had repeatedly discomfited the
Bohemians and Pomeranians; he had humbled the pride of emperors; had twice
dictated laws to Hungary, and gained signal triumphs over the Russians. It was
now his turn to meet with a reverse of fortune. He was surprised and defeated
on the banks of the Dniester by a vastly superior force of Hungarians and
Russians: the Polish historians throw the blame on the palatine of Cracow, who
retired from the field in the heat of the action. After a precipitate retreat,
Boleslaw deliberated what vengeance should be inflicted on a man through whose
cowardice his arms had been thus fatally dishonoured.
His first impulse was to execute the recreant; but vengeance gave way to a
disdainful pity. The palatine was left with life and liberty; but the reception
of a hare-skin, a spindle, and distaff, from the hands of the duke, was an
insult too intolerable to be borne, and he hanged himself.
One of the last acts of Boleslaw was to redeem as many of the
prisoners made on this occasion as could be mustered. The blow fell heavily on
his heart. The victor in forty-seven battles, the bravest prince of the age,
could not review his disgrace at an age when his bodily strength had departed,
and when no one was to be found on whom he could devolve the task of repairing
it. After a year’s indisposition—more of the mind than of the body—in which he
followed the fatal precedent of his father, by dividing his dominions among his
sons, death put a period to his temporal sufferings. With him was buried the
glory of Poland until the restoration of the monarchy. His character must be
sufficiently known from his actions.
ARISTOCRATIC RULERS (1139-1295 A.D.)
The period from the death of Boleslaw the Wry-mouthed to the
restoration of the monarchy is one of little interest; it exhibits nothing but
the lamentable dissensions of the rival princes, and the progressive decay of a
once powerful kingdom. By the will of the late duke, Poland was thus divided
among his sons:
The provinces of Cracow, Leuszysa, Sieradz, Silesia, and Pomerania fell to the eldest,
Wladislaw, who, to preserve something like the unity of power, was also
invested with supreme authority over the rest. Those of Masovia, Cujavia, with the territories of Dobrezyn and Kulm, were assigned to the second brother, Boleslaw. Those of Gnesen,
Posen, and Halitz were subjected to Mieczyslaw, the
third brother. Those of Lublin and Sandomir were left
to Henry, the fourth in order of birth. There remained a fifth and youngest
son, Casimir, to whom nothing was bequeathed. When the late duke was asked the
reason why this best beloved of his children was thus neglected, he is said to
have replied by a homely proverb: “ The four-wheeled chariot must have a
driver”—a reply prophetic of the future superiority of one whose talents were
already beginning to open with remarkable promise. It is more probable that his
tender years alone were the cause of his present exclusion; and that, as the
provinces before enumerated were intended to be held not as hereditary, but as
movable fiefs, reversible to the eldest son, as lord paramount, on the death of
the possessors, he was secure of one in case such an event should happen during
his life.
The fatal effects of this division were soon apparent. The
younger princes were willing, indeed, to consider their elder brother as
superior lord; but they disdained to yield him other than a feudal obedience,
and denied his authority in their respective appanages. In an assembly at Kruswick, however, they were constrained not only to own
themselves his vassals but to recognise his
sovereignty, and leave to his sole decision the important questions of peace
and war.
But such discordant materials could not be made to combine in
one harmonious frame of government. Wladislaw naturally considered every
appearance of authority independent of his will as affecting his rights of
primogeniture. Ilis discontent was powerfully
fomented by the arts of his German consort, who incessantly urged him to unite
under his sceptre the dissevered portions of the
monarchy. Her address prevailed. To veil his ambition under the cloak of
justice and policy, he convoked an assembly of his nobles at Cracow. To them he
exposed, with greater truth than eloquence, the evils which had been occasioned
in former periods of the national history from the division of the sovereign
power, and he urged the restoration of its union as the only measure capable of
saving the country either from domestic treason or from foreign aggression. But
they were not convinced by the arguments of one whose ambition they justly
deemed superior to his patriotism; those arguments, indeed, they could not
answer, but they modestly urged the sanctity of his late father’s will, and the
obligation under which he lay of observing its provisions.
Disappointed in this quarter, he had recourse to more
decisive measures. He first exacted a heavy contribution from each of the
princes. His demand excited their astonishment, but they offered no resistance
to it. With the money thus summarily acquired he not only raised troops, but
hired Russian auxiliaries to aid him in his design of expelling his brethren
from their appanages. Their territories were soon entered, and, as no defence had been organised, were
soon reduced; and these unfortunate victims of fraternal violence fled to Posnania, the only place which still held for Henry. In
vain did they appeal to his justice no less than his affection, in vain did
they endeavour to bend the heart of the haughty
Agnes, whom they well knew to be the chief author of their Woes. A deaf ear was
offered to their supplications, and they were even given to understand that
their banishment from the country would follow their expulsion from their
possessions.
This arbitrary violence made a deep impression on the Poles.
The archbishop of Gnesen espoused the cause of the deprived princes. Uszebor, palatine of Sandomir,
raised troops in their behalf. The views of both were aided far beyond their
expectation by a tragic incident. Count Peter, a nobleman of great riches and
influence, who had been the confidential friend of Boleslaw the Wry-mouthed,
and who lived in the court of Wladislaw, inveighed both in public and private
against the measures of the duke. But as his opposition was confined to
speaking, it did not wholly destroy his favour with
the latter. One day, both being engaged in hunting, they alighted to take
refreshment. As they afterwards reclined on the hard, cold ground (it was the
winter season), Wladislaw observed: “ We are not so comfortably situated here,
Peter, as thy wife now is, on a bed of down with her fat abbot Skrezcpiski!”. “No,” replied the other; “nor as yours in
the arms of your page Dobiesz!”. Whether either
intended more than as a jest is doubtful, but the count paid dear for his freedom.
The incensed Agnes, to whom the duke communicated the repartee, contrived to
vindicate herself in his eyes; but she vowed the destruction of the count. She
had him seized at an entertainment, thrown into prison, and deprived both of
his tongue and eyes.
The popular indignation now burst forth in every direction. Uszebor defeated the Russian auxiliaries; the Pomeranians
poured their wild hordes into Great Poland; the pope excommunicated the
princess, because through her he was disappointed of the aids he solicited
against the infidels; and the same dreaded doom was hurled at the head of the
duke by the archbishop of Gnesen, the staunch advocate of the exiled princes.
Wladislaw himself was defeated, and forced to take refuge in Cracow. Thither he
was pursued by his indignant subjects, who would probably have served him as he
had done Count Peter, had he not precipitately abandoned both sceptre and consort and fled into Germany to implore the
aid of his brother-in-law, the emperor Conrad. Cracow fell; Agnes became the
captive of the princes whose ruin she had all but effected. Her mean
supplications moved their contempt as much as her ambition and cruelty had
provoked their hatred. She was, however, respectfully conducted over the
frontiers of the duchy, and told to rejoin her kindred.
By the princes and nobles, Boleslaw, the eldest of the
remaining brothers, was unanimously elected to the vacant dignity. The new duke
had need of all his talents and courage—and he possessed both in no ordinary
degree—to meet the difficulties of his situation. By confirming his brothers in
their respective appanages, and even increasing their territories, he
effectually gained their support; but he had to defend his rights against the
whole force of the empire, which espoused the cause of the exiles. In a
personal interview, indeed, he disarmed the hostility of Conrad, who was too
honest to oppose a man whose conduct he could not fail to approve; but
Frederick Barbarossa, the successor of that emperor, was less scrupulous, or
more ambitious. A resolution of the diet having summoned the Polish duke to
surrender his throne to Wladislaw, or acknowledge his country tributary to the
empire, he prepared to defend his own dignity and the national independence.
Aided by his brothers, whose privileges he had so religiously
respected, and by his subjects, whose welfare he had constantly endeavoured to promote, he feared not the result, though an
overwhelming force of imperialists and Bohemians rapidly approached Silesia.
Had he ventured, however, to measure arms with the formidable Barbarossa,
neither the valour of his troops nor the goodness of
his cause would have availed him much; but by hovering about the flanks of the
enemy, by harassing them with repeated skirmishes, and, above all, by laying
waste the country through which they marched, he constrained them to sue for
peace. The conditions were that Wladislaw should have Silesia, and that
Barbarossa should be furnished with three hundred Polish lances in his
approaching expedition into Italy. The former died before he could take
possession of the province; but through the interference of the latter it was
divided among his three sons, who held it as a fief of Poland, and did homage
for it to Duke Boleslaw.
The subsequent exploits of Boleslaw were less successful. In
one expedition, indeed, he reduced the Prussians, who, not content with
revolting ever since the death of Boleslaw the Wry-mouthed, had abolished
Christianity and returned to their ancient idolatry; but, in a second, his
troops were drawn into a marshy country, were there surprised, and almost
annihilated. This was a severe blow to Poland; among the number of the slain
was Henry, the duke’s brother, whose provinces of Sandomir and Lublin now became the appanage of Casimir.
To add to the general consternation, the sons of Wladislaw
demanded the inheritance of their father; the. whole nation, indeed, began to
despise a ruler who had suffered himself to be so signally defeated by the
barbarians. By a powerful faction of nobles Casimir was invited to wrest the sceptre from the hands which held it. Fortunately for
Boleslaw his brother had the virtue to reject with indignation the alluring
offer; and he himself, with his characteristic address, succeeded in pacifying
the Silesian princes. His reverses, however, and the little consideration
shown him by his subjects, sank deep into his heart and hastened his death. To
his surviving son, Leszek, he left the duchies of Masovia and Cujavia; but, in conformity with the order of
settlement, the government of Poland devolved on Mieczyslaw (1174).
This prince, from his outward gravity and his affectation of
prudence, had been surnamed the Old; and the nation, on his accession, believed
it had reason to hope a wise and happy administration. But appearances are
proverbially deceitful, and gravity more so than any other. He had scarcely
seized the reins of government before his natural character, which it had been
his policy to cover, unfolded itself to the universal dismay of his people. His
cruelty, his avarice, his distrust, his tyranny made him the object alike of
their fear and hatred. They were beset with spies; were dragged before his
inexorable tribunal for fancied offences; were oppressed by unheard-of imposts,
which were collected with unsparing vigour; and were
subjected to sanguinary laws emanating from his caprice alone. Confiscation,
imprisonment, and death were the instruments of his government.
The people groaned; the nobles, whose privileges had
increased inversely with the decline of the monarchy, and whose pride made them
impatient of a superior, openly murmured; the clergy execrated one whose
exactions weighed even on them. At length the archbishop of Cracow, after
vainly endeavouring to effect his reformation, and
employing, like the prophet of old, a striking parable to convict him of his
injustice from his own lips, joined a conspiracy formed against him. Cracow was
the first to throw off its allegiance; the example was followed by the greater
part of the. kingdom, and with such rapidity that before he could dream of
defending his rights his brother Casimir was proclaimed duke of Poland (1178 a.d.).
EXTINCTION OF THE DYNASTY OF THE PIASTS
Casimir was the youngest brother of Boleslaw IV. It was not ambition
that induced him to take possession of the throne from which Mieczyslaw was
ejected, for, on the contrary, he even requested to be allowed to resign it to
him, pledging himself to the voyavods for his better
conduct. This offer was, however, refused, the Poles not being willing to trust
themselves to their former tyrant, and the only fruit of the negotiation was
the proof of Casimir’s mild and generous disposition.
He was engaged in various wars with the Russians, though not
of sufficient consequence to Poland to merit detail; in all which, however, he
rendered himself conspicuous for clemency and benevolenee,
“smoothing the rugged brow” of war, and binding up the wounds which his sword
had made.
The following anecdote is given as an admirable illustration
of the mildness and benevolence of this amiable prince: “He was one day at play
and won all the money of one of his nobility, who, incensed at his ill fortune,
suddenly struck the prince a blow on the ear, in the heat of his uncontrolled
passion. He fled immediately from justice, but, being pursued and overtaken,
was condemned to lose his head. The generous Casimir determined otherwise. ‘I
am not surprised,’ said he, ‘at the gentleman’s conduct; for, not having it in
his power to revenge himself on fortune, no wonder he should attack her favourite in me.’ After these generous words he revoked the
sentence, returned the nobleman his money, and declared that he alone was
faulty, as he encouraged, by his example, a pernicious practice that might
terminate in the ruin of hundreds of the people.”
This prince was indeed a father to his subjects: he viewed
the oppression of the nobles over the serfs with an eye of sorrow; and though
it was not in his power to change the constitution of Polish society by emancipating
them and making them perfectly independent, what he could do, he did, in
protecting them by strict laws from wanton cruelty. He has left behind him the
character of the most amiable monarch that ever swayed the Polish sceptre. He had faults, but they were almost lost in the
number of his noble qualities and his virtues. He was a lover of peace, and the
friend of the people.
His manners were of the most conciliating kind,
And e’en his failings loan’d to
virtue’s side.
His clemency was not the result of fear, nor his bounty the
ostentation of pride. Like Aristides, he never swerved from duty and equity,
and, unlike him, he tempered right with mercy; he has therefore even one claim
more than the Athenian to that rare and enviable appellation which his subjects
bestowed on him—the Just.
After several succeeding reigns in which nothing occurred
worthy to be remembered, we find Wladislaw III on the throne in 1306. He had
been deposed, but after five years he was reinstated in his authority. The
regal title had been revived by one of the preceding princes in the year 1296,
but the Poles were determined not to bestow it on Wladislaw until he had
rendered himself deserving of it by reforming his mind and character as a
prince.
The first opportunity he had of meriting well of his country
was in its defence against new enemies and
invaders—no less than the Teutonic knights. This military order had obtained a
settlement in Prussia, and were continually infesting the northern frontier.
The Germans who accompanied Frederick Barbarossa, emperor of Germany, to the
crusades in 1188, being left by his death without a commander, were at length
formed by Henry, king of Jerusalem, into a religious and martial order, called
the knights of St. George. This title was afterwards changed to knights of St.
Mary. They were required to be of noble parentage, to defend the Christian
religion, and promulgate it to the utmost extent of their power. In the year
1191 Pope Celestine III granted them a bull addressed to them under the title
of the Teutonic knights of the Hospital of St. Mary the Virgin. In the
beginning of the thirteenth century Kulm, in Prussia, was allotted to them,
under the condition that they should turn their arms only against their pagan neighbours. This injunction, however, was soon set at
naught; after conquering all Polish Prussia (as it is now called) and building Marienburg, they invaded the Polish territory, and overran
the greater part of Pomerania.
Wladislaw, when they had been denounced by the pope as out of
the pale and protection of the church, soon checked their inroads. After
several battles, in which the Poles were always superior, a great and last
effort was made, but still fortune declared against the Teutonic, knights; for,
according to the Polish historians, four thousand of
them were left dead on the field, besides thirty thousand auxiliaries, either
slain or taken captive. Wladislaw had it now in his power to exterminate the
order; but, at the sacrifice of policy, he contented himself with taking
possession of his own territory, and binding them down by a treaty.
Having thus fought the battles of his country, he returned,
to obtain the crown which his subjects could no longer refuse. However, to give
the ceremony the sanction of religion, Wladislaw sent an ambassador to Rome,
to persuade the pope, more perhaps by a liberal sum of money than words, to
ratify it with his authority. This confirmation being obtained, the ceremony of
coronation was performed with great pomp in the cathedral at Cracow. Death,
however, shortly transferred the diadem from his head to that of his son,
Casimir, in the year 1333, to whom he gave these instructions on his death-bed:
“If you have any regard for your honour or your
reputation, take care to yield nothing to the knights of the Teutonic order and
the marquis of Brandenburg. Resolve to bury yourself under the ruins of your
throne rather than abandon to them the portion of your heritage which they
possess, and for which you are responsible to your people and your children. Do
not leave your successors such an example of cowardice, which would be
sufficient to tarnish all your virtues and the splendour of the finest reign. Punish the traitors; and, happier than your father, drive them
from a kingdom where pity opened an asylum for them, for they are stained with
the blackest ingratitude”.
CASIMIR (III) THE GREAT (1333-1370 A.D.)
Notwithstanding the dying injunctions of his father, Casimir
made no attempts to expel the Teutonic knights from his dominions. The reason
doubtless was his inability to carry on the war with any prospect of success.
His situation was not without its difficulties: the Bohemian king still aspired
to the Polish throne; two of his own palatines were in the interests of that
monarch; and the internal state of the kingdom, the nullity of the laws, the
insecurity of property and persons, were evils which loudly called for
reparation. Peace with these enterprising monks was indispensable to the
reforms he meditated; it was at length concluded through the mediation of the
Hungarian king, but on conditions deeply mortifying to the nation. Cujavia and the territory of Dobrzyn were restored: but Casimir renounced for himself and successors Kulm, Michalow, and Pomerania. The clergy, the barons, the equestrian
order, long refused to sanction so unexpected a concession; but the arguments
of the king convinced them that no better terms could be procured, and they
reluctantly concurred.
In his proposed reformation of abuses, Casimir first applied
his attention to one which threatened to dissolve the frame of society. The
highways were infested by numerous parties of robbers, chiefly disbanded
soldiers, who plundered alike travellers and
peasantry, and long defied punishment. Many of them were doubtless protected by
certain nobles, whose interests in return they zealously espoused. They were
now pursued to their last hiding-places, were brought before the tribunals of
the country, and punished with inflexible severity. The scaffolds of Cracow and
the provincial towns continually smoked with the blood of the guilty. His
severity not only struck a salutary terror into the hearts of the lawless, but
impressed the whole nation with a high idea of his vigour.
Casimir at length aspired to the noble ambition of becoming
the legislator of his people. He found the laws barbarous, but so sanctioned by
time and custom that their abrogation or improvement was a work of great
delicacy.
Nor were the judges who administered them a less evil; their
sentences were not according to equity, but capricious or venal; corruption had
seized on all, from the princely palatine to the lowest link in the judicial
chain. To frame a body of laws uniform in their character and of universal
application, he convoked at Wisliza a diet of bishops,
palatines, castellans, and other magistrates, and, in concert with the best
informed of these, he digested a code which was thenceforth to be received as
obligatory anil perpetual. It was comprised in two books, one for Little, the
other for Great Poland. Their provisions were on the whole as good as could be
expected in an age when feudality reigned undisputed, and when civil rights
were little understood. They secured to the peasant, no less than to the
nobles, the possession and the rights of property, and subjected both, in an
equal manner, to the same penalties and tribunals. In other respects the
distinction between the two orders was strongly marked. Hitherto the peasants
had been adscripti gleba,
slaves to their masters, who had power of life and death over them, and were
not allowed to change owners. Servage was now
abolished; every serf employed in cultivating the ground, or in colonisation, was declared entitled to the privileges of
the peasant; but the peasants were still chained by a personal, though not a
territorial, dependence. Of this order there were two descriptions: those who,
as serfs previously, could do nothing without their master’s permission; and
those who, as born free or made so, could offer their industry to whatever master
they pleased. Yet even one of the latter class—free as he would be thought—who,
by his agreement with his feudal superior, could migrate to another estate
with or without that superior’s permission, was affected by the system. If he
sued another at the law, and sentence was pronounced in his favour,
his lord shared the compensation awarded. The murderer of a peasant paid ten
marks; five went to the lord, the other five to the family of the deceased. The
reason of these regulations, apparently so arbitrary, was, that as the time of
the peasant, so long as he remained on his lord’s estate, belonged to that
lord, so any injury inflicted on him which interfered with his labour, or diminished in anyway the profits of his
industry, must be felt by the other; by his death he left his family chargeable
to the owner of the estate; the lord then, as he participated in the injury,
had a claim to share also the compensation. The peasants not free—those who
could not migrate as they pleased, and whose families were subject to the same
dependence—were yet entitled to a share of the profits arising from their
industry, and with these were qualified to purchase their freedom. On their
decease their effects devolved, not as heretofore to their lords, but to their
surviving kindred. If ill-treated themselves, or if their wives and daughters
were persecuted by their masters, they could remove as free peasants to another
estate; the freed peasant could even aspire to the dignity of a noble. Money,
or long service in the martial retinue of the great barons, or success in war,
or royal favour, could procure that distinction. The
importance of the several. orders was carefully graduated by the code under
consideration. The murder of a free peasant was redeemed by ten marks; of a
peasant recently ennobled, or, in more correct language, recently admitted to
the privileges of a gentleman, fifteen marks; of a common noble (Anglice,
gentleman), thirty marks; of a baron or count, sixty marks. These distinctions
in time gradually disappeared; all were merged in the common designation of
noble; every noble was thenceforth equal; but the more the order was confounded
in itself, the more it laboured to deepen the line of
demarcation between itself and the inferior order of peasants. In the following
reigns, indeed, the salutary regulations made in favour of the latter by this prince were disregarded. The nobles again assumed over
them a despotic authority, and arrogated to themselves a jurisdiction which
rightly belonged to the local magistrates. Until within a very modern period,
this judicial vassalage subsisted in Poland. The lord of the soil held his
court for the trial of his peasantry as confidently as any judge in the realm;
in capital cases, however, the culprit lay within the jurisdiction of the palatinal courts. The whole life of this king was a long
chain of treaties; he wanted and he was obliged to have peace with all hostile
powers before he could start the great work which he had made the aim of his
life. He did not, however, conclude peace in a frivolous and light way at any
price; on the contrary, he wisely hesitated as long as it was possible before
he gave his last word, for he found it difficult to ask the country to make a
sacrifice before it had comprehended that it would do so for its own benefit.
The treaty of Kalish in 1343, and that of Bohemia a little later, left his
hands free so that he could begin his great task of reconstructing the internal organisation of his kingdom. The country he had
inherited from his father was no realm, but an incoherent complexity of
provinces dependent upon the personality of the king. For this country to
become a realm a soul had to be infused into it, and the soul of states is law.
In place of the crumbling exercise of the tottering laws of usage he put the
written constitutional laws. He touched, however, these time-honoured institutions with no violent hand; success never crowns such a proceeding; on
the contrary, he allowed space for development, and towards the end of his life
assembled all the state factors and explained to them the meaning of his
actions and endeavours; he expresses the tendency of
his whole life and the aim of the next future in the following words: “The same
people under one sovereign ought not to enjoy various rights, otherwise it is
similar to that monster with several heads. It is therefore useful for the
state if it proceeds according to one law, no matter in what province.” Casimir
was, however, far from disguising from himself the fact that the equality of
all the elements forming the state is suitable for nomads—for the patriarchal
conditions of the nations—but could never be practised in a cultured state such as Casimir was endeavouring to make Poland. And even if he had wished it, the community had reached such a
point of development from which it could indeed advance but not go backwards.
And here we discover in Casimir an inclination to imitate his German, Bohemian,
and Hungarian neighbours in the feudal system. He
forces the Masovian line of his house to become his liegemen, enters for some
time with Wladislaw the White into a similar relationship, and on his death-bed
bequeaths a great part of northern Poland to his grandson Casimir of Stettin,
as a feudal tenure. One perceives his endeavours to
have princes of vassalage. His inclination towards the feudal system appears
still more in his fostering of the nobility, to whom he voluntarily accorded an
influence over public affairs. The more the idea of property vanishes, the more
the principle of noble birth prevails, and the king does not hesitate to
countenance it and bestows coats-of-arms upon those families who did not
possess them. He encourages the abolition of, the old-established system of
equality existing among the nobles in favour of a new organisation which made the Polish nobility more
similar to the feudal; in a word, he recognises the
growing power of the nobility and allows it full development. He is, however,
also endeavouring to create and foster for himself
and the state a counterweight. This and his care for the national wealth were
the cause of the king’s inexhaustible endeavours in
the development of the towns and in the increase of settlements with German
rights. In this respect the reign of Casimir is especially epoch-making.
German colonisation had in his time
invaded the greatest part of the Polish realm as far as the district on the
other side of the Vistula, and one of the first acts of Casimir was to endow
the most important towns in the newly acquired south Russian provinces with
German right to transplant German settlers into the thinly populated districts.
Not without reason do the patriotic Polish authors of this period complain that
the reign of Casimir was in so far destructive to the national spirit, for
through his endeavours Germanism came so much to the
front that it pervaded every phase of life of the community. German was spoken
in the courts of justice, and the German language was employed in business and
commerce; nay, it was preached even in the churches of the most important
towns, and German expressions penetrated into the Polish language. It is a fact
almost unheard of in the history of the world that without any previous
conquest one nationality grew through another to such an extent that even now,
after centuries, traces are still easily recognised.
If, however, the national spirit suffered by it, the national wealth and the
welfare of the inhabitants gained. Casimir had received from his father an
impoverished land full of tears, and he left it at his death in such a state of
bloom and welfare that it could vie with the most prosperous country of the
time. Everywhere it was the result of German settlement where German right was
guaranteed. Where German right was granted to a town or a borough, the place
after a short time became prosperous, enlarged, and enriched. In order to
establish a firm foundation for the future, the king ordered the German right
to be put in the form of a code as the national laws; he also established
courts of appeal for those laws, and thus clearly showed his desire to nationalise those useful institutions which had assumed an
indestructible extent during his reign, and to guarantee their coexistence
together with national institutions.
As from his union with the princess Anne of Lithuania Casimir
had only a daughter,1 his attention was anxiously directed towards
the choice of a successor. Though several princes remained of the house of Piast, he did not consider any one of them sufficiently
powerful either to repress the insurrectionary disposition of his nobles, or
to make head against the military monks, whose ambition he so justly dreaded.
He proposed Louis, king of Hungary, the son of his sister, and therefore a Piast, to the diet he had convoked at Cracow. He thus recognised in that body a right to which they had never
dared to make a claim. They felt their importance, and resolved to avail themselves
of it. He encountered great opposition. One party would have him to nominate
the duke of Masovia; another, the duke of Oppelen; both reproached him for his partiality to a
foreigner, in prejudice of the male descendants of his house. Fortunately for
his views, they opposed each other with so much animosity that, in the end,
both adopted his proposition as a means of avoiding the shame of a defeat. But
though they thus united in the election of Louis, they resolved to draw their
own advantage from it. The sceptre of Casimir, though
never swayed more rigorously than justice permitted, they felt to be one of
iron, after the long impunity they had enjoyed during two centuries. Some years
afterwards they sent deputies to Breda, to inform Louis that, though in
compliance with the wishes of their king they had concurred in his election,
they should yet consider themselves free to make choice of any other prince if
he refused them certain concessions. He was not to invest Hungarians or any
other foreigners with the offices of the state; he was to declare the Polish
equestrian order exempt from contributions, to confirm them in their utmost privileges,
and even to support their retinues in his warlike expeditions. The Hungarian
king had the weakness to comply with these and other demands, and thereby to
forge chains for his successors. Hence the origin of the pacta conventa, or the covenants between the nobles and the
candidate they proposed to elect—covenants exclusively framed for their own
benefit, and for the detriment alike of king and peasantry.
Casimir was a man of peace. War he desired not, yet he never
shunned it when it was forced upon him, or when the voice of his nobles
demanded it. Both he and they, perhaps, feared the knights too much to engage
with them; but he triumphed over the Silesians (now subject to the Bohemians),
the Russians, the Lithuanians, and Tatars; he subdued Volhinia and Podolia, with the palatinates of Brescia and Beltz.
These successes, with the alliance of two princes so powerful as Louis and the
emperor, rendered him formidable to his neighbours,
and deterred his enemies of Pomerania from their cruel aggressions.
But the great qualities of this prince were sullied by some
excesses. He was much addicted to drunkenness, and immoderately so to women.
Long before his father’s death he had dishonoured the
daughter of an Hungarian noble, and fled from the vengeance of her friends. To
none of his wives (and he had three) did he dream of fidelity. After the death
of the princess Anne, he married Adelaide, a German princess; but her jealousy,
and still more her reproaches, incensed him so much that he exiled her to a fortress.
His career of intemperance was thenceforth the more headstrong. He soon became enamoured of a Bohemian lady, whom all his arts, however,
failed to seduce, and who declared she would yield only to marriage. (How his
engagement with Adelaide was to be set aside, we are not informed; perhaps he
had the art to convince her that he had obtained a divorce.) He feigned to
comply; but instead of the bishop of Cracow, whom she wished to perform the
ceremony, and whose authority she conceived would sanction the act, he
substituted a monk (the abbot of Tynieck), who
assumed the pontifical robes, and thus became a participator in the most
detestable of deceptions. Her he soon discarded, to make way for a Jewess named
Esther, by whom he had two sons. During this concubine’s favour Poland was the paradise of the Israelites; the privileges, indeed, which at her
entreaties he granted to them, remained in force long after his reign, and, no
doubt, was the cause why they have continued for so many ages to regard this
kingdom with peculiar affection, and to select it as their chief residence.
After Esther, or perhaps contemporary with her, we find a multitude of favourites. His licentiousness knew no bounds; he
established a regular seraglio, which he filled with frail beauties. The
bishops murmured, but dared not openly reproach him; the pope expostulated, but
in vain. A priest of Cracow at length had the courage to reprove him; but as
he was quickly thrown into the Vistula, his fate deterred others from imitating
his temerity. Age effected what reason and religion had attempted in vain.
After his union with a third wife (a Piast), he
became less notorious for his amours; and as the fire of lust expired before
the chilling influence of age, his subjects had the consolation of finding that
their wives, sisters, and daughters were safe from pollution.
Casimir’s death was occasioned by a fall from his horse while
hunting. The accident might not have been fatal, had he not turned a deaf ear
to the advice of his physicians. To this day his memory is cherished by his
country, which justly regards him as the greatest prince of a great line. Of
his genius, his patriotism, his love of justice, his success in improving the
condition of his people, his acts are the best comment; but his splendid
qualities must not blind us to his vices—vices which not only sully the lustre of his character, but must have had a pernicious
influence on the minds of a people with whom the obligations of religion and
morality were not in that age usually strong.
During the reign of this last male prince of the house of Piast, the Flagellants, a numerous sect of enthusiasts, so
called from the rigour of their self-inflictions,
entered Poland from Hungary; they went naked to the waist, wore crosses on
their lower garments, and entered every town two by two, with caps descending
to their eyes, and exhibiting on their breasts and backs the wounds caused by
their merciless whippings. Twice a day, and once during the night, did they
inflict upon themselves this horrible penance—sometimes in the churches,
sometimes in the public cemeteries, vociferating the whole time, “Mercy!” After
which, joining in a song alluding to our Saviour’s passion, they would suddenly throw themselves on the ground, regardless of
stones, flint, or mud ; one of their lay preachers would then pass from one to
another, saying, “ God forgives thee thy sins!” Thirty days’ continued
suffering they considered a full atonement for sin; hence they dispensed with
the sacraments, which they taught were abrogated, grace being obtained and
guilt removed by this penance alone. They took in a strange sense that most
Christian of truths, “without shedding of blood there can be no remission.”
The success of these madmen in making proselytes would appear incredible, had
we not instances enough in our times how easily heresy and fanaticism—and
those, too, of the worst kind—may be propagated among the vulgar. Hungary,
Poland, Germany, Italy, France, and even England, were overrun by the
Flagellants. They were long treated with respect even by those who considered
them as displaying more zeal than knowledge; but, in the end, it was found
that their vices were superior to both. Men and women roamed together from
kingdom to kingdom; and while thus publicly enduring so severe a discipline,
made ample amends for it in secret; they lived in the worst species of
fornication. Until their knavery was discovered, and they were scouted by the
very populace, pope and prince vainly endeavoured to
repress them.
LOUIS
(1370-1382 A.D.)
On the death of Casimir, there being no immediate heirs, his
sister’s son, Louis, king of Hungary, was called to the Polish throne.
As Louis was the sovereign of another kingdom, the Polish
nobles, apprehending that their interests would be compromised to those of his
other subjects, made him agree to certain stipulations as a safeguard before
they would allow him to take
possession of the insignia of authority. There had always been some form of
this kind on the accession of the preceding kings, but it was merely a formal
coronation oath, binding the new monarch to preserve the interests of his
people. In the present case it became something more than a mere matter of form,
being made in fact a “corner-stone” of the Polish constitution. This bond
between the king and his subjects was called the Pacta Conventa,
and—subject to the alterations made by the diets—has continued to be
administered to the monarchs on oath ever since, and is the Magna Charta of
Poland. The conditions required of Louis were as follows: He was obliged to
resign all right to most of the extensive domains annexed before to the. crown,
and make them the benefices of his officers or starostas,
whom he could not remove without consulting the senate, or assembly of nobles.
He was not to exact any personal service, to impose any taxes, or wage war
without their consent. Nor was he to interfere with the authority of the lords
over their serfs. The power of the king was thus limited to little, more than
that of a guardian of the laws.
Louis agreed to these demands, but his conduct afterwards
proved that it was not with an intention of observing them. He fixed his
residence entirely in Hungary, and, regardless of the complaints of the Poles,
filled all the principal offices with Hungarians. Great disturbances ensued,
and the neighbours of Poland, taking advantage of the
discord, made frequent incursions. Happily, however, death removed the author
of these troubles after he had reigned twelve years, and, having no male heirs,
Louis terminated the dynasty of the Piasts in the
year 1382.
In this first period were laid the foundations of all the
most important Polish institutions, its laws, diets, orders, and not only political
establishments, but those of learning also.
The laws, we have seen, were formed into a regular code by
Casimir; Wladislaw first assembled his nobles in a diet in the year 1331, and
his successor, Casimir, followed his example. These convocations were not
merely assemblies of one order, but were formed by the kings on the very
principle of balance of power, between the aristocracy, consisting of the
influential nobles, and the numerous barons who possessed the title of
noblemen, but, in fact, constituted a separate interest. This is a distinction
of no small importance; all the army, at least those who fought on horseback,
were styled nobles, for miles and nobilis were synonymous.
The commercial classes were not admitted to any great
privileges, since at that time they consisted chiefly of foreigners and Jews.
The latter people, indeed, had obtained possession of most of the ready money
in Poland, as well as elsewhere. Boleslaw II granted them a charter in 1264,
and the same protection was extended to them by Casimir the Great. It is said
that this prince was interested in their favour by
Esther, a young Jewess, of whom he was enamoured.
Cracow was in his time one of the Hanse towns in alliance with forty other
cities in Europe. The exchange, still standing, impresses us with a high idea
of the commerce of this age, thus intrusted to the
Jews. So sedulously did this industrious people avail themselves of their
advantages, that at the marriage of Casimir’s granddaughter, Elizabeth, Wierzynck, a Jewish merchant of Cracow, requested the honour of being allowed to make the young bride a marriage
present of 100,000 florins of gold, an immense sum at that time, and equal to
her dowry from her grandfather.
With regard to the learning of this period, we first meet
with the monkish historian, Gallus, who wrote between the years 1110 and 1135.
His history commences in 825, and extends to 1118. According to the custom of
his order, he wrote in bad Latin verse. He was followed by Matthew Cholewa, bishop of Cracow, and Vincent Kadlubek.
This latter writer was also diocesan of the same see, and was born about the
year 1160. He wrote in the time of Casimir the Just, and in his history
attempts to penetrate the mysteries of the Polish origin. But the circumstance
which most conduced to the promotion of learning in Poland was the foundation
of the University of Cracow, by Casimir the Great, in 1347. It was regulated in
imitation of that of Paris, and such eminence had its professors attained in a
short time that Pope Urban V estimated it, in 1364, as equal to any of the
universities of Europe.
CHAPTER II.
ZENITH AND DECLINE1382-1696 a.d
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