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Partitions of Poland

The Partitions of Poland[a] were three partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth that took place toward the end of the 18th century and ended the existence of the state, resulting in the elimination of sovereign Poland and Lithuania for 123 years. The partitions were conducted by the Habsburg monarchy, the Kingdom of Prussia, and the Russian Empire, which divided up the Commonwealth lands among themselves progressively in the process of territorial seizures and annexations.[1][2][3][4]

Partitions of Poland
Partitions
The three partitions of Poland (the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth). The Russian Partition (brown), the Austrian Partition (green), and the Prussian Partition (blue)

The First Partition was decided on August 5, 1772 after the Bar Confederation lost the war with Russia. The Second Partition occurred in the aftermath of the Polish–Russian War of 1792 and the Targowica Confederation of 1792 when Russian and Prussian troops entered the Commonwealth and the partition treaty was signed during the Grodno Sejm on January 23, 1793 (without Austria). The Third Partition took place on October 24, 1795, in reaction to the unsuccessful Polish Kościuszko Uprising the previous year. With this partition, the Commonwealth ceased to exist.[1]

In English, the term "Partitions of Poland" is sometimes used geographically as toponymy, to mean the three parts that the partitioning powers divided the Commonwealth into, namely: the Austrian Partition, the Prussian Partition and the Russian Partition. In Polish, there are two separate words for the two meanings. The consecutive acts of dividing and annexation of Poland are referred to as rozbiór (plural: rozbiory), while the term zabór (plural: zabory) refers to parts of the Commonwealth that were annexed in 1772–95 and which became part of Imperial Russia, Prussia, or Austria. Following the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the borders of the three partitioned sectors were redrawn; the Austrians established Galicia in the Austrian partition, whereas the Russians gained Warsaw from Prussia and formed an autonomous polity of Congress Poland in the Russian partition.

In Polish historiography, the term "Fourth Partition of Poland" has also been used, in reference to any subsequent annexation of Polish lands by foreign invaders. Depending on source and historical period, this could mean the events of 1815, or 1832 and 1846, or 1939. The term "Fourth Partition" in a temporal sense can also mean the diaspora communities that played an important political role in re-establishing the Polish sovereign state after 1918.

History

 
Allegory of the first partition of Poland, showing Catherine the Great of Russia (left), Joseph II of Austria and Frederick the Great of Prussia (right) quarrelling over their territorial seizures
 
Włodzimierz Tetmajer, Allegory of Dead Poland, St. Nicholas Cathedral, Kalisz

During the reign of Władysław IV (1632–1648), the liberum veto was developed, a policy of parliamentary procedure based on the assumption of the political equality of every "gentleman/Polish nobleman", with the corollary that unanimous consent was needed for all measures.[1] A single member of parliament's belief that a measure was injurious to his own constituency (usually simply his own estate), even after the act had been approved, became enough to strike the act. Thus it became increasingly difficult to undertake action. The liberum veto also provided openings for foreign diplomats to get their ways, through bribing nobles to exercise it.[1] Thus, one could characterise Poland–Lithuania in its final period (mid-18th century) before the partitions as already in a state of disorder and not a completely sovereign state, and almost as a vassal state,[5] with Russian tsars effectively choosing Polish kings. This applies particularly to the last Commonwealth King Stanisław August Poniatowski, who for some time had been a lover of Russian Empress Catherine the Great.

In 1730 the neighbors of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Rzeczpospolita), namely Prussia, Austria and Russia, signed a secret agreement to maintain the status quo: specifically, to ensure that the Commonwealth laws would not change. Their alliance later became known in Poland as the "Alliance of the Three Black Eagles" (or Löwenwolde's Treaty), because all three states used a black eagle as a state symbol (in contrast to the white eagle, a symbol of Poland). The Commonwealth had been forced to rely on Russia for protection against the rising Kingdom of Prussia, which demanded a slice of the northwest in order to unite its Western and Eastern portions; this would leave the Commonwealth with a Baltic coast only in Latvia and Lithuania.[1] Catherine had to use diplomacy to win Austria to her side.

The Commonwealth had remained neutral in the Seven Years' War (1756–1763), yet it sympathized with the alliance of France, Austria, and Russia, and allowed Russian troops access to its western lands as bases against Prussia. Frederick II retaliated by ordering enough Polish currency counterfeited to severely affect the Polish economy. Through the Polish nobles whom Russia controlled and the Russian Minister to Warsaw, ambassador and Prince Nicholas Repnin, Empress Catherine the Great forced a constitution on the Commonwealth at the so-called Repnin Sejm of 1767, named after ambassador Repnin, who effectively dictated the terms of that Sejm (and ordered the capture and exile to Kaluga of some vocal opponents of his policies,[5][6][7] including bishop Józef Andrzej Załuski[8] and others). This new constitution undid the reforms made in 1764 under Stanisław II. The liberum veto and all the old abuses of the last one and a half centuries were guaranteed as unalterable parts of this new constitution (in the so-called Cardinal Laws[7][9]). Repnin also demanded the Russian protection of the rights of peasants in private estates of Polish and Lithuanian noblemen, religious freedom for the Protestant and Orthodox Christians and the political freedoms for Protestants, Orthodox Christians and Eastern Catholics (Uniates), including their right to occupy all state positions, including a royal one. The next king could be a member of the Russian ruling dynasty now. The Sejm approved this. Resulting reaction among some of Poland's Roman Catholics, as well as the deep resentment of Russian intervention in the Commonwealth's domestic affairs including the exile to Russia of the top Roman Catholic bishops, the members of the Polish Senate, led to the War of the Confederation of Bar of 1768–1772, formed in Bar, where the Poles tried to expel Russian forces from Commonwealth territory.[5][7] The irregular and poorly commanded Polish forces had little chance in the face of the regular Russian army and suffered a major defeat. Adding to the chaos was a Ukrainian Cossack and peasant rebellion in the east (Koliyivshchyna), which erupted in 1768 and resulted in massacres of Polish noblemen (szlachta), Jews, Uniates, ethnic minorities and Catholic priests, before it was put down by Russian and governmental Polish troops. This uprising led to the intervention of the Ottoman Empire, supported by Roman Catholic France and Austria. Bar confederation and France promised Podolia and Volhynia and the protectorate over the Commonwealth to the Ottoman Empire for armed support.

In 1769 the Habsburg monarchy annexed a small territory of Spisz and in 1770 it annexed Nowy Sącz and Nowy Targ. These territories had been a bone of contention between Poland and Hungary, which was a part of the Monarchy. Nevertheless, the Ottoman Empire, the Bar confederation and its French and European volunteers were defeated by Russian forces and Polish governmental ones with the aid of Great Britain. As Russia moved into the Crimea and the Danubian Principalities (which the Habsburg monarchy long coveted), King Frederick II of Prussia and Maria Theresa were worried that the defeat of the Ottoman Empire would severely upset the balance of power in Eastern Europe. Frederick II began to construct the partition to rebalance the power in Eastern Europe.

First Partition

 
The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth after the First Partition, as a protectorate of the Russian Empire (1773–1789)

In February 1772, the agreement of partition was signed in Vienna. Early in August, Russian, Prussian and Austrian troops occupied the provinces agreed upon among themselves. Nevertheless, several battles and sieges took place, as Bar confederation troops and French volunteers refused to lay down their arms (most notably, in Tyniec, Częstochowa and Kraków). On 5 August 1772, the occupation manifesto was issued, much to the consternation of a country too exhausted by the endeavors of the Confederation of Bar to offer successful resistance;[1] The partition treaty was ratified by its signatories on September 22, 1772. Frederick II of Prussia was elated with his success; Prussia took most of Royal Prussia (without Danzig) that stood between its possessions in the Kingdom of Prussia and the Margraviate of Brandenburg, as well as Ermland (Warmia), northern areas of Greater Poland along the Noteć River (the Netze District), and parts of Kuyavia (but not the city of Toruń).[1] Despite token criticism of the partition from Empress Maria Theresa, Austrian statesman Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg, was proud of wresting as large a share as he did, with the rich salt mines of Bochnia and Wieliczka. To Austria fell Zator and Auschwitz (Oświęcim), part of Lesser Poland embracing parts of the counties of Kraków and Sandomir and the whole of Galicia, less the city of Kraków. Empress Catherine II of Russia was also satisfied in spite of the loss of Galicia to the Habsburg monarchy. By this "diplomatic document" Russia came into possession of that section of Livonia that had remained in Commonwealth control, and of eastern Belarus embracing the counties of Vitebsk, Polotsk and Mstislavl.[1]

 
Rejtan at Sejm 1773, oil on canvas by Jan Matejko, 1866, 282 cm × 487 cm (111 in × 192 in), Royal Castle in Warsaw

By this partition, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth lost about 30% of its territory and half of its population[1] (four million people), of which a large portion had not been ethnically Polish. By seizing northwestern Poland, Prussia instantly gained control over 80% of the Commonwealth's total foreign trade. Through levying enormous customs duties, Prussia accelerated the collapse of the Commonwealth.[10]

After having occupied their respective territories, the three partitioning powers demanded that King Stanisław and the Sejm approve their action. When no help was forthcoming and the armies of the combined nations occupied Warsaw to compel by force of arms the calling of the assembly, no alternative could be chosen to save passive submission to their will. The so-called Partition Sejm, with Russian military forces threatening the opposition, on September 18, 1773, signed the treaty of cession, renouncing all claims of the Commonwealth to the occupied territories.

In 1772, Rousseau was invited to present recommendations for a new constitution for the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, resulting in the Considerations on the Government of Poland (1782), which was to be his last major political work.[11]

Second Partition

 
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth after the Second Partition (1793)
 
1793 Russian campaign medal

By 1790 the First Polish Republic had been weakened to such a degree that it was forced into an unnatural and terminal alliance with its enemy, Prussia. The Polish–Prussian Pact of 1790 was signed. The conditions of the Pact contributed to the subsequent final two partitions of Poland–Lithuania.

The May Constitution of 1791 enfranchised the bourgeoisie, established the separation of the three branches of government, and eliminated the abuses of the Repnin Sejm. Those reforms prompted aggressive actions on the part of its neighbours, wary of the potential renaissance of the Commonwealth. Arguing that Poland had fallen prey to the radical Jacobinism then at high tide in France, Russian forces invaded the Commonwealth in 1792.

In the War in Defense of the Constitution, pro-Russian conservative Polish magnates, the Confederation of Targowica, fought against Polish forces supporting the constitution, believing that Russians would help them restore the Golden Liberty. Abandoned by their Prussian allies, Polish pro-constitution forces, faced with Targowica units and the regular Russian army, were defeated. Prussia signed a treaty with Russia, agreeing that Polish reforms would be revoked, and both countries would receive chunks of Commonwealth territory. In 1793, deputies to the Grodno Sejm, last Sejm of the Commonwealth, in the presence of the Russian forces, agreed to Russian territorial demands. In the Second Partition, Russia and Prussia helped themselves to enough land so that only one-third of the 1772 population remained in Poland. Prussia named its newly gained province South Prussia, with Poznań (and later Warsaw) as the capital of the new province.

Targowica confederates, who did not expect another partition, and the king, Stanisław August Poniatowski, who joined them near the end, both lost much prestige and support. The reformers, on the other hand, were attracting increasing support, and in 1794 the Kościuszko Uprising began.

Third Partition

Kosciuszko's ragtag insurgent armies won some initial successes, but they eventually fell before the superior forces of the Russian Empire. The partitioning powers, seeing the increasing unrest in the remaining Commonwealth, decided to solve the problem by erasing any independent Polish state from the map. On 24 October 1795, their representatives signed a treaty, dividing the remaining territories of the Commonwealth between their three countries. One of Russia's chief foreign policy authors, Alexander Bezborodko, advised Catherine II on the Second and Third Partitions of Poland.[12]

The Russian part included 120,000 km2 (46,332 sq mi) and 1.2 million people with Vilnius, the Prussian part (new provinces of New East Prussia and New Silesia) 55,000 km2 (21,236 sq mi) and 1 million people with Warsaw, and the Austrian 47,000 km2 (18,147 sq mi) with 1.2 million and Lublin and Kraków.

Aftermath

The King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski, under Russian military escort left for Grodno where he abdicated on November 25, 1795; next he left for Saint Petersburg, Russia, where he would spend his remaining days. This act ensured that Russia would be seen as the most important of the partitioning powers.

With regard to population, in the First Partition, Poland lost over four to five million citizens (about a third of its population of 14 million before the partitions).[13] Only about 4 million people remained in Poland after the Second Partition which makes for a loss of another third of its original population, about a half of the remaining population.[14] By the Third Partition, Prussia ended up with about 23% of the Commonwealth's population, Austria with 32%, and Russia with 45%.[15]

Cumulative division of the Commonwealth territory[16]
Partition To Austria To Prussia To Russia Total annexed Total remaining
Area % Area % Area % Area % Area %
1772 81,900 km2 (31,600 sq mi) 11.17% 36,300 km2 (14,000 sq mi) 4.95% 93,000 km2 (36,000 sq mi) 12.68% 211,200 km2 (81,500 sq mi) 28.79% 522,300 km2 (201,700 sq mi) 71.21%
1793 57,100 km2 (22,000 sq mi) 7.78% 250,200 km2 (96,600 sq mi) 34.11% 307,300 km2 (118,600 sq mi) 41.90% 215,000 km2 (83,000 sq mi) 29.31%
1795 47,000 km2 (18,000 sq mi) 6.41% 48,000 km2 (19,000 sq mi) 6.54% 120,000 km2 (46,000 sq mi) 16.36% 215,000 km2 (83,000 sq mi) 29.31%
None
0%
Total 128,900 km2 (49,800 sq mi) 17.57% 141,400 km2 (54,600 sq mi) 19.28% 463,200 km2 (178,800 sq mi) 63.15% 733,500 km2 (283,200 sq mi) 100%

(Wandycz also offers slightly different total annexed territory estimates, with 18% for Austria, 20% for Prussia and 62% for Russia.)[15]

 
"A map of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania including Samogitia and Curland divided according to their dismemberments with the Kingdom of Prussia" from 1799

During the Napoleonic Wars and in their immediate aftermath the borders between partitioning powers shifted several times, changing the numbers seen in the preceding table. Ultimately, Russia ended up with most of the Polish core at the expense of Prussia and Austria. Following the Congress of Vienna, Russia controlled 82% of the pre-1772 Commonwealth's territory (this includes its puppet state of Congress Poland), Austria 11%, and Prussia 7%.[17]

As a result of the Partitions, Poles were forced to seek a change of status quo in Europe.[18][19] Polish poets, politicians, noblemen, writers, artists, many of whom were forced to emigrate (thus the term Great Emigration), became the revolutionaries of the 19th century, as desire for freedom became one of the defining parts of Polish romanticism.[20][21] Polish revolutionaries participated in uprisings in Prussia, the Austrian Empire and Imperial Russia.[22] Polish legions fought alongside Napoleon[23][24] and, under the slogan of For our freedom and yours, participated widely in the Spring of Nations (particularly the Hungarian Revolution of 1848).[22][25]

Poland would be briefly resurrected—if in a smaller frame—in 1807, when Napoleon set up the Duchy of Warsaw. After his defeat and the implementation of the Congress of Vienna treaty in 1815, the Russian-dominated Congress Kingdom of Poland was created in its place. After the Congress, Russia gained a larger share of Poland (with Warsaw) and, after crushing an insurrection in 1831, the Congress Kingdom's autonomy was abolished and Poles faced confiscation of property, deportation, forced military service, and the closure of their own universities. After the uprising of 1863, Russification of Polish secondary schools was imposed and the literacy rate dropped dramatically. In the Austrian sector which now was called Galicia, Poles fared better and were allowed to have representation in Parliament and to form their own universities, and Kraków with Lemberg (Lwów/Lviv) became centers of Polish culture and education. Meanwhile, Prussia Germanized the entire school system of its Polish subjects, and had no more respect for Polish culture and institutions than the Russian Empire. In 1915 a client state of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary was proposed and accepted by the Central Powers of World War I: the Regency Kingdom of Poland. After the end of World War I, the Central Powers' surrender to the Western Allies, the chaos of the Russian Revolution and the Treaty of Versailles finally allowed and helped the restoration of Poland's full independence after 123 years.

Fourth Partition

 
The partition of Poland according to the German–Soviet Pact; division of Polish territories in the years 1939–1941

The term "Fourth Partition of Poland" may refer to any subsequent division of Polish lands, including:

If one accepts more than one of those events as partitions, fifth, sixth, and even seventh partitions can be counted, but these terms are very rare. (For example, Norman Davies in God's Playground refers to the 1807 creation of the Duchy of Warsaw as the fourth partition, the 1815 Treaty of Vienna as the fifth, the 1918 Treaty of Brest-Litovsk as the sixth, and the 1939 division of Poland between Nazi Germany and the USSR as the seventh.)[27]

The term "Fourth Partition" was also used in the 19th and 20th centuries to refer to diaspora communities who maintained a close interest in the project of regaining Polish independence.[28] Sometimes termed Polonia, these expatriate communities often contributed funding and military support to the project of regaining the Polish nation-state. Diaspora politics were deeply affected by developments in and around the homeland, and vice versa, for many decades.[29]

Reasons, legality and justifications

More recent studies claim that partitions happened when the Commonwealth had been showing the beginning signs of a slow recovery and see the last two partitions as an answer to strengthening reforms in the Commonwealth and the potential threat they represented to its power-hungry neighbours.[19][30][31][32][33][34][35]

As historian Norman Davies stated, because the balance of power equilibrium was observed, many contemporary observers accepted explanations of the "enlightened apologists" of the partitioning state.[36][30] 19th-century historians from countries that carried out the partitions, such as 19th-century Russian scholar Sergey Solovyov, and their 20th century followers, argued that partitions were justified, as the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth had degenerated to the point of being partitioned because the counterproductive principle of liberum veto made decision-making on divisive issues, such as a wide-scale social reform, virtually impossible. Solovyov specified the cultural, language and religious break between the supreme and lowest layers of the society in the east regions of the Commonwealth, where the Belarusian and Ukrainian serf peasantry was Orthodox. Russian authors emphasized the historical connections between Belarus, Ukraine and Russia, as former parts of the medieval old Russian state where dynasty of Rurikids reigned (Kievan Rus').[37] Thus, Nikolay Karamzin wrote: "Let the foreigners denounce the partition of Poland: we took what was ours."[38] Russian historians often stressed that Russia annexed primarily Ukrainian and Belorussian provinces with Eastern Slavic inhabitants,[39] although many Ruthenians were no more enthusiastic about Russia than about Poland, and ignoring ethnically Polish and Lithuanian territories also being annexed later. A new justification for partitions arose with the Russian Enlightenment, as Russian writers such as Gavrila Derzhavin, Denis Fonvizin, and Alexander Pushkin stressed degeneration of Catholic Poland and the need to "civilize" it by its neighbors.[31]

Nonetheless, other 19th century contemporaries were much more skeptical; for example, British jurist Sir Robert Phillimore discussed the partition as a violation of international law;[40] German jurist Heinrich Bernhard Oppenheim presented similar views.[41] Other older historians who challenged such justifications for the Partitions included French historian Jules Michelet, British historian and politician Thomas Babington Macaulay, and Edmund Burke, who criticized the immorality of the partitions.[30][42] Nonetheless, most governments accepted the event as a fait acompli. The Ottoman Empire was one of only two countries in the world that refused to accept the partitions,[43] (the other being the Persian Empire),[44] and reserved a place in its diplomatic corps for an Ambassador of Lehistan (Poland).

Several scholars focused on the economic motivations of the partitioning powers. Hajo Holborn noted that Prussia aimed to take control of the lucrative Baltic grain trade through Danzig (Gdańsk).[45] In the 18th century the Russian peasants were escaping from Russia to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (where the once dire conditions have improved, unlike in Russia[46]) in significant enough numbers to become a major concern for the Russian Government sufficient to play a role in its decision to partition the Commonwealth (one of the reasons Catherine II gave for the partition of Poland was the fact that thousands of peasants escaped from Russia to Poland to seek a better fate").[47][48] Increasingly in the 18th century until the partitions solved this problem, Russian armies raided territories of the Commonwealth, officially to recover the escapees, but in fact kidnapping many locals.[47] Piotr Kimla noted that the Russian government spread international propaganda, mainly in France, which falsely exaggerated serfdom conditions in Poland, while ignoring worse conditions in Russia, as one of the justification for the partitions.[48]

Legacy

"Il Canto degli Italiani", the Italian National Anthem, contains a reference to the partition.[49]

The ongoing partitions of Poland were a major topic of discourse in The Federalist Papers, where the structure of the government of Poland, and of foreign influence over it, is used in several papers (Federalist No. 14, Federalist No. 19, Federalist No. 22, Federalist No. 39 for examples) as a cautionary tale for the writers of the U.S. Constitution.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Although the full name of the partitioned state was the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, while referring to the partitions, virtually all sources use the term Partitions of Poland, not Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, as Poland is the common short name for the state in question. The term Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth is effectively not used in literature on this subject.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Partitions of Poland". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2008. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  2. ^ Bideleux, Robert; Jeffries, Ian (1998). A History of Eastern Europe: Crisis and Change. Routledge. p. 156.
  3. ^ Batt, Judy; Wolczuk, Kataryna (2002). Region, State and Identity in Central and Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 153.
  4. ^ Sinkoff, Nancy (2004). Out of the Shtetl: Making Jews Modern in the Polish Borderlands. Society of Biblical Literature. p. 271.
  5. ^ a b c Scott, Hamish M. (2001). The Emergence of the Eastern Powers, 1756–1775. Cambridge University Press. pp. 181–182. ISBN 0-521-79269-X.
  6. ^ H. Wickham Steed, A Short History of Austria-Hungary and Poland, 2007-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, 1914, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved on 3 August 2007.
  7. ^ a b c Seton-Watson, Hugh (1967). The Russian Empire, 1801–1917. Oxford University Press. p. 44. ISBN 0-19-822152-5.
  8. ^ Various, The Story of My Life, Penguin Classics, 2001, ISBN 0-14-043915-3, Google Print, p. 528
  9. ^ Butterwick, Richard (1998). Poland-Lithuania's Last King and English Culture: Stanisław August Poniatowski, 1732–1798. Oxford University Press. p. 169. ISBN 0-19-820701-8.
  10. ^ von Guttner, Darius (2015). The French Revolution. Nelson Cengage. p. 139.
  11. ^ Gourevitch, Victor, ed. (1997). Rousseau: 'The Social Contract' and Other Later Political Writings. Cambridge University Press. p. ix. ISBN 978-0-521-42446-2. from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  12. ^ "Alexander Bezborodko". Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  13. ^ Jerzy Lukowski; W. H. Zawadzki (2001). A Concise History of Poland: Jerzy Lukowski and Hubert Zawadzki. Cambridge University Press. pp. 96–98. ISBN 978-0-521-55917-1. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  14. ^ Jerzy Lukowski; W. H. Zawadzki (2001). A Concise History of Poland: Jerzy Lukowski and Hubert Zawadzki. Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–103. ISBN 978-0-521-55917-1. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  15. ^ a b Piotr Stefan Wandycz (2001). The Price of Freedom: A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present. Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-0-415-25490-8. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  16. ^ Davies, Norman (2005). God's Playground. A History of Poland. The Origins to 1795. Vol. I (revised ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 394. ISBN 978-0-19-925339-5.
  17. ^ "Po przyłączeniu do obwodu białostockiego w 1807 roku do cesartwa i utworzeniu osiem lat później Królestwa Polskiego wnuk Katarzyny zjednoczył pod swoim berłem około 82% przedrozbiorowego terytorium Rzeczypospolitej (dla porównania – Austria 11%, Prusy 7%). "[in:] Basil Kerski, Andrzej Stanisław Kowalczyk. Realiści z wyobraźnią. Uniwersytet Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej. 2007 page. 318 ISBN 978-83-227-2620-4
  18. ^ Johnson, Lonnie R. (1996). Central Europe: Enemies, Neighbors, Friends. Oxford University Press. pp. 127–128. ISBN 0-19-510071-9.
  19. ^ a b Piotr Stefan Wandycz (2001). The Price of Freedom: A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present. Routledge. p. 133. ISBN 0-415-25491-4.
  20. ^ Zawadzki, W. H. (1993). A Man of Honour: Adam Czartoryski as a Statesman of Russia and Poland, 1795–1831. Oxford University Press. p. 330. ISBN 0-19-820303-9.
  21. ^ Auer, Stefan (2004). Liberal Nationalism in Central Europe. Routledge. p. 60. ISBN 0-415-31479-8.
  22. ^ a b Dowe, Dieter (2001). Europe in 1848: Revolution and Reform. Berghahn. p. 180. ISBN 1-57181-164-8. While it is often and quite justifiably remarked that there was hardly a barricade or battlefield in Europe between 1830 and 1870 where no Poles were fighting, this is especially true for the revolution of 1848/1849.
  23. ^ Pachonski, Jan; Wilson, Reuel K. (1986). Poland's Caribbean Tragedy: A Study of Polish Legions in the Haitian War of Independence 1802–1803. East European Monographs/Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-88033-093-7.
  24. ^ Fedosova, Elena I. (1998). "Polish Projects of Napoleon Bonaparte". Journal of the International Napoleonic Society.
  25. ^ Gods, Heroes, & Legends
  26. ^ Brecher, Michael; Wilkenfeld, Jonathan (1997). A Study of Crisis. University of Michigan Press. p. 255. ISBN 0-472-10806-9.
  27. ^ Norman Davies. God's Playground: A History of Poland: 1795 to the Present. Oxford University Press. 2005. pp. 218, 225, 284, 321.
  28. ^ Cygan, Mary (1998). "Inventing Polonia: Notions of Polish American Identity, 1870–1990". Prospects. 23: 209–246. doi:10.1017/S0361233300006335.
  29. ^ Lopata, Helena Znaniecka (1994). Polish Americans. Transaction.
  30. ^ a b c Norman Davies, Europe: A History, Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-19-820171-0, Google Print, p.661
  31. ^ a b Nowak, Andrzej (1997). "The Russo-Polish Historical Confrontation". Sarmatian Review. XVII (1).
  32. ^ The Army of Grand Duchy of Warsaw 2005-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Hon. Carl L. Bucki, University of Buffalo's History of Poland series, The Constitution of May 3, 1791 December 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Paul W. Schroeder, The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848, Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-19-820654-2, Google print p.84
  35. ^ Geoffrey Russell, The Making of Modern Europe, 1648–1780, Routledge, 2003, ISBN 0-415-30155-6, Google Print, p.548
  36. ^ Norman Davies, God's Playground: A History of Poland in Two Volumes, Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-19-925339-0, Google Print, p.283
  37. ^ E.g., Sergey Solovyov's History of the Downfall of Poland (Moscow, 1863).
  38. ^ Н.М. Карамзин. Записка о древней и новой России в ее политическом и гражданском отношениях
  39. ^ Riasanovsky, Nicholas V. (1952). "Old Russia, the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe". American Slavic and East European Review. 11 (3): 171–188. doi:10.2307/2491975. JSTOR 2491975.
  40. ^ Sir Robert Phillimore, Commentaries Upon International Law, 1854, T. & J. W. Johnson, Google Print, p.819
  41. ^ Sharon Korman, The Right of Conquest: The Acquisition of Territory by Force in International Law and Practice, Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-19-828007-6, Google Print, p.101
  42. ^ Poland The First Partition
  43. ^ Prazmowska, Anita (2010). Poland: A Modern History. I. B. Tauris. p. 25.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-01-22. Retrieved 2019-11-12.
  45. ^ Hajo Holborn (1 December 1982). A History of Modern Germany: 1648–1840. Princeton University Press. p. 256. ISBN 978-0-691-00796-0. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
  46. ^ Wagner, W.J. (1992). "May 3, 1791, and the Polish constitutional tradition". The Polish Review. 36 (4): 383–395. JSTOR 25778591.
  47. ^ a b Czajewski, Jerzy (October 2004). [Russian population exodus into the Rzeczpospolita]. Promemoria (6/15). ISSN 1509-9091. Archived from the original on 3 January 2005.
  48. ^ a b Kimla, Piotr (2011). "Przywary niewolników pańszczyźnianych w XVIII-wiecznej Rzeczypospolitej w relacji Huberta Vautrina". Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska. Sectio G. Ius (in Polish). 58 (1): 87–97. ISSN 0458-4317.
  49. ^ "L'Inno nazionale". Quirinale.it. Retrieved 2013-11-17.

Further reading

  • Lewitter, L. R. "The Partitions of Poland" History Today (Dec 1958) 8#12 pp 813–820.
  • Lewitter, Lucjan R. "The Partitions of Poland" in A. Goodwyn, ed. The New Cambridge Modern History: vol 8 1763–93 (1965) pp. 333–59.
  • Lord, Robert. The second partition of Poland; a study in diplomatic history (1915) online
  • Lukowski, Jerzy. The Partitions of Poland 1772, 1793, 1795 (1998); online review
  • McLean, Thomas. The Other East and Nineteenth-Century British Literature: Imagining Poland and the Russian Empire (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) pp. 14–40.</ref>

External links

  • Krzysztof Wroński, (in Polish)
  • Where Is Poland?, a multimedia guide created by Culture.pl to the 123-year period during which Poland was partitioned

partitions, poland, fourth, partition, redirects, here, 2013, documentary, film, fourth, partition, film, were, three, partitions, polish, lithuanian, commonwealth, that, took, place, toward, 18th, century, ended, existence, state, resulting, elimination, sove. Fourth Partition redirects here For the 2013 documentary film see Fourth Partition film The Partitions of Poland a were three partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth that took place toward the end of the 18th century and ended the existence of the state resulting in the elimination of sovereign Poland and Lithuania for 123 years The partitions were conducted by the Habsburg monarchy the Kingdom of Prussia and the Russian Empire which divided up the Commonwealth lands among themselves progressively in the process of territorial seizures and annexations 1 2 3 4 Partitions of PolandThe Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772PartitionsThe three partitions of Poland the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Russian Partition brown the Austrian Partition green and the Prussian Partition blue The First Partition was decided on August 5 1772 after the Bar Confederation lost the war with Russia The Second Partition occurred in the aftermath of the Polish Russian War of 1792 and the Targowica Confederation of 1792 when Russian and Prussian troops entered the Commonwealth and the partition treaty was signed during the Grodno Sejm on January 23 1793 without Austria The Third Partition took place on October 24 1795 in reaction to the unsuccessful Polish Kosciuszko Uprising the previous year With this partition the Commonwealth ceased to exist 1 In English the term Partitions of Poland is sometimes used geographically as toponymy to mean the three parts that the partitioning powers divided the Commonwealth into namely the Austrian Partition the Prussian Partition and the Russian Partition In Polish there are two separate words for the two meanings The consecutive acts of dividing and annexation of Poland are referred to as rozbior plural rozbiory while the term zabor plural zabory refers to parts of the Commonwealth that were annexed in 1772 95 and which became part of Imperial Russia Prussia or Austria Following the Congress of Vienna in 1815 the borders of the three partitioned sectors were redrawn the Austrians established Galicia in the Austrian partition whereas the Russians gained Warsaw from Prussia and formed an autonomous polity of Congress Poland in the Russian partition In Polish historiography the term Fourth Partition of Poland has also been used in reference to any subsequent annexation of Polish lands by foreign invaders Depending on source and historical period this could mean the events of 1815 or 1832 and 1846 or 1939 The term Fourth Partition in a temporal sense can also mean the diaspora communities that played an important political role in re establishing the Polish sovereign state after 1918 Contents 1 History 1 1 First Partition 1 2 Second Partition 1 3 Third Partition 2 Aftermath 3 Fourth Partition 4 Reasons legality and justifications 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit Allegory of the first partition of Poland showing Catherine the Great of Russia left Joseph II of Austria and Frederick the Great of Prussia right quarrelling over their territorial seizures Wlodzimierz Tetmajer Allegory of Dead Poland St Nicholas Cathedral Kalisz During the reign of Wladyslaw IV 1632 1648 the liberum veto was developed a policy of parliamentary procedure based on the assumption of the political equality of every gentleman Polish nobleman with the corollary that unanimous consent was needed for all measures 1 A single member of parliament s belief that a measure was injurious to his own constituency usually simply his own estate even after the act had been approved became enough to strike the act Thus it became increasingly difficult to undertake action The liberum veto also provided openings for foreign diplomats to get their ways through bribing nobles to exercise it 1 Thus one could characterise Poland Lithuania in its final period mid 18th century before the partitions as already in a state of disorder and not a completely sovereign state and almost as a vassal state 5 with Russian tsars effectively choosing Polish kings This applies particularly to the last Commonwealth King Stanislaw August Poniatowski who for some time had been a lover of Russian Empress Catherine the Great In 1730 the neighbors of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Rzeczpospolita namely Prussia Austria and Russia signed a secret agreement to maintain the status quo specifically to ensure that the Commonwealth laws would not change Their alliance later became known in Poland as the Alliance of the Three Black Eagles or Lowenwolde s Treaty because all three states used a black eagle as a state symbol in contrast to the white eagle a symbol of Poland The Commonwealth had been forced to rely on Russia for protection against the rising Kingdom of Prussia which demanded a slice of the northwest in order to unite its Western and Eastern portions this would leave the Commonwealth with a Baltic coast only in Latvia and Lithuania 1 Catherine had to use diplomacy to win Austria to her side The Commonwealth had remained neutral in the Seven Years War 1756 1763 yet it sympathized with the alliance of France Austria and Russia and allowed Russian troops access to its western lands as bases against Prussia Frederick II retaliated by ordering enough Polish currency counterfeited to severely affect the Polish economy Through the Polish nobles whom Russia controlled and the Russian Minister to Warsaw ambassador and Prince Nicholas Repnin Empress Catherine the Great forced a constitution on the Commonwealth at the so called Repnin Sejm of 1767 named after ambassador Repnin who effectively dictated the terms of that Sejm and ordered the capture and exile to Kaluga of some vocal opponents of his policies 5 6 7 including bishop Jozef Andrzej Zaluski 8 and others This new constitution undid the reforms made in 1764 under Stanislaw II The liberum veto and all the old abuses of the last one and a half centuries were guaranteed as unalterable parts of this new constitution in the so called Cardinal Laws 7 9 Repnin also demanded the Russian protection of the rights of peasants in private estates of Polish and Lithuanian noblemen religious freedom for the Protestant and Orthodox Christians and the political freedoms for Protestants Orthodox Christians and Eastern Catholics Uniates including their right to occupy all state positions including a royal one The next king could be a member of the Russian ruling dynasty now The Sejm approved this Resulting reaction among some of Poland s Roman Catholics as well as the deep resentment of Russian intervention in the Commonwealth s domestic affairs including the exile to Russia of the top Roman Catholic bishops the members of the Polish Senate led to the War of the Confederation of Bar of 1768 1772 formed in Bar where the Poles tried to expel Russian forces from Commonwealth territory 5 7 The irregular and poorly commanded Polish forces had little chance in the face of the regular Russian army and suffered a major defeat Adding to the chaos was a Ukrainian Cossack and peasant rebellion in the east Koliyivshchyna which erupted in 1768 and resulted in massacres of Polish noblemen szlachta Jews Uniates ethnic minorities and Catholic priests before it was put down by Russian and governmental Polish troops This uprising led to the intervention of the Ottoman Empire supported by Roman Catholic France and Austria Bar confederation and France promised Podolia and Volhynia and the protectorate over the Commonwealth to the Ottoman Empire for armed support In 1769 the Habsburg monarchy annexed a small territory of Spisz and in 1770 it annexed Nowy Sacz and Nowy Targ These territories had been a bone of contention between Poland and Hungary which was a part of the Monarchy Nevertheless the Ottoman Empire the Bar confederation and its French and European volunteers were defeated by Russian forces and Polish governmental ones with the aid of Great Britain As Russia moved into the Crimea and the Danubian Principalities which the Habsburg monarchy long coveted King Frederick II of Prussia and Maria Theresa were worried that the defeat of the Ottoman Empire would severely upset the balance of power in Eastern Europe Frederick II began to construct the partition to rebalance the power in Eastern Europe First Partition Edit Main article First Partition of Poland The Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth after the First Partition as a protectorate of the Russian Empire 1773 1789 In February 1772 the agreement of partition was signed in Vienna Early in August Russian Prussian and Austrian troops occupied the provinces agreed upon among themselves Nevertheless several battles and sieges took place as Bar confederation troops and French volunteers refused to lay down their arms most notably in Tyniec Czestochowa and Krakow On 5 August 1772 the occupation manifesto was issued much to the consternation of a country too exhausted by the endeavors of the Confederation of Bar to offer successful resistance 1 The partition treaty was ratified by its signatories on September 22 1772 Frederick II of Prussia was elated with his success Prussia took most of Royal Prussia without Danzig that stood between its possessions in the Kingdom of Prussia and the Margraviate of Brandenburg as well as Ermland Warmia northern areas of Greater Poland along the Notec River the Netze District and parts of Kuyavia but not the city of Torun 1 Despite token criticism of the partition from Empress Maria Theresa Austrian statesman Wenzel Anton Prince of Kaunitz Rietberg was proud of wresting as large a share as he did with the rich salt mines of Bochnia and Wieliczka To Austria fell Zator and Auschwitz Oswiecim part of Lesser Poland embracing parts of the counties of Krakow and Sandomir and the whole of Galicia less the city of Krakow Empress Catherine II of Russia was also satisfied in spite of the loss of Galicia to the Habsburg monarchy By this diplomatic document Russia came into possession of that section of Livonia that had remained in Commonwealth control and of eastern Belarus embracing the counties of Vitebsk Polotsk and Mstislavl 1 Rejtan at Sejm 1773 oil on canvas by Jan Matejko 1866 282 cm 487 cm 111 in 192 in Royal Castle in Warsaw By this partition the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth lost about 30 of its territory and half of its population 1 four million people of which a large portion had not been ethnically Polish By seizing northwestern Poland Prussia instantly gained control over 80 of the Commonwealth s total foreign trade Through levying enormous customs duties Prussia accelerated the collapse of the Commonwealth 10 After having occupied their respective territories the three partitioning powers demanded that King Stanislaw and the Sejm approve their action When no help was forthcoming and the armies of the combined nations occupied Warsaw to compel by force of arms the calling of the assembly no alternative could be chosen to save passive submission to their will The so called Partition Sejm with Russian military forces threatening the opposition on September 18 1773 signed the treaty of cession renouncing all claims of the Commonwealth to the occupied territories In 1772 Rousseau was invited to present recommendations for a new constitution for the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth resulting in the Considerations on the Government of Poland 1782 which was to be his last major political work 11 Second Partition Edit Main article Second Partition of Poland The Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth after the Second Partition 1793 1793 Russian campaign medal By 1790 the First Polish Republic had been weakened to such a degree that it was forced into an unnatural and terminal alliance with its enemy Prussia The Polish Prussian Pact of 1790 was signed The conditions of the Pact contributed to the subsequent final two partitions of Poland Lithuania The May Constitution of 1791 enfranchised the bourgeoisie established the separation of the three branches of government and eliminated the abuses of the Repnin Sejm Those reforms prompted aggressive actions on the part of its neighbours wary of the potential renaissance of the Commonwealth Arguing that Poland had fallen prey to the radical Jacobinism then at high tide in France Russian forces invaded the Commonwealth in 1792 In the War in Defense of the Constitution pro Russian conservative Polish magnates the Confederation of Targowica fought against Polish forces supporting the constitution believing that Russians would help them restore the Golden Liberty Abandoned by their Prussian allies Polish pro constitution forces faced with Targowica units and the regular Russian army were defeated Prussia signed a treaty with Russia agreeing that Polish reforms would be revoked and both countries would receive chunks of Commonwealth territory In 1793 deputies to the Grodno Sejm last Sejm of the Commonwealth in the presence of the Russian forces agreed to Russian territorial demands In the Second Partition Russia and Prussia helped themselves to enough land so that only one third of the 1772 population remained in Poland Prussia named its newly gained province South Prussia with Poznan and later Warsaw as the capital of the new province Targowica confederates who did not expect another partition and the king Stanislaw August Poniatowski who joined them near the end both lost much prestige and support The reformers on the other hand were attracting increasing support and in 1794 the Kosciuszko Uprising began Third Partition Edit Main article Third Partition of Poland Kosciuszko s ragtag insurgent armies won some initial successes but they eventually fell before the superior forces of the Russian Empire The partitioning powers seeing the increasing unrest in the remaining Commonwealth decided to solve the problem by erasing any independent Polish state from the map On 24 October 1795 their representatives signed a treaty dividing the remaining territories of the Commonwealth between their three countries One of Russia s chief foreign policy authors Alexander Bezborodko advised Catherine II on the Second and Third Partitions of Poland 12 The Russian part included 120 000 km2 46 332 sq mi and 1 2 million people with Vilnius the Prussian part new provinces of New East Prussia and New Silesia 55 000 km2 21 236 sq mi and 1 million people with Warsaw and the Austrian 47 000 km2 18 147 sq mi with 1 2 million and Lublin and Krakow Aftermath EditThe King of Poland Stanislaw August Poniatowski under Russian military escort left for Grodno where he abdicated on November 25 1795 next he left for Saint Petersburg Russia where he would spend his remaining days This act ensured that Russia would be seen as the most important of the partitioning powers With regard to population in the First Partition Poland lost over four to five million citizens about a third of its population of 14 million before the partitions 13 Only about 4 million people remained in Poland after the Second Partition which makes for a loss of another third of its original population about a half of the remaining population 14 By the Third Partition Prussia ended up with about 23 of the Commonwealth s population Austria with 32 and Russia with 45 15 Cumulative division of the Commonwealth territory 16 Partition To Austria To Prussia To Russia Total annexed Total remainingArea Area Area Area Area 1772 81 900 km2 31 600 sq mi 11 17 36 300 km2 14 000 sq mi 4 95 93 000 km2 36 000 sq mi 12 68 211 200 km2 81 500 sq mi 28 79 522 300 km2 201 700 sq mi 71 21 1793 57 100 km2 22 000 sq mi 7 78 250 200 km2 96 600 sq mi 34 11 307 300 km2 118 600 sq mi 41 90 215 000 km2 83 000 sq mi 29 31 1795 47 000 km2 18 000 sq mi 6 41 48 000 km2 19 000 sq mi 6 54 120 000 km2 46 000 sq mi 16 36 215 000 km2 83 000 sq mi 29 31 None 0 Total 128 900 km2 49 800 sq mi 17 57 141 400 km2 54 600 sq mi 19 28 463 200 km2 178 800 sq mi 63 15 733 500 km2 283 200 sq mi 100 Wandycz also offers slightly different total annexed territory estimates with 18 for Austria 20 for Prussia and 62 for Russia 15 A map of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania including Samogitia and Curland divided according to their dismemberments with the Kingdom of Prussia from 1799During the Napoleonic Wars and in their immediate aftermath the borders between partitioning powers shifted several times changing the numbers seen in the preceding table Ultimately Russia ended up with most of the Polish core at the expense of Prussia and Austria Following the Congress of Vienna Russia controlled 82 of the pre 1772 Commonwealth s territory this includes its puppet state of Congress Poland Austria 11 and Prussia 7 17 As a result of the Partitions Poles were forced to seek a change of status quo in Europe 18 19 Polish poets politicians noblemen writers artists many of whom were forced to emigrate thus the term Great Emigration became the revolutionaries of the 19th century as desire for freedom became one of the defining parts of Polish romanticism 20 21 Polish revolutionaries participated in uprisings in Prussia the Austrian Empire and Imperial Russia 22 Polish legions fought alongside Napoleon 23 24 and under the slogan of For our freedom and yours participated widely in the Spring of Nations particularly the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 22 25 Poland would be briefly resurrected if in a smaller frame in 1807 when Napoleon set up the Duchy of Warsaw After his defeat and the implementation of the Congress of Vienna treaty in 1815 the Russian dominated Congress Kingdom of Poland was created in its place After the Congress Russia gained a larger share of Poland with Warsaw and after crushing an insurrection in 1831 the Congress Kingdom s autonomy was abolished and Poles faced confiscation of property deportation forced military service and the closure of their own universities After the uprising of 1863 Russification of Polish secondary schools was imposed and the literacy rate dropped dramatically In the Austrian sector which now was called Galicia Poles fared better and were allowed to have representation in Parliament and to form their own universities and Krakow with Lemberg Lwow Lviv became centers of Polish culture and education Meanwhile Prussia Germanized the entire school system of its Polish subjects and had no more respect for Polish culture and institutions than the Russian Empire In 1915 a client state of the German Empire and Austria Hungary was proposed and accepted by the Central Powers of World War I the Regency Kingdom of Poland After the end of World War I the Central Powers surrender to the Western Allies the chaos of the Russian Revolution and the Treaty of Versailles finally allowed and helped the restoration of Poland s full independence after 123 years Fourth Partition Edit The partition of Poland according to the German Soviet Pact division of Polish territories in the years 1939 1941 The term Fourth Partition of Poland may refer to any subsequent division of Polish lands including after the Napoleonic era the 1815 division of the Duchy of Warsaw at the Congress of Vienna the 1832 incorporation of the Congress Kingdom into Russia the 1846 incorporation of the Republic of Krakow into Austria and the 1848 incorporation of the Grand Duchy of Posen into Prussia and the 1939 division of Poland between Germany and the Soviet Union pursuant to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 26 If one accepts more than one of those events as partitions fifth sixth and even seventh partitions can be counted but these terms are very rare For example Norman Davies in God s Playground refers to the 1807 creation of the Duchy of Warsaw as the fourth partition the 1815 Treaty of Vienna as the fifth the 1918 Treaty of Brest Litovsk as the sixth and the 1939 division of Poland between Nazi Germany and the USSR as the seventh 27 The term Fourth Partition was also used in the 19th and 20th centuries to refer to diaspora communities who maintained a close interest in the project of regaining Polish independence 28 Sometimes termed Polonia these expatriate communities often contributed funding and military support to the project of regaining the Polish nation state Diaspora politics were deeply affected by developments in and around the homeland and vice versa for many decades 29 Reasons legality and justifications EditMore recent studies claim that partitions happened when the Commonwealth had been showing the beginning signs of a slow recovery and see the last two partitions as an answer to strengthening reforms in the Commonwealth and the potential threat they represented to its power hungry neighbours 19 30 31 32 33 34 35 As historian Norman Davies stated because the balance of power equilibrium was observed many contemporary observers accepted explanations of the enlightened apologists of the partitioning state 36 30 19th century historians from countries that carried out the partitions such as 19th century Russian scholar Sergey Solovyov and their 20th century followers argued that partitions were justified as the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth had degenerated to the point of being partitioned because the counterproductive principle of liberum veto made decision making on divisive issues such as a wide scale social reform virtually impossible Solovyov specified the cultural language and religious break between the supreme and lowest layers of the society in the east regions of the Commonwealth where the Belarusian and Ukrainian serf peasantry was Orthodox Russian authors emphasized the historical connections between Belarus Ukraine and Russia as former parts of the medieval old Russian state where dynasty of Rurikids reigned Kievan Rus 37 Thus Nikolay Karamzin wrote Let the foreigners denounce the partition of Poland we took what was ours 38 Russian historians often stressed that Russia annexed primarily Ukrainian and Belorussian provinces with Eastern Slavic inhabitants 39 although many Ruthenians were no more enthusiastic about Russia than about Poland and ignoring ethnically Polish and Lithuanian territories also being annexed later A new justification for partitions arose with the Russian Enlightenment as Russian writers such as Gavrila Derzhavin Denis Fonvizin and Alexander Pushkin stressed degeneration of Catholic Poland and the need to civilize it by its neighbors 31 Nonetheless other 19th century contemporaries were much more skeptical for example British jurist Sir Robert Phillimore discussed the partition as a violation of international law 40 German jurist Heinrich Bernhard Oppenheim presented similar views 41 Other older historians who challenged such justifications for the Partitions included French historian Jules Michelet British historian and politician Thomas Babington Macaulay and Edmund Burke who criticized the immorality of the partitions 30 42 Nonetheless most governments accepted the event as a fait acompli The Ottoman Empire was one of only two countries in the world that refused to accept the partitions 43 the other being the Persian Empire 44 and reserved a place in its diplomatic corps for an Ambassador of Lehistan Poland Several scholars focused on the economic motivations of the partitioning powers Hajo Holborn noted that Prussia aimed to take control of the lucrative Baltic grain trade through Danzig Gdansk 45 In the 18th century the Russian peasants were escaping from Russia to the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth where the once dire conditions have improved unlike in Russia 46 in significant enough numbers to become a major concern for the Russian Government sufficient to play a role in its decision to partition the Commonwealth one of the reasons Catherine II gave for the partition of Poland was the fact that thousands of peasants escaped from Russia to Poland to seek a better fate 47 48 Increasingly in the 18th century until the partitions solved this problem Russian armies raided territories of the Commonwealth officially to recover the escapees but in fact kidnapping many locals 47 Piotr Kimla noted that the Russian government spread international propaganda mainly in France which falsely exaggerated serfdom conditions in Poland while ignoring worse conditions in Russia as one of the justification for the partitions 48 Legacy Edit Il Canto degli Italiani the Italian National Anthem contains a reference to the partition 49 The ongoing partitions of Poland were a major topic of discourse in The Federalist Papers where the structure of the government of Poland and of foreign influence over it is used in several papers Federalist No 14 Federalist No 19 Federalist No 22 Federalist No 39 for examples as a cautionary tale for the writers of the U S Constitution See also EditAdministrative division of Polish Lithuanian territories after partitions Administrative division of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in the course of partitions Ambassadors and envoys from Russia to Poland 1763 1794 Three Emperors Corner at the border of the Russian Austrian and the German EmpiresNotes Edit Although the full name of the partitioned state was the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth while referring to the partitions virtually all sources use the term Partitions of Poland not Partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth as Poland is the common short name for the state in question The term Partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth is effectively not used in literature on this subject References Edit a b c d e f g h i Partitions of Poland Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2008 Retrieved 8 June 2011 Bideleux Robert Jeffries Ian 1998 A History of Eastern Europe Crisis and Change Routledge p 156 Batt Judy Wolczuk Kataryna 2002 Region State and Identity in Central and Eastern Europe Routledge p 153 Sinkoff Nancy 2004 Out of the Shtetl Making Jews Modern in the Polish Borderlands Society of Biblical Literature p 271 a b c Scott Hamish M 2001 The Emergence of the Eastern Powers 1756 1775 Cambridge University Press pp 181 182 ISBN 0 521 79269 X H Wickham Steed A Short History of Austria Hungary and Poland Archived 2007 09 24 at the Wayback Machine 1914 Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved on 3 August 2007 a b c Seton Watson Hugh 1967 The Russian Empire 1801 1917 Oxford University Press p 44 ISBN 0 19 822152 5 Various The Story of My Life Penguin Classics 2001 ISBN 0 14 043915 3 Google Print p 528 Butterwick Richard 1998 Poland Lithuania s Last King and English Culture Stanislaw August Poniatowski 1732 1798 Oxford University Press p 169 ISBN 0 19 820701 8 von Guttner Darius 2015 The French Revolution Nelson Cengage p 139 Gourevitch Victor ed 1997 Rousseau The Social Contract and Other Later Political Writings Cambridge University Press p ix ISBN 978 0 521 42446 2 Archived from the original on 16 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Alexander Bezborodko Encyclopaedia Britannica Jerzy Lukowski W H Zawadzki 2001 A Concise History of Poland Jerzy Lukowski and Hubert Zawadzki Cambridge University Press pp 96 98 ISBN 978 0 521 55917 1 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Jerzy Lukowski W H Zawadzki 2001 A Concise History of Poland Jerzy Lukowski and Hubert Zawadzki Cambridge University Press pp 101 103 ISBN 978 0 521 55917 1 Retrieved 8 January 2013 a b Piotr Stefan Wandycz 2001 The Price of Freedom A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present Taylor amp Francis Group pp 133 ISBN 978 0 415 25490 8 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Davies Norman 2005 God s Playground A History of Poland The Origins to 1795 Vol I revised ed Oxford University Press p 394 ISBN 978 0 19 925339 5 Po przylaczeniu do obwodu bialostockiego w 1807 roku do cesartwa i utworzeniu osiem lat pozniej Krolestwa Polskiego wnuk Katarzyny zjednoczyl pod swoim berlem okolo 82 przedrozbiorowego terytorium Rzeczypospolitej dla porownania Austria 11 Prusy 7 in Basil Kerski Andrzej Stanislaw Kowalczyk Realisci z wyobraznia Uniwersytet Marii Curie Sklodowskiej 2007 page 318 ISBN 978 83 227 2620 4 Johnson Lonnie R 1996 Central Europe Enemies Neighbors Friends Oxford University Press pp 127 128 ISBN 0 19 510071 9 a b Piotr Stefan Wandycz 2001 The Price of Freedom A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present Routledge p 133 ISBN 0 415 25491 4 Zawadzki W H 1993 A Man of Honour Adam Czartoryski as a Statesman of Russia and Poland 1795 1831 Oxford University Press p 330 ISBN 0 19 820303 9 Auer Stefan 2004 Liberal Nationalism in Central Europe Routledge p 60 ISBN 0 415 31479 8 a b Dowe Dieter 2001 Europe in 1848 Revolution and Reform Berghahn p 180 ISBN 1 57181 164 8 While it is often and quite justifiably remarked that there was hardly a barricade or battlefield in Europe between 1830 and 1870 where no Poles were fighting this is especially true for the revolution of 1848 1849 Pachonski Jan Wilson Reuel K 1986 Poland s Caribbean Tragedy A Study of Polish Legions in the Haitian War of Independence 1802 1803 East European Monographs Columbia University Press ISBN 0 88033 093 7 Fedosova Elena I 1998 Polish Projects of Napoleon Bonaparte Journal of the International Napoleonic Society Gods Heroes amp Legends Brecher Michael Wilkenfeld Jonathan 1997 A Study of Crisis University of Michigan Press p 255 ISBN 0 472 10806 9 Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland 1795 to the Present Oxford University Press 2005 pp 218 225 284 321 Cygan Mary 1998 Inventing Polonia Notions of Polish American Identity 1870 1990 Prospects 23 209 246 doi 10 1017 S0361233300006335 Lopata Helena Znaniecka 1994 Polish Americans Transaction a b c Norman Davies Europe A History Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820171 0 Google Print p 661 a b Nowak Andrzej 1997 The Russo Polish Historical Confrontation Sarmatian Review XVII 1 The Army of Grand Duchy of Warsaw Archived 2005 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Hon Carl L Bucki University of Buffalo s History of Poland series The Constitution of May 3 1791 Archived December 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Paul W Schroeder The Transformation of European Politics 1763 1848 Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 820654 2 Google print p 84 Geoffrey Russell The Making of Modern Europe 1648 1780 Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 30155 6 Google Print p 548 Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 0 19 925339 0 Google Print p 283 E g Sergey Solovyov s History of the Downfall of Poland Moscow 1863 N M Karamzin Zapiska o drevnej i novoj Rossii v ee politicheskom i grazhdanskom otnosheniyah Riasanovsky Nicholas V 1952 Old Russia the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe American Slavic and East European Review 11 3 171 188 doi 10 2307 2491975 JSTOR 2491975 Sir Robert Phillimore Commentaries Upon International Law 1854 T amp J W Johnson Google Print p 819 Sharon Korman The Right of Conquest The Acquisition of Territory by Force in International Law and Practice Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 828007 6 Google Print p 101 Poland The First Partition Prazmowska Anita 2010 Poland A Modern History I B Tauris p 25 History of Polish Iranian relations Archived from the original on 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2019 11 12 Hajo Holborn 1 December 1982 A History of Modern Germany 1648 1840 Princeton University Press p 256 ISBN 978 0 691 00796 0 Retrieved 16 February 2012 Wagner W J 1992 May 3 1791 and the Polish constitutional tradition The Polish Review 36 4 383 395 JSTOR 25778591 a b Czajewski Jerzy October 2004 Zbiegostwo ludnosci Rosji w granice Rzeczypospolitej Russian population exodus into the Rzeczpospolita Promemoria 6 15 ISSN 1509 9091 Archived from the original on 3 January 2005 a b Kimla Piotr 2011 Przywary niewolnikow panszczyznianych w XVIII wiecznej Rzeczypospolitej w relacji Huberta Vautrina Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie Sklodowska Sectio G Ius in Polish 58 1 87 97 ISSN 0458 4317 L Inno nazionale Quirinale it Retrieved 2013 11 17 Further reading EditMain article Bibliography of the history of Poland Lewitter L R The Partitions of Poland History Today Dec 1958 8 12 pp 813 820 Lewitter Lucjan R The Partitions of Poland in A Goodwyn ed The New Cambridge Modern History vol 8 1763 93 1965 pp 333 59 Lord Robert The second partition of Poland a study in diplomatic history 1915 online Lukowski Jerzy The Partitions of Poland 1772 1793 1795 1998 online review McLean Thomas The Other East and Nineteenth Century British Literature Imagining Poland and the Russian Empire Palgrave Macmillan 2012 pp 14 40 lt ref gt External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Partitions of Poland Krzysztof Wronski Rozbiory Polski w XVIII w ich uwarunkowania i skutki in Polish Where Is Poland a multimedia guide created by Culture pl to the 123 year period during which Poland was partitioned Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Partitions of Poland amp oldid 1134546928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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