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Poland–United Kingdom relations

British–Polish relations are the bilateral relations between the countries of United Kingdom and Poland. Exchanges between the two countries date back to medieval times, when Britain and Poland, then one of Europe's largest countries, were linked by trade and diplomacy. As a result of the 18th-century Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth by its neighbours, the number of Polish immigrants to Britain increased in the aftermath of two 19th-century uprisings (November Uprising of 1831 and January Uprising of 1863) which forced much of Poland's social and political elite into exile. A number of Polish exiles fought in the Crimean War on the British side.

The number of Poles in the UK increased during the Second World War. Most of the Polish people who came to the United Kingdom at that time comprised military units reconstituted outside Poland after the German and Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939, which marked the beginning of World War II. On 3 September 1939, Britain and France, which were allied with Poland, declared war on Germany. Poland moved its government abroad, first to France and, after its fall in May 1940, to London. The Poles contributed greatly to the Allied war effort and the Polish Air Force pilots played a conspicuous role in the Battle of Britain and the Polish army formed in Britain later fought during Operation Overlord. The Polish Government in Exile, though denied majority international recognition after 1945, remained at its post in London until formally dissolved in 1991, after a democratically elected president had taken office in Warsaw.

Currently, both countries are NATO and OECD members and allies. Since the European Union's 2004 enlargement, a significant number of Poles emigrated to the United Kingdom and now constitute one of the largest ethnic minorities in the country.

Comparison edit

Official Name Republic of Poland United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Common Name   Poland   United Kingdom
Coat of Arms    
Population 38,383,000 67,545,000
Area 312,696 km2 (120,733 sq mi) 244,820  km2 (94,526 sq mi )
Population Density 123/km2 (318/sq mi) 271/km2 (677/sq mi)
Capital Warsaw London
Largest city Warsaw – 1,863,056 (3,100,844 Metro) London – 8,908,000 (14,187,000 Metro)
Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
Legislature Parliament of Poland Parliament of the United Kingdom
Current leaders
Official languages Polish (de facto and de jure) English (de facto); Welsh in Wales
Main religions 92.9% Christianity, 3.1% non-religious, 2.7% unstated, 1.3% other 59.5% Christianity, 25.7% non-religious, 7.2% unstated, 4.4% Islam,
1.3% Hinduism, 0.7% Sikhism, 0.4% Judaism, 0.4% Buddhism
Ethnic groups 98% Polish, 2% other or unstated[1][2] 87.2% White (81.9% White British), 6.9% Asian, 3% Black, 2% Mixed, 0.9% Other (2011 Census)
GDP (nominal) PLN2.2 trillion (US$607 billion) PLN60,000 per capita ($15,988) £2.021 trillion (US$2.62 trillion), £30,600 per capita ($39,670)
Expatriate populations 832,000 Polish-born people live in the UK (2018 estimate) 5,569 British-born people live in Poland (2017)[3]
Military Polish Armed Forces British Armed Forces
Military expenditures PLN49.015 billion (US$13.07 billion) (2020) £36.4 billion (US$47.2 billion) (2017)[4]

History edit

15th century edit

According to the Polish historian Oskar Halecki, there was a piece of correspondence by King Henry V of England to Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland and Grand-Duke of Lithuania requesting his assistance against France in the Hundred Years' War.[5] English–Polish relations had continued in the following years largely in the area of commerce, and diplomacy. The 16th century saw the height of early modern diplomatic relations between Poland-Lithuania and England. When Queen Mary I of England and King Philip II of Spain were married in 1554, Krzysztof Warszewicki was present to attend and witness their wedding. Warszewicki was at the time of the Tudor-Habsburg marriage page to Ferdinand, King of the Romans. According to Norman Davies, Warszewicki later became a notable Polish diplomat. The English Eastland Company, founded in 1579, fostered trade between England and Poland.

After the death of Queen Mary I, her sister, Elizabeth I, ascended to the English throne. Unlike her Catholic sister, Queen Elizabeth I was a Protestant and gave her support to the Dutch cause against their Spanish Habsburg overlords in the Eighty Years' War. With the English and the Dutch at war with the Spaniards, the conflict adversely affected the Spanish trade with the Polish port city of Gdańsk as British and Dutch navies' privateers would seize Spanish vessels, including those sailing for Poland. It and, by extension, the city of Gdańsk sent Paweł Działyński to the Dutch and the English to persuade them to stop their attacks against Spanish ships headed for Gdańsk. However, as Norman Davies writes, Działyński was overly direct and blunt by threatening the Dutch and the English with an embargo of their merchants and goods. Queen Elizabeth I responded with an equally-blunt response, and Działyński's mission ultimately failed.

In the 17th century, 20 Scottish traders formed the foundation of a successful Scottish colony in Poland. The Scots were referred by Davies as "British Trading Agents".

18th century edit

 
Poland Street, today, in London's Soho district

As the 18th century dawned, the sun was setting slowly over the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Saxon Kings of Poland–Lithuania had largely neglected Poland's diplomatic relations during this period, as they preferred to conduct their diplomatic affairs from Saxony. That, however, did not stop the conducting of diplomatic relations with other European states. In 1744–1746, the British government concluded negotiations in a treaty between Great Britain, the Dutch Republic, Hungary and Poland-Lithuania. The multilateral agreement, which the Journal of the House of Commons calls "Treaty of Friendship and Alliance", came during the War of the Austrian Succession in which Britain fought on the side of Maria Theresa of Austria, the Queen of Hungary. Poland was a neutral power in the war and did not participate. However, as Saxony was a participant and the Elector of Saxony was the King of Poland, the treaty was signed and ratified in the name of the "Polish Republic".

With the death of Augustus III in late 1762, Stanisław August Poniatowski was elected to the Polish throne at the end of 1764. Although King George III mentioned the election of Stanisław August Poniatowski in His Majesty's most gracious speech to Parliament in 1765,[6] his speeches to Parliament in 1772 and 1773 made no references to the 1772 First Partition of Poland by Russia, Prussia, and Austria. He did not mention the Second Partition in his 1793 speech to Parliament or the Third and Final Partition in his 1795 speech to Parliament. In reaction to the decision of His Majesty's Government to make no diplomatic protests against the actions of Russia, Prussia, and Austria, the 18th- and 19th-century contemporaries in Britain on the European continent and scholars of Polish history have often made the conclusion that Britain was indifferent to the situation in Poland.[7]

Although Britain seemed to be largely indifferent to the Partitions of Poland, many of Britain's political elites, including George III and Edmund Burke, voiced their concerns in their correspondences and publications about the partitions and the imbalance of power in Europe that they had created.

19th century edit

During the Congress of Vienna, Lord Castlereagh, British Foreign Secretary from 1812 to 1822, was a major proponent of restoration of Polish independence, but he later dropped that point to attain ground in areas on which the United Kingdom had greater interest.

In the 19th century, frosty British–Russian relations prompted more interest in an independent Poland from Britain. In the British populace too, sympathy for Poland and the other oppressed peoples of Europe was common.

20th century edit

Britain, along with its allies France and the United States, was crucial in securing Polish independence at the end of World War I in order to recruit national minorities against the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary. During the Paris Peace Conference at the end of World War I, the British delegation under David Lloyd George opposed France and the United States's territorial concessions towards Poland as excessive and potentially provocative towards the Weimar Republic. Lloyd George was influential in making Danzig an autonomous city-state rather than a direct Polish territory, and also secured the Upper Silesia plebiscite. Another major point of disagreement was the point of its eastern borders.[8]

During the Polish-Soviet War, the support of the British government was truly with Poland, but peace was by far the preferred option resulting in Lord Curzon's drawing of the Curzon Line as part of an attempted mediated peace. The agreement was not adopted in time, and Poland soon took the upper hand in the war pushing its border further to the east. Lloyd-George adopted a policy in which it would support Poland's defense against the Soviet Red Army west of the Curzon Line but would oppose attempts to reconquer its pre-Partition borders as its leader Józef Piłsudski desired.[8]

During the 1920s and the early 1930s, British views of Poland were generally negative because of its expansionism and treatment of ethnic minorities. That was particularly the case from the British left. Overall, the right wing in Britain, meanwhile, held more neutral views of Poland because of its position as a buffer against the Soviet Union.

Poland's view of Britain was then generally ambivalent. France or even Germany was then the primary focus of British friendship and attempts to gain protection. The first Polish embassy in London was established only in 1929.

With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, the British and the Poles began to see more of a point in friendly relations. On 31 March 1939, the British made a guarantee of independence to Poland. On 25 August, an Anglo-Polish military alliance was signed. At first glance, that treaty was just a catch-all mutual assistance pact against the aggression of any other European nation, but a secret protocol attached to the agreement made clear that it was to defend Poland from Germany.

Second World War edit

 
303 Polish Fighter Squadron during the Battle of Britain, October 1940

After the German annexation of Czechoslovakia, Britain abandoned its foreign policy of appeasement and declared that an annexation of Poland would mean war. In March 1939, the British gave up on plans to avoid sending an army to the continent in the event of conflict with German and to rely on the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force. Plan were put in place for eventually providing 32 divisions, starting with two Corp of two divisions each, within 33 days of mobilization.[9]

After the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany in September 1939, Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September and honourings agreement signed with Poland, and a British naval blockade of Germany was initiated. On 4 September, an RAF raid against Kriegsmarine warships in Wilhelmshaven was undertaken, and the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) left the British to arrive in France, where it was immediately placed under French 1st Army Group and so it was stationed in the defensive line on the French/Belgium border. In September 1939, however, the BEF had only two divisions, with severe shortages of modern equipment. By the end of September, it had doubled in size to four divisions, but severe equipment shortages continued. The divisions fulfilled the undertaking given for two Army Corps assembled in France 33 days after mobilization.[10]

It had been decided that no major air operations against Germany would take place because of French concerns over reprisals on RAF launches from French airfields, against targets in Germany and so most British bomber activity over Germany was the dropping of propaganda leaflets and reconnaissance.[11] That theme would continue in meetings of the Anglo-French Supreme War Council meetings until 1940.

The Polish government-in-exile was based in London since 1940. During the war, 250,000 Polish people served with British forces taking part in many key campaigns. A twelfth of all pilots in the Battle of Britain were Polish. Poles were among the prisoners of German forced labour camps in the occupied Channel Islands,[12] and British prisoners of war were among Allied POWs held in German POW camps and forced labour subcamps operated in occupied Poland. The Polish resistance movement helped British POWs escape from German POW camps, gave shelter to POWs who had escaped from German POW camps and forced labor camps, and organized their escapes either by sea to neutral Sweden or by land through Hungary to southeastern Europe.[13][14]

Gibraltar was the site of the 1943 Gibraltar Liberator AL523 crash, in which General Władysław Sikorski, the commander-in-chief of the Polish Army and Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile, was killed. The crash was officially ruled to have been an accident, however, there are many controversies and theories surrounding it.

During the Yalta Conference and the postwar alteration of Poland's borders, British-Polish relations hit a low because of Britain was perceived to have compromised over Poland's fate so readily. Poland saw that in a particularly negative light because of its large contribution to the war effort and its sacrifices.

After the war, many Polish servicemen remained in Britain and further numbers of refugees arrived in the country.

Cold War edit

At first, British relations to Soviet-occupied Polish People's Republic were largely neutral with some sections of the far left even being supportive of the regime. The Polish government-in-exile remained in place at 43 Eaton Place, London, however, and no Poles were forced to return home.

During the Cold War, Poland retained a largely-negative view of Britain as part of the West. British efforts meanwhile were focused at trying to split Poland from the Warsaw Pact and encouraging reforms in the country.

After Cold War edit

 
Mateusz Morawiecki and Theresa May, Brussels, Belgium 2017

In the 1990s and the 2000s, the newly-democratic Poland maintained close relations with Britain; both in defence matters and within the European Union. Britain was one of only a few countries to allow equal rights to Polish workers upon Polish accession in 2004 after which 375,000 Poles registered to work in Britain.

The results of the 2011 British census has shown that Polish is now the second most common spoken first language in Northern Ireland, after English, and surpassed Ulster Scots and Irish. Poland and the United Kingdom have staged several intergovernmental consultations,[15][16] the last of which took place in December 2018 in London with Prime Ministers Theresa May and Mateusz Morawiecki and their cabinet members.[17]

The United Kingdom is the largest importer of Polish goods outside the EU, and the third largest importer of Polish goods overall (as of 2019).[18]

In December 2020, Poland sent medical and military personnel to help administer more than 15,000 COVID-19 tests to people who were stuck in a huge roadblock outside the English Channel in Kent, thus allowing them to enter France and relieving the traffic jam.[19]

In November 2021, during the Belarus–European Union border crisis, the United Kingdom sent 150 British army Royal Engineers to support Poland's border security.[20]

In response to the Russian military build-up proceeding the invasion, on 17 February 2022, the UK, Poland and Ukraine agreed a British–Polish–Ukrainian trilateral pact to strengthen strategic cooperation between the three countries.[21] In a poll published by Rating Group, Ukrainian respondents voted in favour of closer ties to Poland and the UK as opposed to NATO membership.[22]

Resident diplomatic missions edit

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Struktura narodowo-etniczna, językowa i wyznaniowa ludności Polski. Narodowy Spis Powszechny Ludności i Mieszkań 2011 [National-ethnic, linguistic and religious structure of Poland. National Census of Population and Housing 2011] (PDF) (in Polish). Central Statistical Office. 2015. ISBN 978-83-7027-597-6.
  2. ^ Ludność. Stan i struktura demograficzno-społeczna. Narodowy Spis Powszechny Ludności i Mieszkań 2011 [Population. Number and demographical-social structure. National Census of Population and Housing 2011] (PDF) (in Polish). Central Statistical Office. 2013. ISBN 978-83-7027-521-1.
  3. ^ "HOW MANY EXPATS LIVE IN POLAND?". Retrieved 27 July 2020.
  4. ^ "The Top 15 Military Spenders, 2008". Sipri.org. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
  5. ^ Halecki, Oskar (1934). "Anglo-Polish Relations in the Past". The Slavonic and East European Review. 12 (36): 660.
  6. ^ 'House of Lords Journal Volume 31: January 1765, 1-10', in Journal of the House of Lords Volume 31, 1765-1767 (London, 1767-1830), pp. 3-7. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/lords-jrnl/vol31/pp3-7 [accessed 25 February 2022].
  7. ^ Reddaway, W. F. "Great Britain and Poland 1762-72." Cambridge Historical Journal 4, no. 3 (1934): 223-62. online.
  8. ^ a b Steiner, Zara (2005). The lights that failed : European international history, 1919-1933. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-151881-2. OCLC 86068902.
  9. ^ Ellis, L. F. (2004). The war in France and Flanders. London: Naval & Military Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-84574-056-6.
  10. ^ Ellis, L. F. (2004). The war in France and Flanders. London: Naval & Military Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-84574-056-6.
  11. ^ Ellis, L. F. (2004). The war in France and Flanders. London: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84574-056-6.
  12. ^ "WWII Occupation". VisitAlderney.com. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  13. ^ Chrzanowski, Bogdan. "Organizacja sieci przerzutów drogą morską z Polski do Szwecji w latach okupacji hitlerowskiej (1939–1945)". Stutthof. Zeszyty Muzeum (in Polish). 5: 29–31, 33–34, 38. ISSN 0137-5377.
  14. ^ Aleksandra Pietrowicz. ""Dorsze" z Poznania". Przystanek Historia (in Polish). Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  15. ^ "UK-Poland intergovernmental consultations, 28 November 2016: Joint Communiqué". Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  16. ^ "Polish-British intergovernmental consultations this fall - FM". Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  17. ^ "Polsko-brytyjskie konsultacje międzyrządowe w Londynie". Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  18. ^ "Poland trade balance, exports and imports by country and region 2019". World Integrated Trade Solution. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  19. ^ Bartłomiej Niedziński. "Brytyjska wiceminister dziękuje Polsce za pomoc w Dover". Interia.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  20. ^ "Belarus migrant crisis: British army engineers to help at Polish border". BBC News. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  21. ^ "United Kingdom, Poland and Ukraine foreign ministers' joint statement, February 2022". GOV.UK. 17 February 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  22. ^ "П'ЯТЕ ЗАГАЛЬНОНАЦІОНАЛЬНЕ ОПИТУВАННЯ: УКРАЇНА В УМОВАХ ВІЙНИ (18 БЕРЕЗНЯ 2022)". РЕЙТИНГ (in Ukrainian). 18 March 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  23. ^ Embassy of Poland in London
  24. ^ Embassy of the United Kingdom in Warsaw

Further reading edit

  • Horn, David Bayne. Great Britain and Europe in the eighteenth century (1967), covers 1603 to 1702; pp 201–36.
  • Kaiser, David E. Economic Diplomacy and the Origins of the Second World War: Germany, Britain, France, and Eastern Europe, 1930–1939 (Princeton UP, 2015).
  • Reddaway, W. F. "Great Britain and Poland 1762-72." Cambridge Historical Journal 4#3 (1934): 223–62. online.
  • , pp. 80–84, by Kerry Longhurst and Marcin Zaborowski, from The Royal Institute of International Affairs, first published 2007 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd., ISBN 978-1-4051-2646-5 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-4051-2645-8 (paperback).

poland, united, kingdom, relations, british, polish, relations, bilateral, relations, between, countries, united, kingdom, poland, exchanges, between, countries, date, back, medieval, times, when, britain, poland, then, europe, largest, countries, were, linked. British Polish relations are the bilateral relations between the countries of United Kingdom and Poland Exchanges between the two countries date back to medieval times when Britain and Poland then one of Europe s largest countries were linked by trade and diplomacy As a result of the 18th century Partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth by its neighbours the number of Polish immigrants to Britain increased in the aftermath of two 19th century uprisings November Uprising of 1831 and January Uprising of 1863 which forced much of Poland s social and political elite into exile A number of Polish exiles fought in the Crimean War on the British side British Polish relationsUnited Kingdom PolandDiplomatic missionEmbassy of the United Kingdom WarsawEmbassy of Poland LondonThe number of Poles in the UK increased during the Second World War Most of the Polish people who came to the United Kingdom at that time comprised military units reconstituted outside Poland after the German and Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939 which marked the beginning of World War II On 3 September 1939 Britain and France which were allied with Poland declared war on Germany Poland moved its government abroad first to France and after its fall in May 1940 to London The Poles contributed greatly to the Allied war effort and the Polish Air Force pilots played a conspicuous role in the Battle of Britain and the Polish army formed in Britain later fought during Operation Overlord The Polish Government in Exile though denied majority international recognition after 1945 remained at its post in London until formally dissolved in 1991 after a democratically elected president had taken office in Warsaw Currently both countries are NATO and OECD members and allies Since the European Union s 2004 enlargement a significant number of Poles emigrated to the United Kingdom and now constitute one of the largest ethnic minorities in the country Contents 1 Comparison 2 History 2 1 15th century 2 2 18th century 2 3 19th century 2 4 20th century 2 4 1 Second World War 2 4 2 Cold War 2 4 3 After Cold War 3 Resident diplomatic missions 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further readingComparison editOfficial Name Republic of Poland United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandCommon Name nbsp Poland nbsp United KingdomCoat of Arms nbsp nbsp Population 38 383 000 67 545 000Area 312 696 km2 120 733 sq mi 244 820 km2 94 526 sq mi Population Density 123 km2 318 sq mi 271 km2 677 sq mi Capital Warsaw LondonLargest city Warsaw 1 863 056 3 100 844 Metro London 8 908 000 14 187 000 Metro Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchyLegislature Parliament of Poland Parliament of the United KingdomCurrent leaders Head of state President Andrzej Duda Head of government Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki Head of state King Charles III Head of government Prime Minister Rishi SunakOfficial languages Polish de facto and de jure English de facto Welsh in WalesMain religions 92 9 Christianity 3 1 non religious 2 7 unstated 1 3 other 59 5 Christianity 25 7 non religious 7 2 unstated 4 4 Islam 1 3 Hinduism 0 7 Sikhism 0 4 Judaism 0 4 BuddhismEthnic groups 98 Polish 2 other or unstated 1 2 87 2 White 81 9 White British 6 9 Asian 3 Black 2 Mixed 0 9 Other 2011 Census GDP nominal PLN2 2 trillion US 607 billion PLN60 000 per capita 15 988 2 021 trillion US 2 62 trillion 30 600 per capita 39 670 Expatriate populations 832 000 Polish born people live in the UK 2018 estimate 5 569 British born people live in Poland 2017 3 Military Polish Armed Forces British Armed ForcesMilitary expenditures PLN49 015 billion US 13 07 billion 2020 36 4 billion US 47 2 billion 2017 4 History edit15th century edit According to the Polish historian Oskar Halecki there was a piece of correspondence by King Henry V of England to Wladyslaw II Jagiello King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania requesting his assistance against France in the Hundred Years War 5 English Polish relations had continued in the following years largely in the area of commerce and diplomacy The 16th century saw the height of early modern diplomatic relations between Poland Lithuania and England When Queen Mary I of England and King Philip II of Spain were married in 1554 Krzysztof Warszewicki was present to attend and witness their wedding Warszewicki was at the time of the Tudor Habsburg marriage page to Ferdinand King of the Romans According to Norman Davies Warszewicki later became a notable Polish diplomat The English Eastland Company founded in 1579 fostered trade between England and Poland After the death of Queen Mary I her sister Elizabeth I ascended to the English throne Unlike her Catholic sister Queen Elizabeth I was a Protestant and gave her support to the Dutch cause against their Spanish Habsburg overlords in the Eighty Years War With the English and the Dutch at war with the Spaniards the conflict adversely affected the Spanish trade with the Polish port city of Gdansk as British and Dutch navies privateers would seize Spanish vessels including those sailing for Poland It and by extension the city of Gdansk sent Pawel Dzialynski to the Dutch and the English to persuade them to stop their attacks against Spanish ships headed for Gdansk However as Norman Davies writes Dzialynski was overly direct and blunt by threatening the Dutch and the English with an embargo of their merchants and goods Queen Elizabeth I responded with an equally blunt response and Dzialynski s mission ultimately failed In the 17th century 20 Scottish traders formed the foundation of a successful Scottish colony in Poland The Scots were referred by Davies as British Trading Agents 18th century edit nbsp Poland Street today in London s Soho districtAs the 18th century dawned the sun was setting slowly over the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Saxon Kings of Poland Lithuania had largely neglected Poland s diplomatic relations during this period as they preferred to conduct their diplomatic affairs from Saxony That however did not stop the conducting of diplomatic relations with other European states In 1744 1746 the British government concluded negotiations in a treaty between Great Britain the Dutch Republic Hungary and Poland Lithuania The multilateral agreement which the Journal of the House of Commons calls Treaty of Friendship and Alliance came during the War of the Austrian Succession in which Britain fought on the side of Maria Theresa of Austria the Queen of Hungary Poland was a neutral power in the war and did not participate However as Saxony was a participant and the Elector of Saxony was the King of Poland the treaty was signed and ratified in the name of the Polish Republic With the death of Augustus III in late 1762 Stanislaw August Poniatowski was elected to the Polish throne at the end of 1764 Although King George III mentioned the election of Stanislaw August Poniatowski in His Majesty s most gracious speech to Parliament in 1765 6 his speeches to Parliament in 1772 and 1773 made no references to the 1772 First Partition of Poland by Russia Prussia and Austria He did not mention the Second Partition in his 1793 speech to Parliament or the Third and Final Partition in his 1795 speech to Parliament In reaction to the decision of His Majesty s Government to make no diplomatic protests against the actions of Russia Prussia and Austria the 18th and 19th century contemporaries in Britain on the European continent and scholars of Polish history have often made the conclusion that Britain was indifferent to the situation in Poland 7 Although Britain seemed to be largely indifferent to the Partitions of Poland many of Britain s political elites including George III and Edmund Burke voiced their concerns in their correspondences and publications about the partitions and the imbalance of power in Europe that they had created 19th century edit During the Congress of Vienna Lord Castlereagh British Foreign Secretary from 1812 to 1822 was a major proponent of restoration of Polish independence but he later dropped that point to attain ground in areas on which the United Kingdom had greater interest In the 19th century frosty British Russian relations prompted more interest in an independent Poland from Britain In the British populace too sympathy for Poland and the other oppressed peoples of Europe was common 20th century edit Britain along with its allies France and the United States was crucial in securing Polish independence at the end of World War I in order to recruit national minorities against the Central Powers of Germany and Austria Hungary During the Paris Peace Conference at the end of World War I the British delegation under David Lloyd George opposed France and the United States s territorial concessions towards Poland as excessive and potentially provocative towards the Weimar Republic Lloyd George was influential in making Danzig an autonomous city state rather than a direct Polish territory and also secured the Upper Silesia plebiscite Another major point of disagreement was the point of its eastern borders 8 During the Polish Soviet War the support of the British government was truly with Poland but peace was by far the preferred option resulting in Lord Curzon s drawing of the Curzon Line as part of an attempted mediated peace The agreement was not adopted in time and Poland soon took the upper hand in the war pushing its border further to the east Lloyd George adopted a policy in which it would support Poland s defense against the Soviet Red Army west of the Curzon Line but would oppose attempts to reconquer its pre Partition borders as its leader Jozef Pilsudski desired 8 During the 1920s and the early 1930s British views of Poland were generally negative because of its expansionism and treatment of ethnic minorities That was particularly the case from the British left Overall the right wing in Britain meanwhile held more neutral views of Poland because of its position as a buffer against the Soviet Union Poland s view of Britain was then generally ambivalent France or even Germany was then the primary focus of British friendship and attempts to gain protection The first Polish embassy in London was established only in 1929 With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany the British and the Poles began to see more of a point in friendly relations On 31 March 1939 the British made a guarantee of independence to Poland On 25 August an Anglo Polish military alliance was signed At first glance that treaty was just a catch all mutual assistance pact against the aggression of any other European nation but a secret protocol attached to the agreement made clear that it was to defend Poland from Germany Second World War edit nbsp 303 Polish Fighter Squadron during the Battle of Britain October 1940After the German annexation of Czechoslovakia Britain abandoned its foreign policy of appeasement and declared that an annexation of Poland would mean war In March 1939 the British gave up on plans to avoid sending an army to the continent in the event of conflict with German and to rely on the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force Plan were put in place for eventually providing 32 divisions starting with two Corp of two divisions each within 33 days of mobilization 9 After the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany in September 1939 Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September and honourings agreement signed with Poland and a British naval blockade of Germany was initiated On 4 September an RAF raid against Kriegsmarine warships in Wilhelmshaven was undertaken and the British Expeditionary Force BEF left the British to arrive in France where it was immediately placed under French 1st Army Group and so it was stationed in the defensive line on the French Belgium border In September 1939 however the BEF had only two divisions with severe shortages of modern equipment By the end of September it had doubled in size to four divisions but severe equipment shortages continued The divisions fulfilled the undertaking given for two Army Corps assembled in France 33 days after mobilization 10 It had been decided that no major air operations against Germany would take place because of French concerns over reprisals on RAF launches from French airfields against targets in Germany and so most British bomber activity over Germany was the dropping of propaganda leaflets and reconnaissance 11 That theme would continue in meetings of the Anglo French Supreme War Council meetings until 1940 The Polish government in exile was based in London since 1940 During the war 250 000 Polish people served with British forces taking part in many key campaigns A twelfth of all pilots in the Battle of Britain were Polish Poles were among the prisoners of German forced labour camps in the occupied Channel Islands 12 and British prisoners of war were among Allied POWs held in German POW camps and forced labour subcamps operated in occupied Poland The Polish resistance movement helped British POWs escape from German POW camps gave shelter to POWs who had escaped from German POW camps and forced labor camps and organized their escapes either by sea to neutral Sweden or by land through Hungary to southeastern Europe 13 14 Gibraltar was the site of the 1943 Gibraltar Liberator AL523 crash in which General Wladyslaw Sikorski the commander in chief of the Polish Army and Prime Minister of the Polish government in exile was killed The crash was officially ruled to have been an accident however there are many controversies and theories surrounding it During the Yalta Conference and the postwar alteration of Poland s borders British Polish relations hit a low because of Britain was perceived to have compromised over Poland s fate so readily Poland saw that in a particularly negative light because of its large contribution to the war effort and its sacrifices After the war many Polish servicemen remained in Britain and further numbers of refugees arrived in the country Cold War edit At first British relations to Soviet occupied Polish People s Republic were largely neutral with some sections of the far left even being supportive of the regime The Polish government in exile remained in place at 43 Eaton Place London however and no Poles were forced to return home During the Cold War Poland retained a largely negative view of Britain as part of the West British efforts meanwhile were focused at trying to split Poland from the Warsaw Pact and encouraging reforms in the country After Cold War edit nbsp Mateusz Morawiecki and Theresa May Brussels Belgium 2017In the 1990s and the 2000s the newly democratic Poland maintained close relations with Britain both in defence matters and within the European Union Britain was one of only a few countries to allow equal rights to Polish workers upon Polish accession in 2004 after which 375 000 Poles registered to work in Britain The results of the 2011 British census has shown that Polish is now the second most common spoken first language in Northern Ireland after English and surpassed Ulster Scots and Irish Poland and the United Kingdom have staged several intergovernmental consultations 15 16 the last of which took place in December 2018 in London with Prime Ministers Theresa May and Mateusz Morawiecki and their cabinet members 17 The United Kingdom is the largest importer of Polish goods outside the EU and the third largest importer of Polish goods overall as of 2019 18 In December 2020 Poland sent medical and military personnel to help administer more than 15 000 COVID 19 tests to people who were stuck in a huge roadblock outside the English Channel in Kent thus allowing them to enter France and relieving the traffic jam 19 In November 2021 during the Belarus European Union border crisis the United Kingdom sent 150 British army Royal Engineers to support Poland s border security 20 In response to the Russian military build up proceeding the invasion on 17 February 2022 the UK Poland and Ukraine agreed a British Polish Ukrainian trilateral pact to strengthen strategic cooperation between the three countries 21 In a poll published by Rating Group Ukrainian respondents voted in favour of closer ties to Poland and the UK as opposed to NATO membership 22 Resident diplomatic missions editPoland has an embassy in London and consulates general in Belfast Edinburgh and Manchester 23 United Kingdom has an embassy in Warsaw 24 nbsp Embassy of Poland in London nbsp Consulate General of Poland in Edinburgh nbsp Embassy of the United Kingdom in WarsawSee also editEmbassy of Poland London List of Ambassadors from the United Kingdom to Poland List of Ambassadors of Poland to the United Kingdom Poles in the United Kingdom Britons in Poland Anglo Polish military alliance Anglo Polish Radio ORLA fm United Kingdom European Union relations List of twin towns and sister cities in the United Kingdom List of twin towns and sister cities in PolandNotes editReferences edit Struktura narodowo etniczna jezykowa i wyznaniowa ludnosci Polski Narodowy Spis Powszechny Ludnosci i Mieszkan 2011 National ethnic linguistic and religious structure of Poland National Census of Population and Housing 2011 PDF in Polish Central Statistical Office 2015 ISBN 978 83 7027 597 6 Ludnosc Stan i struktura demograficzno spoleczna Narodowy Spis Powszechny Ludnosci i Mieszkan 2011 Population Number and demographical social structure National Census of Population and Housing 2011 PDF in Polish Central Statistical Office 2013 ISBN 978 83 7027 521 1 HOW MANY EXPATS LIVE IN POLAND Retrieved 27 July 2020 The Top 15 Military Spenders 2008 Sipri org Retrieved 27 July 2020 Halecki Oskar 1934 Anglo Polish Relations in the Past The Slavonic and East European Review 12 36 660 House of Lords Journal Volume 31 January 1765 1 10 in Journal of the House of Lords Volume 31 1765 1767 London 1767 1830 pp 3 7 British History Online http www british history ac uk lords jrnl vol31 pp3 7 accessed 25 February 2022 Reddaway W F Great Britain and Poland 1762 72 Cambridge Historical Journal 4 no 3 1934 223 62 online a b Steiner Zara 2005 The lights that failed European international history 1919 1933 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 151881 2 OCLC 86068902 Ellis L F 2004 The war in France and Flanders London Naval amp Military Press p 6 ISBN 978 1 84574 056 6 Ellis L F 2004 The war in France and Flanders London Naval amp Military Press p 17 ISBN 978 1 84574 056 6 Ellis L F 2004 The war in France and Flanders London Naval amp Military Press ISBN 978 1 84574 056 6 WWII Occupation VisitAlderney com Retrieved 23 December 2021 Chrzanowski Bogdan Organizacja sieci przerzutow droga morska z Polski do Szwecji w latach okupacji hitlerowskiej 1939 1945 Stutthof Zeszyty Muzeum in Polish 5 29 31 33 34 38 ISSN 0137 5377 Aleksandra Pietrowicz Dorsze z Poznania Przystanek Historia in Polish Retrieved 3 September 2022 UK Poland intergovernmental consultations 28 November 2016 Joint Communique Retrieved 26 July 2020 Polish British intergovernmental consultations this fall FM Retrieved 26 July 2020 Polsko brytyjskie konsultacje miedzyrzadowe w Londynie Retrieved 25 July 2020 Poland trade balance exports and imports by country and region 2019 World Integrated Trade Solution Retrieved 23 December 2021 Bartlomiej Niedzinski Brytyjska wiceminister dziekuje Polsce za pomoc w Dover Interia pl in Polish Retrieved 23 December 2021 Belarus migrant crisis British army engineers to help at Polish border BBC News Retrieved 23 December 2021 United Kingdom Poland and Ukraine foreign ministers joint statement February 2022 GOV UK 17 February 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2022 P YaTE ZAGALNONACIONALNE OPITUVANNYa UKRAYiNA V UMOVAH VIJNI 18 BEREZNYa 2022 REJTING in Ukrainian 18 March 2022 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Embassy of Poland in London Embassy of the United Kingdom in WarsawFurther reading editHorn David Bayne Great Britain and Europe in the eighteenth century 1967 covers 1603 to 1702 pp 201 36 Kaiser David E Economic Diplomacy and the Origins of the Second World War Germany Britain France and Eastern Europe 1930 1939 Princeton UP 2015 Reddaway W F Great Britain and Poland 1762 72 Cambridge Historical Journal 4 3 1934 223 62 online The New Atlanticist Poland s Foreign and Security Policy Priorities pp 80 84 by Kerry Longhurst and Marcin Zaborowski from The Royal Institute of International Affairs first published 2007 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 4051 2646 5 hardback ISBN 978 1 4051 2645 8 paperback This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Poland United Kingdom relations news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poland United Kingdom 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