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Władysław IV Vasa

Władysław IV Vasa[a] or Ladislaus IV of Poland (9 June 1595 – 20 May 1648) was King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania and claimant of the thrones of Sweden and Russia. Born into the House of Vasa as a prince of Poland and of Sweden, Władysław IV was the eldest son of Sigismund III Vasa and Sigismund's first wife, Anna of Austria.

Władysław IV Vasa
Portrait by Peter Paul Rubens
King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania
Reign8 November 1632 –
20 May 1648
Coronation6 February 1633
PredecessorSigismund III Vasa
SuccessorJohn II Casimir Vasa
Tsar of Russia (disputed)
Reign19 July 1610 –
21 February 1613
PredecessorVasili IV
SuccessorMichael I
Born9 June 1595
Łobzów, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Died20 May 1648(1648-05-20) (aged 52)
Merecz, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Burial
SpousesCecilia Renata of Austria
Marie Louise Gonzaga
Issue
more...
Sigismund Casimir
Maria Anna Isabella
Władysław Konstanty (illegitimate)
HouseVasa
FatherSigismund III of Poland
MotherAnne of Austria
ReligionRoman Catholic
Signature

Władysław was elected Tsar of Russia by the Seven Boyars in 1610, when the Polish army captured Moscow, but did not assume the throne because of his father's position and a popular uprising. Nevertheless, until 1634 he used the titular title of Grand Duke of Muscovy, a principality centred on Moscow. Elected king of Poland in 1632, he was largely successful in defending the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth against foreign invasion, most notably in the Smolensk War of 1632–1634 in which he participated personally.

He supported religious tolerance and carried out military reforms, such as the founding of the Commonwealth Navy. Władysław was also a renowned patron of the arts and music. He gained fame by defeating the Ottoman Empire, strengthening royal power, and reforming the Commonwealth's political system, although he failed at reclaiming the Swedish throne. Despite that failure, his personal charisma and popularity among all segments of society contributed to relative internal calm in the Commonwealth.

He died without a legitimate son and was succeeded to the Polish throne by his half-brother, John II Casimir Vasa. Władysław's death marked the end of relative stability in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, as conflicts and tensions that had been growing over several decades came to a head with devastating consequences. The Khmelnytsky Uprising in the east (1648) and the subsequent Swedish invasion ("the Deluge", 1655–1660) weakened the country and diminished Poland's status as a regional power.[1] For that reason, Władysław's reign was seen in following decades as a bygone golden era of stability and prosperity.

Life Edit

Władysław IV's father, Sigismund III Vasa, grandson of Sweden's King Gustav I, had succeeded his father to the Swedish throne in 1592, only to be deposed in 1599 by his uncle, subsequently King Charles IX. This resulted in a long-standing feud, with the Polish kings of the House of Vasa claiming the Swedish throne. This led to the Polish–Swedish War of 1600–1629 and later to the Deluge of 1655.

Childhood Edit

 
Prince Władysław, aged about 10, c. 1605

The marriage of Anne of Austria to Sigismund III was a traditional, politically motivated marriage, intended to tie the young House of Vasa to the prestigious Habsburgs.[2] Władysław was born 9 June 1595 at the King's summer residence in Łobzów, near Kraków, a few months after the main Wawel Castle had been consumed by fire.[2]

Władysław's mother died on 10 February 1598, less than three years after giving birth to him.[3] He was raised by one of her former ladies of the court, Urszula Meierin, who eventually became a powerful player at the royal court, with much influence.[4][5]

Władysław's Hofmeister was Michał Konarski, a Polish-Prussian noble.[4] Around early 17th century Urszula lost much of her influence, as Władysław gained new teachers and mentors, including such priests as Marek Łętkowski, Gabriel Prowancjusz, and Andrzej Szołdrski and in military matters by Zygmunt Kazanowski.[5][6]

Much of his curriculum was likely designed by Father Piotr Skarga, much respected by Sigmismund III.[6] Władysław studied for several years in the Kraków Academy, and for two years, in Rome.[6]

At the age of 10, he received his own prince court.[4] He formed a friendship with brothers Adam and Stanisław Kazanowski. It was reported that young Władysław was interested in arts; later this led to him becoming an important patron of the arts. He spoke and wrote in German, Italian and Latin.[5]

Władysław was liked by the szlachta (Polish nobility), but his father's plans to secure him the throne of Poland (vivente rege) were unpopular and eventually crushed in the Zebrzydowski Rebellion (rokosz).[7][8]

Tsar Edit

 
Young Władysław

With the intensification of the Polish intervention in Muscovy, in 1609, the royal family moved to their residence in Vilnius, capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, where he witnessed the fire of Vilnius, which required the royal family to evacuate from Vilnius Castle.[9] Later that year, Władysław, aged 15, was elected Tsar by Muscovy's aristocracy council of Seven boyars, who overthrew tsar Vasily Shuysky during the Polish-Muscovite War and Muscovy's Time of Troubles.[10]

His election was ruined by his father, Sigismund, who aimed to convert Muscovy's population from the Eastern Orthodox religion to Roman Catholicism.[10] Sigismund refused to agree to the boyar's request to send prince Władysław to Moscow and his conversion to Orthodoxy. Instead, Sigismund proposed that he should reign as a regent in Muscovy instead. This unrealistic proposal led to a resumption of hostilities.[10] In 1611-12, silver and gold coins (kopecks) were prematurely stuck in the Russian mints in Moscow and Novgorod with Władysław's titulary Tsar and Grand Prince Vladislav Zigimontovych of all Russia.[11]

Władysław tried to regain the tsar's throne himself, organizing a campaign in 1616. Despite some military victories, he was unable to capture Moscow.[12] The Commonwealth gained some disputed territories in the Truce of Deulino, but Władysław was never able to reign in Russia; the throne during this time was instead held by tsar Michael Romanov. He held on to the title,[a] without any real power, until 1634.[12]

Likely, the failure of this campaign showed Władysław the limits of royal power in Poland, as major factors for the failure included significant autonomy of the military commanders, which did not see Władysław as their superior, and lack of funds for the army, as the Polish parliament (sejm) refused to subsidize the war.[13]

Prince Edit

 
Władysław IV in an 18th-century portrait by Marcello Bacciarelli

Before he was elected king of the Commonwealth, Władysław fought in many campaigns, seeking personal glory. After his final campaign against Russians in 1617–18 (the end of Dymitriads), he went to Silesia in 1619 looking for an opportunity to aid the Habsburgs in their struggle against the Czech Hussites in the Thirty Years' War, an opportunity that never materialized.[14][15]

In 1620, he took part in the second phase of the Polish–Ottoman War, a consequence of the long series of struggles between Poland and the Ottomans over Moldavia.[16] In 1621, he was a Polish commander at Chocim. He reportedly he was stricken with illness but despite that proved a voice of reason, convincing other Polish commanders there to stay and fight.[14][16] His advice was correct, and the battle eventually ended with a peace treaty that returned the status quo from before the Ottoman invasion. This peace treaty also gave Władysław an international reputation as a "defender of the Christian faith", and increased his popularity in the Commonwealth itself.[14][16]

 
Art Collection of Prince Władysław Vasa (Royal Castle in Warsaw), according to artist's signature painted in Warsaw in 1626, depicts treasures purchased by the Prince during his journey across Europe.

In 1623, while near Gdańsk (Danzig), he witnessed Gustavus Adolphus's Swedish Navy use its naval superiority to demand concessions from Gdańsk (the Commonwealth had no navy).[17]

In 1624, King Sigismund decided that the time had come for Władysław to travel, like many of his peers, to Western Europe. For security reasons, Władysław traveled under a fake name, Snopkowski (from Polish Snopek, meaning sheaf, as seen in the Vasa's coat of arms). On the long voyage (1624–25), he was accompanied by Albrycht Stanisław Radziwiłł and other courtiers.[18]

First, he travelled to Wrocław (Breslau), then Munich, where he met Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria.[18] In Brussels he met Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain; in Antwerp, Rubens. Near Breda he met Ambrosio Spinola.[18] It was during his stay with Spinola that he was impressed by Western military techniques; this was later reflected when he became king, as military matters were always important to him.[18][19]

While not a military genius, and surpassed by his contemporary, Commonwealth hetman Stanisław Koniecpolski, Władysław was known as a fairly skillful commander on his own. In Rome he was welcomed by Pope Urban VIII, who congratulated him on his fighting against the Ottomans. During his stay in Florence he was impressed by opera, and decided to bring this form of art to the Commonwealth, where it was previously unknown.[18]

In Genoa and Venice he was impressed by the local shipyards, and in Pisa he witnessed a specially organized mock naval battle, experiences that resulted in his later attempt to create the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Navy.[18]

After returning to Poland, he fought in 1626 against the Swedes in the last phase of the Polish–Swedish War, where he took part in the battle of Gniew.[20] His involvement in this conflict, which lasted till the Truce of Altmark in 1629, was rather limited, and he spent much time in other parts of the country.[21]

During that period and afterward, he lobbied for support of his candidature for the Polish throne, as his father, Sigismund, was getting more advanced in his age, and the succession to the Polish throne did not occur through inheritance but rather through the process of royal elections. While Władysław, and his father tried to ensure Władysław's election during Sigismund's lifetime, this was not a popular option for the nobility, and it repeatedly failed, up to and including at the sejm of 1631.[22]

Sigismund suffered a sudden stroke[b] in late April 1632 and died in the morning hours of 30 April, forcing the matter to be raised again.[25][23]

King Edit

 
Władysław IV Vasa, coronation
 
Władysław IV, by Pieter Soutman, c. 1634

The election sejm of 1632 eventually chose Władysław; there were no other serious contenders.[26] The decision reached on 8 November, but as the pacta conventa were not yet ready, the official announcement was delayed until 13 November.[27][28] In the pacta conventa, Władysław pledged himself to fund a military school and equipment; to find a way to fund a navy; to maintain current alliances; not to raise armies, give offices or military ranks to foreigners, negotiate peace treaties, or declare war without the Sejm's approval; not to take a wife without the Senate's approval; to convince his brothers to take an oath to the Commonwealth; and to transfer the profits from the Royal Mint to the Royal Treasury rather than to a private treasury.[26][28] When the election result was announced by the Crown Grand Marshal, Łukasz Opaliński, the szlachta (nobility), who had taken part in the election, began festivities in honor of the new king, which lasted three hours.[27] Władysław was crowned in the Wawel Cathedral, in Kraków on 6 February in the following year.[29]

Military campaigns Edit

In an attempt to take advantage of the confusion expected after the death of the Polish king, Tsar Michael I of Russia invaded the Commonwealth.[30] A Muscovite army crossed the Commonwealth eastern frontier in October 1632 and laid siege to Smolensk (which was ceded to Poland by Russia in 1618, at the end of the Dymitriad wars).[30] In the war against Russia in 1632–1634 (the Smolensk War), Władysław broke the siege in September 1633 and then in turn surrounded the Russian army under Mikhail Shein, which was then forced to surrender on 1 March 1634.[30][31]

 
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth during the reign of Władysław IV, ca. 1635

During that campaign Władysław started the modernisation program of the Commonwealth army, emphasising the usage of modern infantry and artillery. Władysław proved to be a good tactician, and his innovations in the use of artillery and fortifications based on Western ideas greatly contributed to the eventual Polish–Lithuanian success.[30][31][32] King Władysław wanted to continue the war or, because the Polish–Swedish Treaty of Altmark would soon be expiring, ally with the Russians to strike against Sweden.[33] However, the Sejm wanted no more conflict.[34] As Stanisław Łubieński, the Bishop of Płock, wrote two weeks after Shein's surrender: "Our happiness is in remaining within our borders, guaranteeing health and well-being."[34] The resulting Peace of Polyanov (Treaty of Polanów), favourable to Poland, confirmed the pre-war territorial status quo. Muscovy also agreed to pay 20,000 rubles in exchange for Wladyslaw's renunciation of all claims to the tsardom and return of the royal insignia, which were in the Commonwealth possession since the Dymitriads.[30][31]

Following the Smolensk campaign, the Commonwealth was threatened by another attack by the Ottoman Empire. During the wars against Ottomans in 1633–1634 Władysław moved the Commonwealth army south of the Muscovy border, where under the command of hetman Stanisław Koniecpolski it forced the Turks to renew a peace treaty.[35] In the resulting treaty, both countries agreed again to curb the border raids by Cossacks and the Tatars, and the Ottomans confirmed that the Commonwealth to be an independent power, and had not to pay tribute to the Empire.[35]

After the southern campaign, the Commonwealth had to deal with a threat from the north, as the armistice, ending the Polish–Swedish War (1600–1629) was expiring. The majority of Polish nobles preferred to solve the problem through negotiations, unwilling to pay taxes for a new war, provided that Sweden was open to negotiations and concessions (in particular, to retreat from the occupied Polish coastal territories).[36] Władysław himself was hoping for a war, which could yield some more significant territorial gains, and even managed to gather a sizeable army, with navy elements, near the disputed territories.[37] Sweden, weakened by involvement in the Thirty Years' War, was however open to a peaceful solution.[38] Władysław could not go against the decision of the Sejm and Senate, and agreed to support the treaty.[39] Thus both sides agreed to sign the Armistice of Stuhmsdorf (Sztumska Wieś) on 12 September 1635, favourable to the Commonwealth, which regained the Prussian territories, and called for a reduction of the Swedish tolls on the maritime trade.[40]

Politics Edit

In the three months between his election and coronation, Władysław sounded the waters regarding the possibility of a peaceful succession to the Swedish throne, following the recent death of Gustavus Adolphus, but this, as well as his proposal to mediate between Sweden and its enemies, was rejected, primarily by the Swedish chancellor and head of the regency council, Axel Oxenstierna.[41]

Władysław IV owed nominal allegiance to the Imperial Habsburgs as a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece. His relationship with the Habsburgs was relatively strong; although he was not above carrying some negotiations with their enemies, like France, he refused Cardinal Richelieu's 1635 proposal of an alliance and a full-out war against them, despite potential lure of territorial gains in Silesia.[42] He realized that such a move would cause much unrest in a heavily Catholic Commonwealth, that he likely lacked the authority and power to push such a change of policy through the Sejm, and that the resulting conflict would be very difficult.[42] From 1636 onward, for the next few years, Władysław strengthened his ties with the Habsburgs.[43]

In the meantime, Władysław still tried to take a leading role in European politics, and negotiate a peaceful settlement to the Thirty Years' War, a settlement which he hoped would ease his way into regaining the Swedish crown.[44] Following the armistice of Stuhmsdorf, Władysław came to increasingly realize that his prospects for regaining the Swedish throne were dim.[45] In the years 1636–1638 he proposed several reforms to strengthen his and his dynasty's power in the Commonwealth. His first plan was an attempt to secure a hereditary province within the country, which would not be threatened by the possible power shift following a future royal election; this, however, did not gain sufficient support in the Sejm.[46] Next, Władysław attempted to create an order of chivalry, similar to the Order of the Golden Fleece, but this plan was scuttled down as well, with the szlachta and the magnates seeing this as an attempt to create a royal, loyalist elite, and traditionally opposing anything that could lead to the reduction of their extensive power.[47] Popular vote and opposition also resulted in the failure of the plan to raise taxes from trade tariffs; here it was not only the nobility but even the merchants and burghers from towns, like Gdańsk (Danzig) who were able to muster enough support (including from foreign powers) to stop the king's reforms.[48] In fact, the defeat of his plans was so total, that he was forced to make certain conciliatory gestures to the nobility, as the Sejm passed several laws constraining his authority (such as to hire foreign troops), further indicating the limits of royal power in the Commonwealth.[48]

Marriages Edit

Early in his reign, there were plans regarding a marriage of Władysław and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia, Princess Palatine (daughter of Frederick V, Elector Palatine).[49] This was however unpopular, both with Catholic nobles and the Catholic Church, and when it became clear to Władysław that this would not convince the Swedes to elect him to their throne, this plan, with quiet support from Władysław himself, was dropped.[50]

 
Władysław IV in later life

Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor's proposal of marriage between Władysław and Archduchess Cecilia Renata of Austria (sister of future Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor) arrived in Warsaw somewhere during spring 1636. In June that year, Władysław sent Jerzy Ossoliński to the Imperial Court, to work on improving the Imperial-Commonwealth relations.[43] The king's trusted confessor, father Walerian Magni[51] (of Franciscan religious order), and voivode Kasper Doenhoff arrived in Regensburg (Polish: Ratyzbona) on 26 October 1636 with consent and performed negotiations. The Archduchess' dowry was agreed for 100,000 zlotys,[51] the Emperor also promised to pay the dowries of both of Siegmund III's wives: Anna and Konstance. Additionally the son of Władysław and Cecilia Renata was to obtain the duchy of Opole and Racibórz in Silesia (Duchy of Opole and Racibórz). However, before everything was confirmed and signed Ferdinand II died and Ferdinand III backed from giving the Silesian duchy to the son of Władysław. Instead a dowry was awarded to be secured by the Bohemian estates of Třeboň (Trebon).[51] On 16 March 1637 a "family alliance" was signed between the Habsburgs and the Polish branch of the House of Vasa.[52] Władysław promised not to sign any pacts against the Habsburgs, and to transfer his rights to the Swedish throne in case of his line's extinction; in return, Habsburg promised to support his efforts to regain the Swedish crown, and to transfer to him some territory in case of gains in a war against the Ottomans.[52] The marriage took place in 1637, on 12 September.[53]

 
Portrait of Władysław IV, by Frans Luycx, ca. 1640

The next few years were similarly unsuccessful with regards to his plans.[54] Eventually, he tried to bypass the opposition in the Sejm with secret alliances, dealings, and intrigues, but did not prove successful.[54] Those plans included schemes such as supporting the Holy Roman Emperor's raid on Inflanty in 1639, which he hoped would lead to a war;[55] an attempted alliance with Spain against France in 1640–1641,[56] and in 1641–1643, with Denmark against Sweden.[57] On the international scene, he attempted to mediate between various religious factions of Christianity, using the tolerant image of the Commonwealth to portray himself as the neutral mediator.[58] He organized a conference in Toruń (Thorn) that begun on 28 January 1645, but it failed to reach any meaningful conclusions.[58]

After Cecilia's death in 1644, the ties between Władysław and the Habsburgs were somewhat loosened.[59] In turn, the relations with France improved, and eventually Władysław married the French princess Ludwika Maria Gonzaga de Nevers, daughter of Charles I Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua, in 1646.[60]

Władysław's last plan was to orchestrate a major war between the European powers and the Ottoman Empire.[61] The border with the Empire was in a near constant state of low-level warfare; some historians estimate that in the first half of the 17th century, Ottoman raids and wars resulted in the loss (death or enslavement) of about 300,000 Commonwealth citizens in the borderlands.[62] The war, Władysław hoped, would also solve the problem of unrest among the Cossacks, a militant group living in the Ukraine, near the Ottoman border, who could find worth in such a campaign, and turn their attention to fighting for the Commonwealth, instead of against it.[63] As usual, he failed to inspire the nobility, rarely willing to consider sponsoring another war, to agree to this plan.[63] He received more support from foreign powers, from Rome, Venice and Muscovy.[64] With the promise of funds for the war, Władysław started recruiting troops among the Cossacks in 1646.[64] The opposition of the Sejm, demanding that he dismiss the troops, coupled with Władysław's worsening health, crippled that plan as well.[65] Władysław still did not give up, and attempted to resurrect the plan in 1647, and with support of magnate Jeremi Wiśniowiecki (who organized military exercises near Ottoman border), attempted unsuccessfully to provoke the Ottomans to attack.[66]

On 9 August 1647, his young son, Sigismund Casimir, then seven years old, suddenly fell ill and died; the death of his only legitimate heir to the throne was a major blow to the king, whose grief prevented his attendance at the boy's funeral held in Kraków.[67][b]

Death Edit

 
Władysław IV on Horseback, Rubens' studio

While hunting near Merkinė (Merecz) in early 1648, Władysław suffered from a case of gallstones or kidney stones.[c][67] The King's condition supposedly worsened as he was given the incorrect medication to treat the ailment.[67] Being aware that these might be his final days, the King had his last will dictated and then received his last rites.[67] Władysław died around 02:00 at night on 20 May 1648.[67]

His heart and viscera were interred in the Chapel of St. Casimir of Vilnius Cathedral.[68] As he had no legitimate male heirs, he was succeeded by his half brother John II Casimir Vasa.

Character Edit

Władysław has been described as outgoing and friendly, with a sense of humor, optimistic, a "people's person", able to charm many of those who interacted with him.[69] On the other hand, he had a short temper and when angered, could act without considering all consequences.[70]

Władysław was criticized for being a spendthrift; he lived lavishly, spending more than his royal court treasury could afford.[18][71] He also dispensed much wealth among his courtiers, who were seen by people farther from the court as taking advantage of the king.[18] He has also been known to maintain several mistresses throughout his life, including during his married period.[72]

Patronage Edit

 
Loving cup of King Władysław IV, held at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna

One of the king's most substantial achievements was in the cultural sphere; he became a notable patron of the arts.[73] Władysław was a connoisseur of the arts, in particular, theater and music.[74] He spoke several languages, enjoyed reading historical literature and poetry.[75] He collected paintings and created a notable gallery of paintings in the Warsaw castle.[74] Władysław assembled an important collection of Italian and Flemish Baroque paintings, much of which were lost in the wars after his death. He sponsored many musicians and in 1637 created the first amphitheater in the palace, the first theater in Poland, where during his reign dozens of operas and ballets were performed.[76] He is credited with bringing the very genre of opera to Poland.[77] Władysław's attention to theater contributed to the spread of this art form in Poland.[76] He was also interested in poetry, as well as in cartography and historical and scientific works; he corresponded with Galileo.[78]

Notable painters and engravers Władysław supported and who attended his royal court included Peter Paul Rubens, Tommaso Dolabella, Peter Danckerts de Rij, Wilhelm Hondius,[5] Bartłomiej Strobel, and Christian Melich.[79] His royal orchestra was headed by kapellmeister Marco Scacchi, seconded by Bartłomiej Pękiel.[80]

One of the most renowned works he ordered was the raising of the Sigismund's Column in Warsaw.[81] The column, dedicated to his father, was designed by the Italian-born architect Constantino Tencalla and the sculptor Clemente Molli, and cast by Daniel Tym.[81] He was less interested in decorative architecture; he supported the construction of two palaces in Warsaw – Kazanowski Palace and Villa Regia. Among other works sponsored by or dedicated to him is Guido Reni's The Rape of Europa.[82]

Assessment Edit

 
Sigismund's Column, erected by Władysław IV, 1644

Władysław had many plans (dynastic, about wars, territorial gains: regaining Silesia, Inflanty (Livonia), incorporation of Ducal Prussia, creation of his hereditary dukedom etc.), some of them with real chances of success, but for various reasons, most of them ended in failure during his 16-year reign.[73] Though his grand international political plans failed, he did improve the Commonwealth foreign policy, supporting the establishment of a network of permanent diplomatic agents in important European countries.[73]

Throughout his life, Władysław successfully defended Poland against foreign invasions. He was recognized as a good tactician and strategist, who did much to modernize the Polish Army.[30][31][83] Władysław ensured that the officer corps was significantly large so that the army could be expanded; introduced foreign (Western) infantry to the Polish Army, with its pikes and early firearms, and supported the expansion of the artillery.[84] His attempt to create a Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Navy resulted in the creation of a new port village, Władysławowo.[85] Despite promising beginnings, Władysław failed to secure enough funds for the fleet creation; the ships were gone – sunk, or stolen – by the 1640s.[86]

 
1637 medal commemorating Władysław IV's victories over Russia, Turkey and Sweden

The king, while Catholic, was very tolerant and did not support the more aggressive policies of the Counter-Reformation.[87] When he took power, the Senate of Poland had 6 Protestant members; at the time of his death, it had 11.[87] Despite his support for religious tolerance, he did fail, however, to resolve the conflict stemming from the Union of Brest split. Despite his support for the Protestants, he did not stop the growing tide of intolerance, either in Poland or abroad, as shown by the fate of the Racovian Academy, or an international disagreement between the faiths.[88] Neither did he get involved with the disagreement about the Orthodox Cossacks, a group that he respected and counted on in his plans.[73]

In internal politics he attempted to strengthen the power of the monarchy, but this was mostly thwarted by the szlachta, who valued their independence and democratic powers. Władysław suffered continuing difficulties caused by the efforts of the Polish Sejm (parliament) to check the King's power and limit his dynastic ambitions. Władysław was fed up with the weak position of the king in the Commonwealth; his politics included attempting to secure a small, preferably hereditary territory – like a duchy – where his position would be much stronger.[89]

Władysław used the title of the King of Sweden, although he had no control over Sweden whatsoever and never set foot in that country. However, he continued his attempts to regain the Swedish throne, with similar lack of results as his father.[70] He might have been willing to trade his claim away, but the offer was never put down in the negotiations.[70]

Some historians see Władysław as a dreamer who could not stick to one policy, and upon running into first difficulties, ditched it and looked for another opportunity.[70] Perhaps it was due to this lukewarmness that Władysław was never able to inspire those he ruled to support, at least in any significant manner, any of his plans.[90] Władysław Czapliński in his biography of the king is more understanding, noting the short period of his reign (16 years) and the weakness of the royal position he was forced to deal with.[73]

Several years after his death, a diplomatic mission from Muscovy demanded that publications about Władysław's victories in the Smolensk War of 1633–1634 be collected and burned. Eventually, to much controversy, their demand was met. Polish historian Maciej Rosalak noted: "under the reign of Władysław IV, such a shameful event would have never been allowed."[91]

Royal titles Edit

In 1632 Władysław was elected King of Poland. He claimed to be King of Sweden by paternal inheritance, but was never able to gain possession of that throne. His titles were the longest of any Polish king ever.[91]

Ancestry Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

a ^ After some discussions early on, he chose the title of elected Grand Duke of Moscow (electus Magnus Dux Moscoviae) rather than that of a tsar.[102]

b ^ Władysław had no children with his second wife, and his first wife bore him only two children (Maria Anna Izabela and Zygmunt Kazimierz), both of them died in their youth. He had at least one known illegitimate son, Władysław Konstanty Vasa, but he played no significant role in Polish politics.[103]

c ^ The confusion stems from an undisambiguated use of the Polish medical term kamica in the cited reference work (Czapliński 1976).[67] Czapliński also mentions that Władysław suffered from ill health throughout his life, related to obesity, rheumatism and kidney issues.[104] There were months-long periods, particularly in 1635 and 1639, when he could not walk.[104]

Footnotes Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Polish: Władysław IV Waza; Lithuanian: Vladislovas Vaza; Swedish: Vladislav IV av Polen; Russian: Владислав IV Ваза, tr. Vladislav IV Vaza; Latin: Ladislaus IV Vasa
  2. ^ Historian Władysław Czapliński claimed that Sigismund's death resulted from a heart attack, however, witnesses recorded that the king "lay paralysed" and died of a stroke.[23][24]

References Edit

  1. ^ Queen Liberty: The Concept of Freedom in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. BRILL. 17 August 2012. ISBN 9789004231214.
  2. ^ a b Czapliński 1976, p. 11.
  3. ^ Czapliński 1976, pp. 11, 18.
  4. ^ a b c Czapliński 1976, p. 18.
  5. ^ a b c d Bohun & Rosalak 2007, p. 4.
  6. ^ a b c Czapliński 1976, p. 22.
  7. ^ Bohun & Rosalak 2007, p. 5.
  8. ^ Czapliński 1976, pp. 19–21.
  9. ^ Czapliński 1976, p. 23.
  10. ^ a b c Bohun & Rosalak 2007, p. 8.
  11. ^ Kamiński & Kurpiewski 1984, p. 11.
  12. ^ a b Bohun & Rosalak 2007, p. 9.
  13. ^ Czapliński 1976, p. 52.
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  17. ^ Czapliński 1976, p. 70.
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Bibliography Edit

  • Albertrandy, Jan (1846). Dzieje krolewstwa polskiego krotko lat porzadkiem opisane przez Jana Albertrandego (in Polish). K. Jabloński. p. 164.
  • Besala, Jerzy (2009). Najsłynniejsze miłości królów polskich (in Polish). Bellona. ISBN 9788311115996. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  • Bohun, Tomasz; Rosalak, Maciej (24 July 2007). "Władysław IV Waza 1595–1658". Rzeczpospolita and Mówią Wieki. Władcy Polski (in Polish). 23.
  • Czapliński, Władysław (1959). Na Dworze Króla Władysława IV [At the Court of King Władysław IV] (in Polish). Warsaw: Ksiażka i wiedza. OCLC 577964149.
  • Czapliński, Władysław (1976). Władysław IV i jego czasy [Władysław IV and His Times] (in Polish). Warsaw: PW "Wiedza Poweszechna".
  • Gierowski, Józef Andrzej (1979). Historia Polski, 1505–1764 (in Polish). Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe. ISBN 83-01-00172-0.
  • Kamiński, Czesław; Kurpiewski, Janusz (1984). Katalog monet polskich 1632–1648 (Władysław IV) (in Polish). Warsaw: Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza. OCLC 12805200.
  • Kwiatkowski, Kajetan (1823). Dzieje narodu polskiego za panowania Władysława IV. krola polskiego i szweckiego (in Polish). N. Glücksberg.
  • Jasienica, Paweł (1982). Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów: Srebny Wiek (in Polish). Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. ISBN 83-06-00788-3.
  • Rożek, Michał (1995). Wawel i Skałka: panteony polskie (in Polish). Ossolineum. ISBN 978-83-04-04058-8.
  • Wdowiszewski, Zygmunt (2017) [2005]. Genealogia Jagiellonów i Domu Wazów w Polsce. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Avalon. ISBN 9788377302262.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Wladislaus IV of Poland at Wikimedia Commons
  • Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Wladislaus IV" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). pp. 765–767, see page 767. Wladislaus IV. (1595–1648), king of Poland.....
  • Iter per Europam Bibliotheca Augustana
  • Marek, Miroslav. "Vasa's genealogy". Genealogy.EU.
  • Testimony 30 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Kunstkammer and opera of Władysław Vasa
  • (in Polish)
  • (in Polish) Quotes about Władysław
Władysław IV Vasa
Born: 9 June 1595 Died: 20 May 1648
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania

1632–1648
Succeeded by
Preceded by Tsar of Russia
1610–1613
Succeeded by

władysław, vasa, this, article, about, 17th, century, polish, king, another, person, called, władysław, poland, władysław, elbow, high, ladislaus, poland, june, 1595, 1648, king, poland, grand, duke, lithuania, claimant, thrones, sweden, russia, born, into, ho. This article is about the 17th century Polish king For another person called Wladyslaw IV of Poland see Wladyslaw I the Elbow High Wladyslaw IV Vasa a or Ladislaus IV of Poland 9 June 1595 20 May 1648 was King of Poland Grand Duke of Lithuania and claimant of the thrones of Sweden and Russia Born into the House of Vasa as a prince of Poland and of Sweden Wladyslaw IV was the eldest son of Sigismund III Vasa and Sigismund s first wife Anna of Austria Wladyslaw IV VasaPortrait by Peter Paul RubensKing of PolandGrand Duke of LithuaniaReign8 November 1632 20 May 1648Coronation6 February 1633PredecessorSigismund III VasaSuccessorJohn II Casimir VasaTsar of Russia disputed Reign19 July 1610 21 February 1613PredecessorVasili IVSuccessorMichael IBorn9 June 1595Lobzow Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthDied20 May 1648 1648 05 20 aged 52 Merecz Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthBurialWawel Cathedral Krakow Vilnius Cathedral Vilnius heart SpousesCecilia Renata of AustriaMarie Louise GonzagaIssuemore Sigismund CasimirMaria Anna IsabellaWladyslaw Konstanty illegitimate HouseVasaFatherSigismund III of PolandMotherAnne of AustriaReligionRoman CatholicSignatureWladyslaw was elected Tsar of Russia by the Seven Boyars in 1610 when the Polish army captured Moscow but did not assume the throne because of his father s position and a popular uprising Nevertheless until 1634 he used the titular title of Grand Duke of Muscovy a principality centred on Moscow Elected king of Poland in 1632 he was largely successful in defending the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth against foreign invasion most notably in the Smolensk War of 1632 1634 in which he participated personally He supported religious tolerance and carried out military reforms such as the founding of the Commonwealth Navy Wladyslaw was also a renowned patron of the arts and music He gained fame by defeating the Ottoman Empire strengthening royal power and reforming the Commonwealth s political system although he failed at reclaiming the Swedish throne Despite that failure his personal charisma and popularity among all segments of society contributed to relative internal calm in the Commonwealth He died without a legitimate son and was succeeded to the Polish throne by his half brother John II Casimir Vasa Wladyslaw s death marked the end of relative stability in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth as conflicts and tensions that had been growing over several decades came to a head with devastating consequences The Khmelnytsky Uprising in the east 1648 and the subsequent Swedish invasion the Deluge 1655 1660 weakened the country and diminished Poland s status as a regional power 1 For that reason Wladyslaw s reign was seen in following decades as a bygone golden era of stability and prosperity Contents 1 Life 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Tsar 1 3 Prince 1 4 King 1 4 1 Military campaigns 1 4 2 Politics 1 4 3 Marriages 1 4 4 Death 1 4 5 Character 1 4 6 Patronage 2 Assessment 3 Royal titles 4 Ancestry 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksLife EditWladyslaw IV s father Sigismund III Vasa grandson of Sweden s King Gustav I had succeeded his father to the Swedish throne in 1592 only to be deposed in 1599 by his uncle subsequently King Charles IX This resulted in a long standing feud with the Polish kings of the House of Vasa claiming the Swedish throne This led to the Polish Swedish War of 1600 1629 and later to the Deluge of 1655 Childhood Edit nbsp Prince Wladyslaw aged about 10 c 1605The marriage of Anne of Austria to Sigismund III was a traditional politically motivated marriage intended to tie the young House of Vasa to the prestigious Habsburgs 2 Wladyslaw was born 9 June 1595 at the King s summer residence in Lobzow near Krakow a few months after the main Wawel Castle had been consumed by fire 2 Wladyslaw s mother died on 10 February 1598 less than three years after giving birth to him 3 He was raised by one of her former ladies of the court Urszula Meierin who eventually became a powerful player at the royal court with much influence 4 5 Wladyslaw s Hofmeister was Michal Konarski a Polish Prussian noble 4 Around early 17th century Urszula lost much of her influence as Wladyslaw gained new teachers and mentors including such priests as Marek Letkowski Gabriel Prowancjusz and Andrzej Szoldrski and in military matters by Zygmunt Kazanowski 5 6 Much of his curriculum was likely designed by Father Piotr Skarga much respected by Sigmismund III 6 Wladyslaw studied for several years in the Krakow Academy and for two years in Rome 6 At the age of 10 he received his own prince court 4 He formed a friendship with brothers Adam and Stanislaw Kazanowski It was reported that young Wladyslaw was interested in arts later this led to him becoming an important patron of the arts He spoke and wrote in German Italian and Latin 5 Wladyslaw was liked by the szlachta Polish nobility but his father s plans to secure him the throne of Poland vivente rege were unpopular and eventually crushed in the Zebrzydowski Rebellion rokosz 7 8 Tsar Edit nbsp Young WladyslawWith the intensification of the Polish intervention in Muscovy in 1609 the royal family moved to their residence in Vilnius capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania where he witnessed the fire of Vilnius which required the royal family to evacuate from Vilnius Castle 9 Later that year Wladyslaw aged 15 was elected Tsar by Muscovy s aristocracy council of Seven boyars who overthrew tsar Vasily Shuysky during the Polish Muscovite War and Muscovy s Time of Troubles 10 His election was ruined by his father Sigismund who aimed to convert Muscovy s population from the Eastern Orthodox religion to Roman Catholicism 10 Sigismund refused to agree to the boyar s request to send prince Wladyslaw to Moscow and his conversion to Orthodoxy Instead Sigismund proposed that he should reign as a regent in Muscovy instead This unrealistic proposal led to a resumption of hostilities 10 In 1611 12 silver and gold coins kopecks were prematurely stuck in the Russian mints in Moscow and Novgorod with Wladyslaw s titulary Tsar and Grand Prince Vladislav Zigimontovych of all Russia 11 Wladyslaw tried to regain the tsar s throne himself organizing a campaign in 1616 Despite some military victories he was unable to capture Moscow 12 The Commonwealth gained some disputed territories in the Truce of Deulino but Wladyslaw was never able to reign in Russia the throne during this time was instead held by tsar Michael Romanov He held on to the title a without any real power until 1634 12 Likely the failure of this campaign showed Wladyslaw the limits of royal power in Poland as major factors for the failure included significant autonomy of the military commanders which did not see Wladyslaw as their superior and lack of funds for the army as the Polish parliament sejm refused to subsidize the war 13 Prince Edit nbsp Wladyslaw IV in an 18th century portrait by Marcello BacciarelliBefore he was elected king of the Commonwealth Wladyslaw fought in many campaigns seeking personal glory After his final campaign against Russians in 1617 18 the end of Dymitriads he went to Silesia in 1619 looking for an opportunity to aid the Habsburgs in their struggle against the Czech Hussites in the Thirty Years War an opportunity that never materialized 14 15 In 1620 he took part in the second phase of the Polish Ottoman War a consequence of the long series of struggles between Poland and the Ottomans over Moldavia 16 In 1621 he was a Polish commander at Chocim He reportedly he was stricken with illness but despite that proved a voice of reason convincing other Polish commanders there to stay and fight 14 16 His advice was correct and the battle eventually ended with a peace treaty that returned the status quo from before the Ottoman invasion This peace treaty also gave Wladyslaw an international reputation as a defender of the Christian faith and increased his popularity in the Commonwealth itself 14 16 nbsp Art Collection of Prince Wladyslaw Vasa Royal Castle in Warsaw according to artist s signature painted in Warsaw in 1626 depicts treasures purchased by the Prince during his journey across Europe In 1623 while near Gdansk Danzig he witnessed Gustavus Adolphus s Swedish Navy use its naval superiority to demand concessions from Gdansk the Commonwealth had no navy 17 In 1624 King Sigismund decided that the time had come for Wladyslaw to travel like many of his peers to Western Europe For security reasons Wladyslaw traveled under a fake name Snopkowski from Polish Snopek meaning sheaf as seen in the Vasa s coat of arms On the long voyage 1624 25 he was accompanied by Albrycht Stanislaw Radziwill and other courtiers 18 First he travelled to Wroclaw Breslau then Munich where he met Maximilian I Elector of Bavaria 18 In Brussels he met Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain in Antwerp Rubens Near Breda he met Ambrosio Spinola 18 It was during his stay with Spinola that he was impressed by Western military techniques this was later reflected when he became king as military matters were always important to him 18 19 While not a military genius and surpassed by his contemporary Commonwealth hetman Stanislaw Koniecpolski Wladyslaw was known as a fairly skillful commander on his own In Rome he was welcomed by Pope Urban VIII who congratulated him on his fighting against the Ottomans During his stay in Florence he was impressed by opera and decided to bring this form of art to the Commonwealth where it was previously unknown 18 In Genoa and Venice he was impressed by the local shipyards and in Pisa he witnessed a specially organized mock naval battle experiences that resulted in his later attempt to create the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Navy 18 After returning to Poland he fought in 1626 against the Swedes in the last phase of the Polish Swedish War where he took part in the battle of Gniew 20 His involvement in this conflict which lasted till the Truce of Altmark in 1629 was rather limited and he spent much time in other parts of the country 21 During that period and afterward he lobbied for support of his candidature for the Polish throne as his father Sigismund was getting more advanced in his age and the succession to the Polish throne did not occur through inheritance but rather through the process of royal elections While Wladyslaw and his father tried to ensure Wladyslaw s election during Sigismund s lifetime this was not a popular option for the nobility and it repeatedly failed up to and including at the sejm of 1631 22 Sigismund suffered a sudden stroke b in late April 1632 and died in the morning hours of 30 April forcing the matter to be raised again 25 23 King Edit nbsp Wladyslaw IV Vasa coronation nbsp Wladyslaw IV by Pieter Soutman c 1634The election sejm of 1632 eventually chose Wladyslaw there were no other serious contenders 26 The decision reached on 8 November but as the pacta conventa were not yet ready the official announcement was delayed until 13 November 27 28 In the pacta conventa Wladyslaw pledged himself to fund a military school and equipment to find a way to fund a navy to maintain current alliances not to raise armies give offices or military ranks to foreigners negotiate peace treaties or declare war without the Sejm s approval not to take a wife without the Senate s approval to convince his brothers to take an oath to the Commonwealth and to transfer the profits from the Royal Mint to the Royal Treasury rather than to a private treasury 26 28 When the election result was announced by the Crown Grand Marshal Lukasz Opalinski the szlachta nobility who had taken part in the election began festivities in honor of the new king which lasted three hours 27 Wladyslaw was crowned in the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow on 6 February in the following year 29 Military campaigns Edit In an attempt to take advantage of the confusion expected after the death of the Polish king Tsar Michael I of Russia invaded the Commonwealth 30 A Muscovite army crossed the Commonwealth eastern frontier in October 1632 and laid siege to Smolensk which was ceded to Poland by Russia in 1618 at the end of the Dymitriad wars 30 In the war against Russia in 1632 1634 the Smolensk War Wladyslaw broke the siege in September 1633 and then in turn surrounded the Russian army under Mikhail Shein which was then forced to surrender on 1 March 1634 30 31 nbsp Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth during the reign of Wladyslaw IV ca 1635During that campaign Wladyslaw started the modernisation program of the Commonwealth army emphasising the usage of modern infantry and artillery Wladyslaw proved to be a good tactician and his innovations in the use of artillery and fortifications based on Western ideas greatly contributed to the eventual Polish Lithuanian success 30 31 32 King Wladyslaw wanted to continue the war or because the Polish Swedish Treaty of Altmark would soon be expiring ally with the Russians to strike against Sweden 33 However the Sejm wanted no more conflict 34 As Stanislaw Lubienski the Bishop of Plock wrote two weeks after Shein s surrender Our happiness is in remaining within our borders guaranteeing health and well being 34 The resulting Peace of Polyanov Treaty of Polanow favourable to Poland confirmed the pre war territorial status quo Muscovy also agreed to pay 20 000 rubles in exchange for Wladyslaw s renunciation of all claims to the tsardom and return of the royal insignia which were in the Commonwealth possession since the Dymitriads 30 31 Following the Smolensk campaign the Commonwealth was threatened by another attack by the Ottoman Empire During the wars against Ottomans in 1633 1634 Wladyslaw moved the Commonwealth army south of the Muscovy border where under the command of hetman Stanislaw Koniecpolski it forced the Turks to renew a peace treaty 35 In the resulting treaty both countries agreed again to curb the border raids by Cossacks and the Tatars and the Ottomans confirmed that the Commonwealth to be an independent power and had not to pay tribute to the Empire 35 After the southern campaign the Commonwealth had to deal with a threat from the north as the armistice ending the Polish Swedish War 1600 1629 was expiring The majority of Polish nobles preferred to solve the problem through negotiations unwilling to pay taxes for a new war provided that Sweden was open to negotiations and concessions in particular to retreat from the occupied Polish coastal territories 36 Wladyslaw himself was hoping for a war which could yield some more significant territorial gains and even managed to gather a sizeable army with navy elements near the disputed territories 37 Sweden weakened by involvement in the Thirty Years War was however open to a peaceful solution 38 Wladyslaw could not go against the decision of the Sejm and Senate and agreed to support the treaty 39 Thus both sides agreed to sign the Armistice of Stuhmsdorf Sztumska Wies on 12 September 1635 favourable to the Commonwealth which regained the Prussian territories and called for a reduction of the Swedish tolls on the maritime trade 40 Politics Edit In the three months between his election and coronation Wladyslaw sounded the waters regarding the possibility of a peaceful succession to the Swedish throne following the recent death of Gustavus Adolphus but this as well as his proposal to mediate between Sweden and its enemies was rejected primarily by the Swedish chancellor and head of the regency council Axel Oxenstierna 41 Wladyslaw IV owed nominal allegiance to the Imperial Habsburgs as a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece His relationship with the Habsburgs was relatively strong although he was not above carrying some negotiations with their enemies like France he refused Cardinal Richelieu s 1635 proposal of an alliance and a full out war against them despite potential lure of territorial gains in Silesia 42 He realized that such a move would cause much unrest in a heavily Catholic Commonwealth that he likely lacked the authority and power to push such a change of policy through the Sejm and that the resulting conflict would be very difficult 42 From 1636 onward for the next few years Wladyslaw strengthened his ties with the Habsburgs 43 In the meantime Wladyslaw still tried to take a leading role in European politics and negotiate a peaceful settlement to the Thirty Years War a settlement which he hoped would ease his way into regaining the Swedish crown 44 Following the armistice of Stuhmsdorf Wladyslaw came to increasingly realize that his prospects for regaining the Swedish throne were dim 45 In the years 1636 1638 he proposed several reforms to strengthen his and his dynasty s power in the Commonwealth His first plan was an attempt to secure a hereditary province within the country which would not be threatened by the possible power shift following a future royal election this however did not gain sufficient support in the Sejm 46 Next Wladyslaw attempted to create an order of chivalry similar to the Order of the Golden Fleece but this plan was scuttled down as well with the szlachta and the magnates seeing this as an attempt to create a royal loyalist elite and traditionally opposing anything that could lead to the reduction of their extensive power 47 Popular vote and opposition also resulted in the failure of the plan to raise taxes from trade tariffs here it was not only the nobility but even the merchants and burghers from towns like Gdansk Danzig who were able to muster enough support including from foreign powers to stop the king s reforms 48 In fact the defeat of his plans was so total that he was forced to make certain conciliatory gestures to the nobility as the Sejm passed several laws constraining his authority such as to hire foreign troops further indicating the limits of royal power in the Commonwealth 48 Marriages Edit Early in his reign there were plans regarding a marriage of Wladyslaw and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia Princess Palatine daughter of Frederick V Elector Palatine 49 This was however unpopular both with Catholic nobles and the Catholic Church and when it became clear to Wladyslaw that this would not convince the Swedes to elect him to their throne this plan with quiet support from Wladyslaw himself was dropped 50 nbsp Wladyslaw IV in later lifeFerdinand II Holy Roman Emperor s proposal of marriage between Wladyslaw and Archduchess Cecilia Renata of Austria sister of future Ferdinand III Holy Roman Emperor arrived in Warsaw somewhere during spring 1636 In June that year Wladyslaw sent Jerzy Ossolinski to the Imperial Court to work on improving the Imperial Commonwealth relations 43 The king s trusted confessor father Walerian Magni 51 of Franciscan religious order and voivode Kasper Doenhoff arrived in Regensburg Polish Ratyzbona on 26 October 1636 with consent and performed negotiations The Archduchess dowry was agreed for 100 000 zlotys 51 the Emperor also promised to pay the dowries of both of Siegmund III s wives Anna and Konstance Additionally the son of Wladyslaw and Cecilia Renata was to obtain the duchy of Opole and Raciborz in Silesia Duchy of Opole and Raciborz However before everything was confirmed and signed Ferdinand II died and Ferdinand III backed from giving the Silesian duchy to the son of Wladyslaw Instead a dowry was awarded to be secured by the Bohemian estates of Trebon Trebon 51 On 16 March 1637 a family alliance was signed between the Habsburgs and the Polish branch of the House of Vasa 52 Wladyslaw promised not to sign any pacts against the Habsburgs and to transfer his rights to the Swedish throne in case of his line s extinction in return Habsburg promised to support his efforts to regain the Swedish crown and to transfer to him some territory in case of gains in a war against the Ottomans 52 The marriage took place in 1637 on 12 September 53 nbsp Portrait of Wladyslaw IV by Frans Luycx ca 1640The next few years were similarly unsuccessful with regards to his plans 54 Eventually he tried to bypass the opposition in the Sejm with secret alliances dealings and intrigues but did not prove successful 54 Those plans included schemes such as supporting the Holy Roman Emperor s raid on Inflanty in 1639 which he hoped would lead to a war 55 an attempted alliance with Spain against France in 1640 1641 56 and in 1641 1643 with Denmark against Sweden 57 On the international scene he attempted to mediate between various religious factions of Christianity using the tolerant image of the Commonwealth to portray himself as the neutral mediator 58 He organized a conference in Torun Thorn that begun on 28 January 1645 but it failed to reach any meaningful conclusions 58 After Cecilia s death in 1644 the ties between Wladyslaw and the Habsburgs were somewhat loosened 59 In turn the relations with France improved and eventually Wladyslaw married the French princess Ludwika Maria Gonzaga de Nevers daughter of Charles I Gonzaga Duke of Mantua in 1646 60 Wladyslaw s last plan was to orchestrate a major war between the European powers and the Ottoman Empire 61 The border with the Empire was in a near constant state of low level warfare some historians estimate that in the first half of the 17th century Ottoman raids and wars resulted in the loss death or enslavement of about 300 000 Commonwealth citizens in the borderlands 62 The war Wladyslaw hoped would also solve the problem of unrest among the Cossacks a militant group living in the Ukraine near the Ottoman border who could find worth in such a campaign and turn their attention to fighting for the Commonwealth instead of against it 63 As usual he failed to inspire the nobility rarely willing to consider sponsoring another war to agree to this plan 63 He received more support from foreign powers from Rome Venice and Muscovy 64 With the promise of funds for the war Wladyslaw started recruiting troops among the Cossacks in 1646 64 The opposition of the Sejm demanding that he dismiss the troops coupled with Wladyslaw s worsening health crippled that plan as well 65 Wladyslaw still did not give up and attempted to resurrect the plan in 1647 and with support of magnate Jeremi Wisniowiecki who organized military exercises near Ottoman border attempted unsuccessfully to provoke the Ottomans to attack 66 On 9 August 1647 his young son Sigismund Casimir then seven years old suddenly fell ill and died the death of his only legitimate heir to the throne was a major blow to the king whose grief prevented his attendance at the boy s funeral held in Krakow 67 b Death Edit nbsp Wladyslaw IV on Horseback Rubens studioWhile hunting near Merkine Merecz in early 1648 Wladyslaw suffered from a case of gallstones or kidney stones c 67 The King s condition supposedly worsened as he was given the incorrect medication to treat the ailment 67 Being aware that these might be his final days the King had his last will dictated and then received his last rites 67 Wladyslaw died around 02 00 at night on 20 May 1648 67 His heart and viscera were interred in the Chapel of St Casimir of Vilnius Cathedral 68 As he had no legitimate male heirs he was succeeded by his half brother John II Casimir Vasa Character Edit Wladyslaw has been described as outgoing and friendly with a sense of humor optimistic a people s person able to charm many of those who interacted with him 69 On the other hand he had a short temper and when angered could act without considering all consequences 70 Wladyslaw was criticized for being a spendthrift he lived lavishly spending more than his royal court treasury could afford 18 71 He also dispensed much wealth among his courtiers who were seen by people farther from the court as taking advantage of the king 18 He has also been known to maintain several mistresses throughout his life including during his married period 72 Patronage Edit nbsp Loving cup of King Wladyslaw IV held at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in ViennaOne of the king s most substantial achievements was in the cultural sphere he became a notable patron of the arts 73 Wladyslaw was a connoisseur of the arts in particular theater and music 74 He spoke several languages enjoyed reading historical literature and poetry 75 He collected paintings and created a notable gallery of paintings in the Warsaw castle 74 Wladyslaw assembled an important collection of Italian and Flemish Baroque paintings much of which were lost in the wars after his death He sponsored many musicians and in 1637 created the first amphitheater in the palace the first theater in Poland where during his reign dozens of operas and ballets were performed 76 He is credited with bringing the very genre of opera to Poland 77 Wladyslaw s attention to theater contributed to the spread of this art form in Poland 76 He was also interested in poetry as well as in cartography and historical and scientific works he corresponded with Galileo 78 Notable painters and engravers Wladyslaw supported and who attended his royal court included Peter Paul Rubens Tommaso Dolabella Peter Danckerts de Rij Wilhelm Hondius 5 Bartlomiej Strobel and Christian Melich 79 His royal orchestra was headed by kapellmeister Marco Scacchi seconded by Bartlomiej Pekiel 80 One of the most renowned works he ordered was the raising of the Sigismund s Column in Warsaw 81 The column dedicated to his father was designed by the Italian born architect Constantino Tencalla and the sculptor Clemente Molli and cast by Daniel Tym 81 He was less interested in decorative architecture he supported the construction of two palaces in Warsaw Kazanowski Palace and Villa Regia Among other works sponsored by or dedicated to him is Guido Reni s The Rape of Europa 82 Assessment Edit nbsp Sigismund s Column erected by Wladyslaw IV 1644Wladyslaw had many plans dynastic about wars territorial gains regaining Silesia Inflanty Livonia incorporation of Ducal Prussia creation of his hereditary dukedom etc some of them with real chances of success but for various reasons most of them ended in failure during his 16 year reign 73 Though his grand international political plans failed he did improve the Commonwealth foreign policy supporting the establishment of a network of permanent diplomatic agents in important European countries 73 Throughout his life Wladyslaw successfully defended Poland against foreign invasions He was recognized as a good tactician and strategist who did much to modernize the Polish Army 30 31 83 Wladyslaw ensured that the officer corps was significantly large so that the army could be expanded introduced foreign Western infantry to the Polish Army with its pikes and early firearms and supported the expansion of the artillery 84 His attempt to create a Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Navy resulted in the creation of a new port village Wladyslawowo 85 Despite promising beginnings Wladyslaw failed to secure enough funds for the fleet creation the ships were gone sunk or stolen by the 1640s 86 nbsp 1637 medal commemorating Wladyslaw IV s victories over Russia Turkey and SwedenThe king while Catholic was very tolerant and did not support the more aggressive policies of the Counter Reformation 87 When he took power the Senate of Poland had 6 Protestant members at the time of his death it had 11 87 Despite his support for religious tolerance he did fail however to resolve the conflict stemming from the Union of Brest split Despite his support for the Protestants he did not stop the growing tide of intolerance either in Poland or abroad as shown by the fate of the Racovian Academy or an international disagreement between the faiths 88 Neither did he get involved with the disagreement about the Orthodox Cossacks a group that he respected and counted on in his plans 73 In internal politics he attempted to strengthen the power of the monarchy but this was mostly thwarted by the szlachta who valued their independence and democratic powers Wladyslaw suffered continuing difficulties caused by the efforts of the Polish Sejm parliament to check the King s power and limit his dynastic ambitions Wladyslaw was fed up with the weak position of the king in the Commonwealth his politics included attempting to secure a small preferably hereditary territory like a duchy where his position would be much stronger 89 Wladyslaw used the title of the King of Sweden although he had no control over Sweden whatsoever and never set foot in that country However he continued his attempts to regain the Swedish throne with similar lack of results as his father 70 He might have been willing to trade his claim away but the offer was never put down in the negotiations 70 Some historians see Wladyslaw as a dreamer who could not stick to one policy and upon running into first difficulties ditched it and looked for another opportunity 70 Perhaps it was due to this lukewarmness that Wladyslaw was never able to inspire those he ruled to support at least in any significant manner any of his plans 90 Wladyslaw Czaplinski in his biography of the king is more understanding noting the short period of his reign 16 years and the weakness of the royal position he was forced to deal with 73 Several years after his death a diplomatic mission from Muscovy demanded that publications about Wladyslaw s victories in the Smolensk War of 1633 1634 be collected and burned Eventually to much controversy their demand was met Polish historian Maciej Rosalak noted under the reign of Wladyslaw IV such a shameful event would have never been allowed 91 Royal titles EditIn Latin Vladislaus Quartus Dei gratia rex Poloniae magnus dux Lithuaniae Russiae Prussiae Masoviae Samogitiae Livoniaeque Smolenscie Severiae Czernichoviaeque necnon Suecorum Gothorum Vandalorumque haereditarius rex electus magnus dux Moschoviae In English Wladyslaw IV by grace of God the King of Poland Grand Duke of Lithuania Ruthenia Prussia Masovia Samogitia Livonia Smolensk Severia and Chernigov and hereditary King of the Swedes Goths and Vandals elected Grand Duke of Muscovy In 1632 Wladyslaw was elected King of Poland He claimed to be King of Sweden by paternal inheritance but was never able to gain possession of that throne His titles were the longest of any Polish king ever 91 Ancestry EditAncestors of Wladyslaw IV Vasa16 Erik Johansson Vasa 94 8 Gustav I of Sweden 94 17 Cecilia Mansdotter 94 4 John III of Sweden 92 18 Erik Abrahamsson Leijonhufvud 95 9 Margaret Leijonhufvud 95 19 Ebba Eriksdotter Vasa 95 2 Sigismund III of Poland20 Casimir IV of Poland 96 10 Sigismund I of Poland 96 21 Elisabeth of Austria 96 5 Catherine of Poland 92 22 Gian Galeazzo Sforza Duke of Milan 97 11 Bona Sforza 97 23 Isabella of Naples 97 1 Wladyslaw IV of Poland24 Philip I of Castile 98 12 Ferdinand I Holy Roman Emperor 98 25 Joanna of Castile 98 6 Charles II Archduke of Austria 93 26 Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary 99 13 Anne of Bohemia and Hungary 99 27 Anne of Foix Candale 99 3 Anne of Austria28 William IV Duke of Bavaria 100 14 Albert V Duke of Bavaria 100 29 Margravine Marie of Baden Sponheim 100 7 Duchess Maria Anna of Bavaria 93 30 Ferdinand I Holy Roman Emperor 12 101 15 Archduchess Anna of Austria 101 31 Anne of Bohemia and Hungary 13 101 See also EditHistory of Poland 1569 1795 Golden LibertyNotes Edita After some discussions early on he chose the title of elected Grand Duke of Moscow electus Magnus Dux Moscoviae rather than that of a tsar 102 b Wladyslaw had no children with his second wife and his first wife bore him only two children Maria Anna Izabela and Zygmunt Kazimierz both of them died in their youth He had at least one known illegitimate son Wladyslaw Konstanty Vasa but he played no significant role in Polish politics 103 c The confusion stems from an undisambiguated use of the Polish medical term kamica in the cited reference work Czaplinski 1976 67 Czaplinski also mentions that Wladyslaw suffered from ill health throughout his life related to obesity rheumatism and kidney issues 104 There were months long periods particularly in 1635 and 1639 when he could not walk 104 Footnotes EditNotes Edit Polish Wladyslaw IV Waza Lithuanian Vladislovas Vaza Swedish Vladislav IV av Polen Russian Vladislav IV Vaza tr Vladislav IV Vaza Latin Ladislaus IV Vasa Historian Wladyslaw Czaplinski claimed that Sigismund s death resulted from a heart attack however witnesses recorded that the king lay paralysed and died of a stroke 23 24 References Edit Queen Liberty The Concept of Freedom in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth BRILL 17 August 2012 ISBN 9789004231214 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 11 Czaplinski 1976 pp 11 18 a b c Czaplinski 1976 p 18 a b c d Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 4 a b c Czaplinski 1976 p 22 Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 5 Czaplinski 1976 pp 19 21 Czaplinski 1976 p 23 a b c Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 8 Kaminski amp Kurpiewski 1984 p 11 a b Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 9 Czaplinski 1976 p 52 a b c Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 11 Czaplinski 1976 pp 56 59 a b c Czaplinski 1976 pp 63 66 Czaplinski 1976 p 70 a b c d e f g h Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 12 Czaplinski 1976 p 74 Czaplinski 1976 pp 80 81 Czaplinski 1976 p 84 Czaplinski 1976 pp 88 90 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 95 Wdowiszewski 2017 p 224 Besala 2009 p 206 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 102 118 a b Czaplinski 1959 pp 64 71 a b Albertrandy 1846 pp 164 166 Czaplinski 1976 pp 125 138 a b c d e f Gierowski 1979 pp 235 236 a b c d Wladyslaw IV Waza 1595 1658 Wladcy Polski Nr 23 Rzeczpospolita and Mowia Wieki Various authors and editors 24 July 2007 Czaplinski 1976 p 170 Czaplinski 1976 p 169 a b Jasienica 1982 pp 370 372 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 171 176 Czaplinski 1976 pp 185 186 196 197 Czaplinski 1976 pp 186 187 200 201 Czaplinski 1976 pp 190 191 196 197 Czaplinski 1976 pp 200 201 Czaplinski 1976 p 202 Czaplinski 1976 pp 128 133 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 208 211 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 213 Czaplinski 1976 pp 205 211 212 Czaplinski 1976 p 224 Czaplinski 1976 pp 225 228 Czaplinski 1976 pp 229 233 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 240 258 Czaplinski 1976 pp 179 180 183 205 208 Czaplinski 1976 pp 183 184 205 208 a b c Czaplinski 1976 p 214 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 214 215 Czaplinski 1976 p 218 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 336 Czaplinski 1976 pp 272 274 Czaplinski 1976 pp 336 337 Czaplinski 1976 pp 337 342 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 348 352 Czaplinski 1976 p 347 Czaplinski 1976 pp 353 356 Czaplinski 1976 p 357 Czaplinski 1976 p 359 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 360 361 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 366 368 Czaplinski 1976 pp 374 378 Czaplinski 1976 p 379 a b c d e f Czaplinski 1976 pp 379 380 Rozek 1995 p 23 Czaplinski 1976 pp 121 122 a b c d Czaplinski 1976 p 122 Czaplinski 1976 pp 69 70 Czaplinski 1976 pp 291 292 a b c d e Czaplinski 1976 pp 384 385 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 323 Czaplinski 1976 p 123 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 330 333 Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 pp 3 4 Czaplinski 1976 pp 333 335 Czaplinski 1976 pp 324 326 Czaplinski 1976 p 329 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 327 The Rape of Europa The National Gallery London Czaplinski 1976 pp 170 217 218 Czaplinski 1976 pp 217 218 Czaplinski 1976 pp 219 220 Czaplinski 1976 pp 193 194 222 223 a b Czaplinski 1976 p 124 Czaplinski 1976 pp 348 349 384 385 Czaplinski 1976 pp 122 123 187 Czaplinski 1976 p 125 a b Bohun amp Rosalak 2007 p 3 a b Lager Kromnow Birgitta 1973 Katarina Jagellonica Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 20 Stockholm National Archives of Sweden p 779 Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b Hurter Friedrich von 1861 Habsburg Maria von Bayern In Wurzbach Constantin von ed Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 20 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b c Larsson Lars Olof 10 September 2002 Gustav Vasa Landsfader eller tyrann in Swedish Prisma p 21 ISBN 9789151839042 a b c Dahlback Goran 1985 Margareta Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 25 Stockholm National Archives of Sweden p 139 Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b c Sigismund I at the Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Ward Adolphus William Prothero George Walter Leathes Stanley Mordaunt eds 1911 The Cambridge Modern History Vol XIII Macmillan p 67 Retrieved 29 April 2018 a b c Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ferdinand I Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 261 262 a b c Marczali Henrik 1877 Candalei Anna II Ulaszlo neje magyarorszagi utjanak es a menyegzoi unnepelyek leirasa Kozlemenyek a parisi Nemzeti konyvtarbol 1448 1596 83 122 The Description of the Route to Hungary and the Wedding of Anne of Foix the Wife of Ladislas II Announcements from the National Library of Paris in French 1448 1596 Hungarian Historical Journal 23 97 113 a b c Walter Goetz 1953 Albrecht V Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 1 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 158 160 full text online a b c Hubner Johann 1860 Habsburg Anna von Oesterreich 1528 1587 In Wurzbach Constantin von ed Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 151 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Czaplinski 1976 p 55 Kwiatkowski 1823 p 359 a b Czaplinski 1976 pp 120 121 Bibliography Edit See also Bibliography of Russian history 1223 1613 and Bibliography of Russian history 1613 1917 Albertrandy Jan 1846 Dzieje krolewstwa polskiego krotko lat porzadkiem opisane przez Jana Albertrandego in Polish K Jablonski p 164 Besala Jerzy 2009 Najslynniejsze milosci krolow polskich in Polish Bellona ISBN 9788311115996 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Bohun Tomasz Rosalak Maciej 24 July 2007 Wladyslaw IV Waza 1595 1658 Rzeczpospolita and Mowia Wieki Wladcy Polski in Polish 23 Czaplinski Wladyslaw 1959 Na Dworze Krola Wladyslawa IV At the Court of King Wladyslaw IV in Polish Warsaw Ksiazka i wiedza OCLC 577964149 Czaplinski Wladyslaw 1976 Wladyslaw IV i jego czasy Wladyslaw IV and His Times in Polish Warsaw PW Wiedza Poweszechna Gierowski Jozef Andrzej 1979 Historia Polski 1505 1764 in Polish Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe ISBN 83 01 00172 0 Kaminski Czeslaw Kurpiewski Janusz 1984 Katalog monet polskich 1632 1648 Wladyslaw IV in Polish Warsaw Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza OCLC 12805200 Kwiatkowski Kajetan 1823 Dzieje narodu polskiego za panowania Wladyslawa IV krola polskiego i szweckiego in Polish N Glucksberg Jasienica Pawel 1982 Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodow Srebny Wiek in Polish Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy ISBN 83 06 00788 3 Rozek Michal 1995 Wawel i Skalka panteony polskie in Polish Ossolineum ISBN 978 83 04 04058 8 Wdowiszewski Zygmunt 2017 2005 Genealogia Jagiellonow i Domu Wazow w Polsce Krakow Wydawnictwo Avalon ISBN 9788377302262 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Wladislaus IV of Poland at Wikimedia Commons Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 Wladislaus IV Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed pp 765 767 see page 767 Wladislaus IV 1595 1648 king of Poland Iter per Europam Bibliotheca Augustana Marek Miroslav Vasa s genealogy Genealogy EU Testimony Archived 30 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Kunstkammer and opera of Wladyslaw Vasa in Polish Timeline of Wladyslaw s life in Polish Quotes about WladyslawWladyslaw IV VasaHouse of VasaBorn 9 June 1595 Died 20 May 1648Regnal titlesPreceded bySigismund III King of PolandGrand Duke of Lithuania1632 1648 Succeeded byJohn II CasimirPreceded byVasili IV Tsar of Russia1610 1613 Succeeded byMichael I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wladyslaw IV Vasa amp oldid 1170178485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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