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Danzig rebellion

The rebellion of the city of Danzig (Gdańsk) was a revolt from December 1575 to December 1577 of the city against the outcome of the 1576 Polish–Lithuanian royal election. The Polish throne was contested by Stephen Báthory and the Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian II.

Thaler issued by the city during the siege in 1577, with Jesus Christ on obverse instead of King Stefan Batory

It began on 12 December 1575, when Emperor Maximillian was chosen as monarch by the Polish Senate, while the majority of the szlachta (nobility) had voted for Bathory. It ended on 16 December 1577.[1] Maximilian's II death in fall of 1576 weakened Danzig's position and made the conflict less about the recognition of the ruler than about Danzig's privileges. With neither side being able to defeat the other militarily, a compromise was reached, with economic as well as religious[2] privileges of the city being restored and recognized, in return for a large reparation and recognition of Bathory as Grand Duke of western Prussia. Danzig made its oath conditional on the removal of the Statute of the Karnkowski commission of 1569/70.[3]

Background edit

On 20 July 1570, the Polish-Lithuanian king Sigismund II Augustus introduced Karnkowski Statutes, which partly reduced Danzig's special privileges[4][5] granted by earlier Polish kings after the Prussian Confederation cities recognized their rule in 1454.

In 1572, the throne of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was vacated when King Sigismund Augustus died without an heir and Henry III of France after a brief period as a Polish king returned to France. Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was an elective monarchy and (after the Union of Lublin in 1569) in close union with Lithuania, meaning that Polish nobility (szlachta) could vote on who would become the next king. Cities had no vote; Danzig however was invited by primate of Poland and interrex Jakub Uchański to cast a vote but declined to send a representative.[6] Members of the Senate (including most of the Polish episcopate led by Jakub Uchański) decided to elect Emperor Maximilian II, against the will of majority of nobility, which during the royal election voted for Anna Jagiello (the last representative of the former Polish-Lithuanian Jagiellon dynasty) and Stephen Báthory as her husband and de facto King. This led to some unrest in Poland.

The town whose economic privileges were reduced by the Karnkowski Statutes, wanted to use the situation to regain its preferential position within the Polish Crown. It also preferred Maximilian,[7] who looked more likely to support the towns' economic privileges, and who could also threaten serious economic repercussions (boycott by the Habsburgs). Thus the city, encouraged by its immense wealth and almost impregnable fortifications, as well as by the secret support of Denmark[8] and Emperor Maximilian himself, had supported the latter's election.

On 1 May 1576, Stefan Bathory married King Anna Jagiello and was crowned by Stanisław Karnkowski as King of Poland. Jakub Uchański and nuncio Wincenty Laureo recognized Maximillian as a King, but soon they and others accepted the will of majority. When Stefan swore in all of existing rights of Royal Prussia and Duchy of Prussia,[9] and was recognized as a rightful ruler,[10] Danzig refused to follow along and still recognized Maximillian as King of Poland.[11]

The tensions grew as rioters looted and burned down an abbey in Oliwa.[7] The abbey belonged to the bishop of Kujawy, Stanisław Karnkowski, who had under his jurisdiction the whole of Polish Pomerania. The Sejm (parliament) of the Commonwealth did not approve higher taxes for the war. It did however approve a banicja (form of political exile and excommunication), confiscation of the city's property, arrest of its citizens, commercial blockade and rerouting of the important trade via the port of Elbląg (which however was immediately blockaded by Denmark's navy).[12][13]

Fighting edit

In August 1576, Bathory led 2,000 (Polish soldiers and mercenaries from Transylvania and Wallachia[14]) men to Malbork (Marienburg), from there Polish units took control of the area surrounding Gdańsk, capturing Grabina and Głowa, two strategically important villages, thereby blockading Danzig's port from the east and the south. The King left the army under the command of Hetman Jan Zborowski and most of the forces were stationed at Tczew (Dirschau). In the west the main base was at Puck (Putzig), where there was a mercenary force led by Ernest Weyher. While some Polish privateer ships fought the Gdańsk and Danish fleets, for the most part the control of the Baltic Sea belonged to the Danzigers and their allies.[15] Soon after the fighting begun, Maximilian's II death (12 October 1576) was announced; this weakened Danzig's position and made the conflict less about the recognition of the ruler than about Danzig's privileges.[16]

 
Map showing the fortifications of Danzig as they were over 100 years later

With the coming of the spring of 1577, the fighting began anew. The Danzig army, led by the German mercenary commander Johann Winkelbruch (Hans Winckelburg von Kölln), was about 7,000-12,000 strong (including mercenaries, among them a Scottish regiment[17]), but with less than 1,000 cavalry. Winckelburg decided to crush the small army of Zborowski (who had about 2,000 men, half of them cavalry), but the Danzig army was utterly defeated by Zborowski in the battle of Lubiszewo on 17 April 1577.[7][18]

After the battle, the Danzig forces retreated behind the walls, citizens pulled down trees and houses in front of fortifications[19][20] and a siege began. Reinforcement with King Batory arrived only in July.[15] During it King Stefan was using heated cannonballs[21] and turned back the flow of the Radunia river.[9] Bathory had about 11,000 men, and Danzig, about 10,000.[15] A surprise attack by the Danzigers managed to destroy two-thirds of the Polish artillery, vastly slowing the progress of the siege.[15] In September 1577[9] Danzig and Danish fleets started a blockade of Polish trade along Elbing and attacked its suburbs. Their troops that landed were soon pushed back by Bathory's Hungarian infantry under Kacper Bekiesza, and the city council send a note thanking the King.[9][22]

However, after a few months, Stephen's army was unable to take the city by force. On 16 December 1577,[1] the siege ended and citizens swore loyalty to Stefan's representatives Eustachy Wołłowicz and Andrzej Firlej.[10][23] (Treaty of Malbork).[7]

Aftermath edit

The Gdańsk merchants had suffered a great deal from the blockade, especially because of lack of trade.[15] In the meantime, Bathory also wanted to end the siege, as Ivan the Terrible of Muscovy broke a three-year truce in the same year[24] and Muscovy tried to gain control of the eastern territories of the Commonwealth (Livonian War).[25]

The siege and all economic restrictions that were passed in the past two years were lifted in return for reparations and recognition of Bathory as the sovereign. Stefan forgave the city's rebellion and again turned Polish trade from Elbing to Danzig. The city, in turn, recognized him as ruler of Poland and promised to pay the large sum of 200,000 złotys and an additional 20,000 repatriation to the abbey of Oliwa in five years.[26]

On 26 November 1585 the Karnkowski Statutes from 1570 were lifted,[27] and Danzig again became the most privileged city in the Commonwealth.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Walter Yust (1956). Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. ^ John H. Elliott (2000). Europe Divided. Wiley. p. 336. ISBN 9780631217800.
  3. ^ Friedrich, Karin (2 November 2006). The Other Prussia: Royal Prussia, Poland and Liberty, 1569-1772. p. 111. ISBN 9780521027755.
  4. ^ John Brown Mason (1946). The Danzig Dilemma; a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise. Stanford University Press. p. 377. ISBN 9780598715616.
  5. ^ Karin Friedrich (2000). The Other Prussia: Royal Prussia, Poland and Liberty, 1569-1772. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58335-7.
  6. ^ Rocznik gdański [Vintage Gdansk] (in Polish). Vol. 24–25. Gdańsk Scientific Society. 1965.
  7. ^ a b c d Norman Davies, God's Playground: A History of Poland in Two Volumes, Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-19-925339-0, p.321.
  8. ^ Stewart P. Oakley, War and Peace in the Baltic, 1560-1790, Routledge, 1992, ISBN 0-415-02472-2, p.35
  9. ^ a b c d (in Polish) Paweł Jasienica: "Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów" (p.101-107),
  10. ^ a b Jerzy Samuel Bandtkie (1810). Krótkie wyobrażenie dzieiów Królestwa Polskiego (in Polish). Vol. 2. u Wilhelma Bogumiła Korna. p. 184.
  11. ^ Władysław Czapliński (1985). Zarys dziejów Polski do roku 1864 [Outline of Polish history until 1864] (in Polish). Poland: Znak. p. 550. ISBN 9788370060572.
  12. ^ Daniel Stone (2001). The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386-1795. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-98093-1.
  13. ^ Stanisława Zajchowska; Maria Kiełczewska-Zaleska; Feliks Nowowiejski; Jerzy Antoniewicz (1953). Warmia i Mazury [Warmia and Mazury] (in Polish). Vol. 1. Western Institute.
  14. ^ E. Liptai: Magyarország hadtörténete (1), Zrínyi katonai kiadó 1984. ISBN 963-326-320-4; 208. p.
  15. ^ a b c d e "Polish Renaissance Warfare - Muscovite Polish War 1610-18". Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  16. ^ Besala and Biedrzycka (2005), "Stefan Batory". Polski Słownik Biograficzny. XLIII.p.118
  17. ^ The regiment of six companies numbering about 700 men was hired by Danzig in 1577–8 and won great fame in the city's rebellion against Poland. - Richard Brzezinski: Polish Armies 1569-1696 (2), Osprey Publishing
  18. ^ Radosław Sikora, Lubieszów 17 IV 1577, Zabrze 2005.
  19. ^ Edmund Cieślak; Czesław Biernat (1988). The Structures of Everyday Life. Wydawn. p. 547. ISBN 9780520081147.
  20. ^ History of Gdańsk. Gdańsk, Poland: Wydawn. 1988. p. 547. ISBN 9788321572116.
  21. ^ W. Y. Carman (2004). A History of Firearms. Dover Publications. p. 207. ISBN 9780486433905.
  22. ^ Wacław Sobieski (1923). Dzieje Polski (in Polish). Vol. 1–3. Poland: Wydawn.
  23. ^ Irena Fabiani-Madeyska (1957). "Odwiedziny Gdańska w XIX wieku" (in Polish). Gdańsk, Poland: Gdańsk Scientific Society: 370. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  24. ^ Joseph Slabey Rouček (1949). Slavonic Encyclopaedia. Philosophical Library. p. 1445. ISBN 9780804605373.
  25. ^ Daniel Stone, The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386-1795, University of Washington Press, 2001, ISBN 0-295-98093-1, p. 123.
  26. ^ Marian Pelczar (1947). Polski Gdańsk (in Polish). Gdańsk, Poland: Municipal Library of Gdańsk. p. 187.
  27. ^ Odrodzenie i reformacja w polsce [Rebirth and reformation in Poland] (in Polish). Vol. 4–7. Instytut Historii PAN. 1959.

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The rebellion of the city of Danzig Gdansk was a revolt from December 1575 to December 1577 of the city against the outcome of the 1576 Polish Lithuanian royal election The Polish throne was contested by Stephen Bathory and the Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian II Thaler issued by the city during the siege in 1577 with Jesus Christ on obverse instead of King Stefan Batory It began on 12 December 1575 when Emperor Maximillian was chosen as monarch by the Polish Senate while the majority of the szlachta nobility had voted for Bathory It ended on 16 December 1577 1 Maximilian s II death in fall of 1576 weakened Danzig s position and made the conflict less about the recognition of the ruler than about Danzig s privileges With neither side being able to defeat the other militarily a compromise was reached with economic as well as religious 2 privileges of the city being restored and recognized in return for a large reparation and recognition of Bathory as Grand Duke of western Prussia Danzig made its oath conditional on the removal of the Statute of the Karnkowski commission of 1569 70 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Fighting 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 ReferencesBackground editOn 20 July 1570 the Polish Lithuanian king Sigismund II Augustus introduced Karnkowski Statutes which partly reduced Danzig s special privileges 4 5 granted by earlier Polish kings after the Prussian Confederation cities recognized their rule in 1454 In 1572 the throne of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was vacated when King Sigismund Augustus died without an heir and Henry III of France after a brief period as a Polish king returned to France Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was an elective monarchy and after the Union of Lublin in 1569 in close union with Lithuania meaning that Polish nobility szlachta could vote on who would become the next king Cities had no vote Danzig however was invited by primate of Poland and interrex Jakub Uchanski to cast a vote but declined to send a representative 6 Members of the Senate including most of the Polish episcopate led by Jakub Uchanski decided to elect Emperor Maximilian II against the will of majority of nobility which during the royal election voted for Anna Jagiello the last representative of the former Polish Lithuanian Jagiellon dynasty and Stephen Bathory as her husband and de facto King This led to some unrest in Poland The town whose economic privileges were reduced by the Karnkowski Statutes wanted to use the situation to regain its preferential position within the Polish Crown It also preferred Maximilian 7 who looked more likely to support the towns economic privileges and who could also threaten serious economic repercussions boycott by the Habsburgs Thus the city encouraged by its immense wealth and almost impregnable fortifications as well as by the secret support of Denmark 8 and Emperor Maximilian himself had supported the latter s election On 1 May 1576 Stefan Bathory married King Anna Jagiello and was crowned by Stanislaw Karnkowski as King of Poland Jakub Uchanski and nuncio Wincenty Laureo recognized Maximillian as a King but soon they and others accepted the will of majority When Stefan swore in all of existing rights of Royal Prussia and Duchy of Prussia 9 and was recognized as a rightful ruler 10 Danzig refused to follow along and still recognized Maximillian as King of Poland 11 The tensions grew as rioters looted and burned down an abbey in Oliwa 7 The abbey belonged to the bishop of Kujawy Stanislaw Karnkowski who had under his jurisdiction the whole of Polish Pomerania The Sejm parliament of the Commonwealth did not approve higher taxes for the war It did however approve a banicja form of political exile and excommunication confiscation of the city s property arrest of its citizens commercial blockade and rerouting of the important trade via the port of Elblag which however was immediately blockaded by Denmark s navy 12 13 Fighting editIn August 1576 Bathory led 2 000 Polish soldiers and mercenaries from Transylvania and Wallachia 14 men to Malbork Marienburg from there Polish units took control of the area surrounding Gdansk capturing Grabina and Glowa two strategically important villages thereby blockading Danzig s port from the east and the south The King left the army under the command of Hetman Jan Zborowski and most of the forces were stationed at Tczew Dirschau In the west the main base was at Puck Putzig where there was a mercenary force led by Ernest Weyher While some Polish privateer ships fought the Gdansk and Danish fleets for the most part the control of the Baltic Sea belonged to the Danzigers and their allies 15 Soon after the fighting begun Maximilian s II death 12 October 1576 was announced this weakened Danzig s position and made the conflict less about the recognition of the ruler than about Danzig s privileges 16 nbsp Map showing the fortifications of Danzig as they were over 100 years laterWith the coming of the spring of 1577 the fighting began anew The Danzig army led by the German mercenary commander Johann Winkelbruch Hans Winckelburg von Kolln was about 7 000 12 000 strong including mercenaries among them a Scottish regiment 17 but with less than 1 000 cavalry Winckelburg decided to crush the small army of Zborowski who had about 2 000 men half of them cavalry but the Danzig army was utterly defeated by Zborowski in the battle of Lubiszewo on 17 April 1577 7 18 After the battle the Danzig forces retreated behind the walls citizens pulled down trees and houses in front of fortifications 19 20 and a siege began Reinforcement with King Batory arrived only in July 15 During it King Stefan was using heated cannonballs 21 and turned back the flow of the Radunia river 9 Bathory had about 11 000 men and Danzig about 10 000 15 A surprise attack by the Danzigers managed to destroy two thirds of the Polish artillery vastly slowing the progress of the siege 15 In September 1577 9 Danzig and Danish fleets started a blockade of Polish trade along Elbing and attacked its suburbs Their troops that landed were soon pushed back by Bathory s Hungarian infantry under Kacper Bekiesza and the city council send a note thanking the King 9 22 However after a few months Stephen s army was unable to take the city by force On 16 December 1577 1 the siege ended and citizens swore loyalty to Stefan s representatives Eustachy Wollowicz and Andrzej Firlej 10 23 Treaty of Malbork 7 Aftermath editThe Gdansk merchants had suffered a great deal from the blockade especially because of lack of trade 15 In the meantime Bathory also wanted to end the siege as Ivan the Terrible of Muscovy broke a three year truce in the same year 24 and Muscovy tried to gain control of the eastern territories of the Commonwealth Livonian War 25 The siege and all economic restrictions that were passed in the past two years were lifted in return for reparations and recognition of Bathory as the sovereign Stefan forgave the city s rebellion and again turned Polish trade from Elbing to Danzig The city in turn recognized him as ruler of Poland and promised to pay the large sum of 200 000 zlotys and an additional 20 000 repatriation to the abbey of Oliwa in five years 26 On 26 November 1585 the Karnkowski Statutes from 1570 were lifted 27 and Danzig again became the most privileged city in the Commonwealth See also editHistory of GdanskReferences edit a b Walter Yust 1956 Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica John H Elliott 2000 Europe Divided Wiley p 336 ISBN 9780631217800 Friedrich Karin 2 November 2006 The Other Prussia Royal Prussia Poland and Liberty 1569 1772 p 111 ISBN 9780521027755 John Brown Mason 1946 The Danzig Dilemma a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise Stanford University Press p 377 ISBN 9780598715616 Karin Friedrich 2000 The Other Prussia Royal Prussia Poland and Liberty 1569 1772 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 58335 7 Rocznik gdanski Vintage Gdansk in Polish Vol 24 25 Gdansk Scientific Society 1965 a b c d Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 0 19 925339 0 p 321 Stewart P Oakley War and Peace in the Baltic 1560 1790 Routledge 1992 ISBN 0 415 02472 2 p 35 a b c d in Polish Pawel Jasienica Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodow p 101 107 a b Jerzy Samuel Bandtkie 1810 Krotkie wyobrazenie dzieiow Krolestwa Polskiego in Polish Vol 2 u Wilhelma Bogumila Korna p 184 Wladyslaw Czaplinski 1985 Zarys dziejow Polski do roku 1864 Outline of Polish history until 1864 in Polish Poland Znak p 550 ISBN 9788370060572 Daniel Stone 2001 The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 Seattle and London University of Washington Press ISBN 0 295 98093 1 Stanislawa Zajchowska Maria Kielczewska Zaleska Feliks Nowowiejski Jerzy Antoniewicz 1953 Warmia i Mazury Warmia and Mazury in Polish Vol 1 Western Institute E Liptai Magyarorszag hadtortenete 1 Zrinyi katonai kiado 1984 ISBN 963 326 320 4 208 p a b c d e Polish Renaissance Warfare Muscovite Polish War 1610 18 Retrieved 27 May 2015 Besala and Biedrzycka 2005 Stefan Batory Polski Slownik Biograficzny XLIII p 118 The regiment of six companies numbering about 700 men was hired by Danzig in 1577 8 and won great fame in the city s rebellion against Poland Richard Brzezinski Polish Armies 1569 1696 2 Osprey Publishing Radoslaw Sikora Lubieszow 17 IV 1577 Zabrze 2005 Edmund Cieslak Czeslaw Biernat 1988 The Structures of Everyday Life Wydawn p 547 ISBN 9780520081147 History of Gdansk Gdansk Poland Wydawn 1988 p 547 ISBN 9788321572116 W Y Carman 2004 A History of Firearms Dover Publications p 207 ISBN 9780486433905 Waclaw Sobieski 1923 Dzieje Polski in Polish Vol 1 3 Poland Wydawn Irena Fabiani Madeyska 1957 Odwiedziny Gdanska w XIX wieku in Polish Gdansk Poland Gdansk Scientific Society 370 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Joseph Slabey Roucek 1949 Slavonic Encyclopaedia Philosophical Library p 1445 ISBN 9780804605373 Daniel Stone The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 University of Washington Press 2001 ISBN 0 295 98093 1 p 123 Marian Pelczar 1947 Polski Gdansk in Polish Gdansk Poland Municipal Library of Gdansk p 187 Odrodzenie i reformacja w polsce Rebirth and reformation in Poland in Polish Vol 4 7 Instytut Historii PAN 1959 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Danzig rebellion amp oldid 1146093366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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