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History of Poland
In the period following its emergence in the 10th
century, the Polish nation was led by a series of
strong rulers who converted the Poles to
Christianity, created a strong Central European
state and integrated Poland into European culture.
Formidable foreign enemies and internal
fragmentation eroded this initial structure in the
thirteenth century, but consolidation in the 1300s
laid the base for the dominant Polish Kingdom that
was to follow.
Beginning with the Lithuanian grand duke Jogaila,
the Jagiellon dynasty (1385–1569) formed the
Polish-Lithuanian union. The partnership proved
profitable for the Poles and Lithuanians, who played
a dominant role in one of the most powerful empires
in Europe for the next three centuries. The Nihil
novi act adopted by the Polish Sejm (parliament) in
1505 transferred most legislative power from the
monarch to the Sejm. This event marked the beginning
of the period known as "Nobles' Commonwealth" when
the state was ruled by the "free and equal" Polish
nobility (szlachta). The Lublin Union of 1569
established the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth as an
influential player in European politics and a vital
cultural entity.
By the 18th century the nobles' democracy had
gradually declined into anarchy, making the once
powerful Commonwealth vulnerable to foreign
influence. Eventually the country was partitioned by
its neighbors and erased from the map in 1795.
Although the majority of the szlachta were
reconciled to the end of the Commonwealth in 1795,
the idea of Polish independence was kept alive by
events inside and outside of Poland throughout the
19th century.
Poland's location in the very centre of Europe
became especially significant in a period when both
Prussia and Russia were intensely involved in
European rivalries and alliances and modern nation
states were established over the entire continent.
Poland regained its independence in 1918, but the
Second Polish Republic was destroyed by Germany and
Soviet Union in the Invasion of Poland at the
beginning of the Second World War. Nonetheless the
Polish government in exile never surrendered and
managed to contribute significantly to the Allied
victory. Nazi Germany's forces were forced to
retreat from Poland as the Soviet Union Red Army
advanced, which led to the creation of People's
Republic of Poland, a Soviet satellite state. By the
late 1980s a Polish reform movement, Solidarity, was
able to enforce a peaceful transistion from
communist state to democracy, which resulted in the
creation of the modern Polish state.
Over the past millennium, the territory ruled by
Poland has shifted and varied greatly. At one time,
in the 16th century, Poland was the second largest
state in Europe, after Russia. At other times there
was no separate Polish state at all. Poland regained
its independence in 1918, after more than a century
of rule by its neighbours, but its borders shifted
again after the Second World War.
Early history of Poland (966-1385)
The Polish state was born in 966 with the baptism
of Mieszko I, duke of the Slavic tribe of Polans and
founder of the Piast dynasty. His conversion from
paganism to Christianity was Poland's first recorded
historical event. By 990, when Mieszko officially
submitted to the authority of the Holy See, he had
transformed his country into one of the strongest
powers in Eastern Europe. Mieszko's son Bolesław the
Brave built on his father's achievements, for the
first time uniting all the provinces that
subsequently came to comprise the traditional
territory of Poland. In 1025 he became the first
king of Poland. After his death the country entered
a period of instability, but was unified under the
reign of Bolesław the Wrymouth. After he died in
1138, however, the kingdom was divided among four of
his sons, ushering in a period of fragmentation. For
two centuries, the Piasts sparred with each other,
the clergy, and the nobility for control over the
divided kingdom. The civil strife and foreign
invasions, such as that of the Mongols in 1241,
weakened and depopulated the small Polish
principalities.
In 1226, Konrad I of Masovia invited the Teutonic
Knights to help him fight the pagan Prussian people
on the border of his lands. In the following decades,
the Teutonic Order conquered large areas long the
Baltic Sea coast and established their monastic
state. When virtually all of the former heathen
Baltic people had become Christians, the Knights
turned their attention to Poland and Lithuania,
waging war with them for most of the 14th and 15th
centuries until their remaining state was converted
into the Protestant Duchy of Prussia in 1525.
In the middle of 14th century Poland started to
expand to the East and annexed Galich Rus'.
The regional division ended when Władysław I the
Elbow-high united the various principalities of
Poland. His son Kazimierz the Great, the last of the
Piast dynasty, considerably strengthened the
country's position in both foreign and domestic
affairs. Before his death in 1370, the sonless king
arranged for his nephew, the Andegawen Louis of
Hungary, to inherit the throne.
In 1385, the Union of Krewo was signed between Louis'
daughter Jadwiga and the Lithuanian Grand Duke
Jogaila (later known as Władysław II Jagiełło),
beginning the Polish-Lithuanian Union and
strengthening both nations in their shared
opposition to the Teutonic Knights and the growing
threat of Muscovy.
The Jagiellon Era (1385-1572)
The personal union with the Grand Duchy of
Lithuania to the North-East, paved the way for the
extension of Polish power far to the East and the
creation (by the Union of Lublin in 1569), of a
unified Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Rzeczpospolita),
stretching from the Baltic Sea and the Carpathians
mountains, to present-day Belarus and Western and
Central Ukraine (which earlier had been Kievan Rus'
principalities).
In the north-west, the Teutonic Knights, in control
of Prussia since the 13th century, were defeated by
a combined Polish-Lithuanian force in the Battle of
Grunwald (1410), and in the later Thirteen Years War.
In the Second Treaty of Toruń of 1466, they had to
surrender the Western half of their territory to the
Polish crown (the areas known afterwards as Royal
Prussia), and to accept Polish-Lithuanian suzerainty
over the remainder (the later Ducal Prussia).
During this period Poland became the home to
Europe's largest Jewish population, as royal edicts
guaranteeing Jewish safety and religious freedom,
issued during the 13th century, contrasted with
bouts of persecution in Western Europe. This
persecution intensified following the Black Death of
1348–1349, when some in the West blamed the outbreak
of the plague on the Jews. Much of Poland was spared
from this disease, and Jewish immigration brought
their valuable contributions and abilities to the
rising state. The greatest increase in Jewish
numbers occurred in the 18th century, when Jews came
to make up 7% of the population. Generally speaking,
the Kings of Poland, and the szlachta (nobles), were
friendly to the Jews, while the peasants and the
Roman Catholic Church were not.
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1572-1795)
During the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, in the
16th century, Poland became an elective monarchy, in
which the king was elected by the nobility. This
king would serve as the monarch until he died. At
that time the country would have another election.
In 1572 CE, the Polish king Sigismund II Augustus
died without any heirs. At the time, Poland didn’t
have any method of choosing a king if such a thing
happened. It took a long time for the Poles to
decide how to elect their king. Finally, after much
debate, they decided to let the entire nobility of
Poland decide who the king was to be. The nobility
were to gather near Warsaw and vote in a “free
election”. However, they did not have elections
every two or four years like most countries do today.
Instead, they voted after the death of the old king.
The first Polish election was held in 1573. There
were four men running for king in this election.
These men were, Henri of Valois (Henryk Walezy), who
was the brother of the king of France, the Russian
czar Ivan IV "the Terrible", Archduke Ernest from
the Austrian Habsburg dynasty, and the king of
Sweden, Johan Vasa III. Henri of Valois was the
winner in a very disorderly election. The reason for
so much disorder was that a huge amount of people
came to elect the new king. But after serving as
Polish king for only four months, he received news
that his brother had died. He then went to France
and claimed the throne as Henry III. This surprised
much of the country because Poland had a better
economy at the time.
Poland stopped electing kings in 1795, when Russia
took over, after the death of Stanislaw August
Poniatowski. The elected kings in chronological
order were: Henri of Valois, Stefan Batory, Zygmunt
Waza III, Wladyslaw Waza IV, Jan Kazmierz Waza,
Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki, Jan Sobieski III,
August II "The Strong", Stanisław Leszczyński,
August III and, last, Stanisław August Poniatowski.
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, following upon
the Union of Lublin, became an interesting
counterpoint to the absolute monarchies gaining
power in Europe. Its quasi-democratic political
system of Golden Liberty, albeit limited to nobility
(szlachta) was mostly unprecedented in the history
of Europe.
However the series of power struggles between the
lesser nobility, the higher nobility (magnates) and
elected kings undermined citizenship values and
gradually eroded the government's function and
authority. After the series of devastating wars in
the middle of the 17th century (most notably the
Chmielnicki Uprising and The Deluge)
Poland-Lithuania stopped being an influential player
in the European politics. Its economy and growth was
further damaged by the nobility's reliance on
agriculture and serfdom, delaying the
industrialization of the country. By the beginning
of the 18th century, the Polish-Lithuanian
Commownealth, the largest European country, was
little more than a pawn of its neighbours (Russian
Empire, Prussia and Austria) who interfered in its
domestic politics almost at will.
With the coming of the Polish Enlightenment in the
second half of the 18th century, the movement for
reform and revitalization of the country made
important gains, culminating in the adoption of the
Constitution of May 3, the first modern codified
constitution on the European continent. However the
reforms, which transformed the Commonwealth into a
constitutional monarchy were viewed as dangerous by
Poland's neighbours, who didn't want the rebirth of
the strong Commonwealth. Before the Commonwealth
could fully implement and benefits from its reforms,
it was invaded by its neighbours.
Partitioned Poland (1795-1918)
Polish independence ended in a series of
partitions (1772, 1793 and 1795) undertaken by
Russia, Prussia and Austria, with Russia gaining
most of the Commonwealth's territory including
nearly all of the former Lithuania (except Podlasie
and lands West from the Niemen river), Volhynia and
Ukraine. Austria gained the populous southern region
henceforth named Galicia–Lodomeria, named after the
Duchy of Halicz and Volodymyr (The Duchy was briefly
occupied by Hungary between 1372 and 1399, and the
Habsburgs claimed to have inherited it from the
Hungarian Kings, despite the fact that Volodymyr was
not a part of Galicia). In 1795 Austria also gained
the land between Kraków and Warsaw, between Vistula
river and Pilica river. Prussia acquired the western
lands from the Baltic through Greater Poland to
Kraków, as well as Warsaw and Lithuanian territories
to the north-east (Augustów, Mariampol) and Podlasie.
The last heroic attempt to save Poland's
independence was a national uprising (1794) led by
Tadeusz Kościuszko, however it was eventually
quenched.
Following the French emperor Napoleon I's defeat of
Prussia, a Polish state was again set up in 1807
under French tutelage as the Duchy of Warsaw. When
Austria was defeated in 1809, Lodomeria was added,
giving the new state a population of some 3.75
million, a quarter of that of the former
commonwealth. Polish nationalists were to remain
among the staunchest allies of the French as the
tide of war turned against them, inaugurating a
relationship that continued into the twentieth
century.
With Napoleon's defeat, the Congress of Vienna in
1815 converted most of the grand duchy into a
Kingdom of Poland ruled by the Russian Tsar, and
after the January Uprising of 1863 fully integrated
into Russia proper. Several national uprisings were
bloodily subdued by the partitioning powers. However,
the striving of Polish patriots to regain their
independence could not be extinguished. The
opportunity for freedom appeared only after World
War I when the oppressing states were defeated or
weakened.
Independence Regained (1918-1939)
World War I and the political turbulence that was
sweeping Europe in 1914 offered the Polish nation
hopes for regaining independence. By the end of
World War I, Poland had seen the defeat or retreat
of all three occupying powers.
Polish independence was eventually proclaimed on
November 3, 1918 and later confirmed by the Treaty
of Versailles in 1919; the same treaty also gave
Poland some territories annexed by German and
Austrian during the partitions (see Polish Corridor).
Eastern borders of Poland have been determined by
the Polish-Soviet War. From mid 1920s to mid 1930s
Polish government was under the control of Józef
Piłsudski. Polish independence had boosted the
development of culture, but Poland was hit hard by
the Great Depression. The new Polish state had had
only 20 years of relative stability and uneasy peace
before Poland's aggressive neighbours tried to wipe
her from the map of Europe again.
World War II in Poland (1939-1945)
On August 23, 1939, Nazi Germany and the Soviet
Union signed the Ribbentrop–Molotov non-aggression
pact, which secretly provided for the dismemberment
of Poland into Nazi and Soviet-controlled zones. On
September 1, 1939, Hitler ordered his troops into
Poland. On September 17, Soviet troops invaded and
then occupied most of the areas of eastern Poland
having significant Ukrainian and Belarusian
populations under the terms of this agreement. After
Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941,
Poland was completely occupied by German troops.
The Poles formed an underground resistance movement
and a Polish government in exile, first in Paris and
later in London, which was recognized by the Soviet
Union. During World War II, 400,000 Poles fought
under Soviet command, and 200,000 went into combat
on Western fronts in units loyal to the Polish
government in exile. Many Polish refugee camps were
set up, including one in Valdivadé, near Kolhapur in
India. The camp numbered about 5000, and the Polish
embassy in exile had its office in Bombay. The camp
existed from 1943 to 1948.
In April 1943, the Soviet Union broke relations with
the Polish government in exile after the German
military announced that they had discovered mass
graves of murdered Polish army officers at Katyń, in
the USSR. The Soviets claimed that the Poles had
insulted them by requesting that the Red Cross
investigate these reports. In July 1944, the Soviet
Red Army entered Poland, defeated the Germans (losing
600,000 of its soldiers), and established a
communist-controlled "Polish Committee of National
Liberation" in Lublin.
There was powerful hatred of the Nazis in Warsaw,
and there was often resistance, most famously the
Warsaw Uprising in 1944 in which most of the Warsaw
population participated, but which was largely
instigated by the Armia Krajowa, or Home Army. The
uprising was planned on the condition that the
Soviet forces, waiting on the other side of the
Vistula River in full force, would help in battle
over Warsaw. However, the promised action by the
Soviets was dismissed and, after 63 days of the
unaided Underground forces, the uprising was
suppressed. Professor Norman Davies famously said
that to comprehend the numbers killed, one would
have to imagine the Twin Towers every day for 63
days, and it still wouldn't be enough. After a
hopeless surrender on the part of the Poles, the
Germans went about systematically levelling the city
and retreated in January 1945 to the incoming Soviet
invasion.
During the war, about 6 million Polish citizens were
killed by Germans, and 2.5 million were deported to
Germany for forced labour or to extermination camps
such as Oświęcim Auschwitz. In 1941-1943 Ukrainian
nationalists (OUN and Ukrainian Insurgent Army)
massacred more than 100,000 Poles in Galicia and
Volhynia. About 3 million Jews (all but about
300,000–500,000 of the Jewish population) died of
starvation in ghettos and labour camps or were
killed in the extermination camps of Oświęcim (Auschwitz
II), Treblinka, Majdanek, Belzec, Sobibór, Chełmno
and others (see List of Polish Martyrology sites).
More than 500,000 Polish citizens were deported to
the Soviet Union, many of them to concentration
camps and labor camps (Gulag).
The Soviet government insisted on retaining the
territories captured in the course of the
Nazi-Soviet pact (now western Ukraine and western
Belarus), compensating Poland with one fifth of (Weimar)
Germany in its extension of 1937 ("Regained
Territories"). Silesia, Pomerania and southern East
Prussia, along with Gdańsk, were definitively
attached to Poland were ethnically cleansed from
Germans. As a consequence, 1,583,000 Germans (
estimated by R. J. Rummel) out of 8 millions
expelles died or were killed, many of them in Polish
labor camps (Lambinowice).
People's Republic of Poland (1945-1989)
In June 1945, following the February Yalta
Conference, a Polish Provisional Government of
National Unity was formed; the US recognized it the
next month. Although the Yalta agreement called for
free elections, those held in January 1947 were
controlled by the Communist Party. The communists
then established a regime entirely under their
domination. The Polish government in exile existed
till 1990, although its influence was degraded.
In October 1956, after the 20th Soviet Party
Congress in Moscow ushered in destalinization and
riots by workers in Poznań ensued, there was a
shakeup in the communist regime. While retaining
most traditional communist economic and social aims,
the regime of First Secretary Władysław Gomułka
began to liberalize internal Polish life.
In 1968, this trend was reversed when student
demonstrations were suppressed and an anti-Zionist
campaign initially directed against Gomułka
supporters within the party eventually led to the
emigration of much of Poland's remaining Jewish
population. In December 1970, disturbances and
strikes in the port cities of Gdańsk, Gdynia, and
Szczecin, triggered by a price increase for
essential consumer goods, reflected deep
dissatisfaction with living and working conditions
in the country. Edward Gierek replaced Gomułka as
First Secretary.
Fueled by large infusions of Western credit,
Poland's economic growth rate was one of the world's
highest during the first half of the 1970s. But much
of the borrowed capital was misspent, and the
centrally planned economy was unable to use the new
resources effectively. The growing debt burden
became insupportable in the late 1970s, and economic
growth had become negative by 1979.
In October 1978, the Archbishop of Kraków, Cardinal
Karol Józef Wojtyła, became Pope John Paul II, head
of the Roman Catholic Church. Polish Catholics
rejoiced at the elevation of a Pole to the papacy
and greeted his June 1979 visit to Poland with an
outpouring of emotion.
On July 1, 1980, with the Polish foreign debt at
more than $20 billion, the government made another
attempt to increase meat prices. A chain reaction of
strikes virtually paralyzed the Baltic coast by the
end of August and, for the first time, closed most
coal mines in Silesia. Poland was entering into an
extended crisis that would change the course of its
future development.
On 31 August 1980, workers at the Lenin Shipyard in
Gdańsk, led by an electrician named Lech Wałęsa,
signed a 21-point agreement with the government that
ended their strike. Similar agreements were signed
at Szczecin and in Silesia. The key provision of
these agreements was the guarantee of the workers’
right to form independent trade unions and the right
to strike. After the Gdańsk agreement was signed, a
new national union movement "Solidarity" swept
Poland.
The discontent underlying the strikes was
intensified by revelations of widespread corruption
and mismanagement within the Polish state and party
leadership. In September 1980, Gierek was replaced
by Stanisław Kania as First Secretary.
Alarmed by the rapid deterioration of the PZPR's
authority following the Gdańsk agreement, the Soviet
Union proceeded with a massive military buildup
along Poland's border in December 1980. In February
1981, Defense Minister Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski
assumed the position of Prime Minister, and in
October 1981, was named party First Secretary. At
the first Solidarity national congress in September–October
1981, Lech Wałęsa was elected national chairman of
the union.
On December 12–13, the regime declared martial law,
under which the army and ZOMO riot police were used
to crush the union. Virtually all Solidarity leaders
and many affiliated intellectuals were arrested or
detained. The United States and other Western
countries responded to martial law by imposing
economic sanctions against the Polish regime and
against the Soviet Union. Unrest in Poland continued
for several years thereafter.
In a series of slow, uneven steps, the Polish regime
rescinded martial law. In December 1982, martial law
was suspended, and a small number of political
prisoners were released. Although martial law
formally ended in July 1983 and a general amnesty
was enacted, several hundred political prisoners
remained in jail.
In July 1984, another general amnesty was declared,
and two years later, the government had released
nearly all political prisoners. The authorities
continued, however, to harass dissidents and
Solidarity activists. Solidarity remained proscribed
and its publications banned. Independent
publications were censored.
In late 1980s the government was forced to negotiate
with Solidarity in the Polish Roundtable
Negotiations. The Polish legislative elections, 1989
become one of the important events marking the fall
of communism in Poland.
The Third Republic (1989-present)
After 1989 Poland became one of the newer Europan
democracies and adopted a market-based economy. The
shock therapy Balcerowicz Plan during the early
1990s enabled the country to transform its economy
into one of the most robust in Central Europe of its
time.
Poland joined NATO on May 27, 1999 and the European
Union on May 1, 2004.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Poland