While scouring Google Images for maps of Europe for my post on European borders, I was inspired to follow up on Curzon’s excellent series of countries’ changing borders over time with a visual history of Poland’s borders.

The Polish state was born in 966 with the baptism of Mieszko I. By 990, when Mieszko officially submitted to papal authority, he’d transformed his country into one of the strongest powers in Eastern Europe.

The Commonwealth was an extension of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, a personal union between those two states that had existed from 1386. It was one of the largest and most populous states in Europe and for over two centuries successfully withstood wars with the Teutonic Order, the Mongols, the Russians, the Ottomans, and Sweden. The Commonwealth was notable for its political system, which was a precursor to modern democracy and federation; for its remarkable religious tolerance; and for the second-oldest codified national constitution in the world.

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 Niemen river), Volhynia and Ukraine.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. Upon Austria’s defeat in 1809, Lodomeria was added, giving the new state a population of some 3.75 million, a quarter of that of the former commonwealth.

Once the German empire was broken apart as part of the Versailles treaty, Poland moved westwards receiving parts of Prussia, though a large chunk remained German yet unconnected to Germany. Additionally, Danzig, a German town, was made a free city. Polish independence was proclaimed on November 3, 1918.

After the second World War, Poland’s borders were made what they are today and after German reunification, the German government renounced (as part of the agreement) any future claim to former German lands. Given Poland’s EU membership signalling ever deepening political and economic integration not to mention its NATO membership, today’s borders are likely to stay where they are for quite awhile.


COMMENTS / 5 COMMENTS

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ComingAnarchy.com » Blog Archive » The Geography of Russia Through History added these pithy words on Jan 24 08 at 2:56 pm

anyone ever read Henryk Senkiewicz’s trilogy? fantastic historical fiction about the time of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth. With Fire and Sword begins the trilogy.

here’s the map wikipedia has for the PLC around 1619.

Hunter added these pithy words on 13 Dec 05 at 4:14 pm

this one is better, actually.

Hunter added these pithy words on 13 Dec 05 at 4:16 pm

Great post. Its rare to see anything (even on blogs) on Polish history, esp. Poland-Lithuania. I remember there was some far-fetched hope of reuniting the two states, after USSR fell.

Today, I think the only reminders of this past is that Poland and Lithuania have a battalion together (http://www.wp.mil.pl/start.php?page=1010501021). Recently this year Ukraine was signed-on to join the group.

StrategyUnit added these pithy words on 14 Dec 05 at 8:58 am

I enjoy the series – and I even recommended Poland to Curzon as a topic – but we have to be very careful about what these boundaries mean. These polities weren’t nation-states, they didn’t have clearly demarcated territories and the structure of authority was not homogeneous within their territory.

You should mention some of the ‘great moments’ in Polish history, including saving Vienna from the Turks.

Daniel Nexon added these pithy words on 15 Dec 05 at 2:35 am
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Poland’s Historical Hokey Pokey

Posted on 13 Dec 05 by Chirol. Subscribe to follow comments on this post. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

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