Although
most accounts of Polish history show the two centuries after
the end of the Jagiellon Dynasty as a time of decline
leading to foreign domination, Poland-Lithuania remained an
influential player in European politics and a vital cultural
entity through most of the period. The death
of Sigismund II Augustus in 1572 was followed by a
three-year Interregnum during which adjustments were made in
the constitutional system. The lower nobility was now
included in the selection process, and the power of the
monarch was further circumscribed in favor of the expanded
noble class. From that point, the king was effectively a
partner with the noble class and constantly supervised by a
group of senators. Once the Jagiellons passed from the
scene, the fragile equilibrium of the commonwealth
government began to go awry. The constitutional reforms made
the monarchy electoral in fact as well as name. As more and
more power went to the noble electors, it also eroded from
the government's center. In its
periodic opportunities to fill the throne, the
szlachta exhibited a preference for foreign
candidates who would not found another strong dynasty. This
policy produced monarchs who were either totally ineffective
or in constant debilitating conflict with the nobility.
Furthermore, aside from notable exceptions such as the able
Transylvanian Stefan Batory (1576-86), the kings of alien
origin were inclined to subordinate the interests of the
commonwealth to those of their own country and ruling house.
This tendency was most obvious in the prolonged military
adventures waged by Sigismund III Vasa (1587-1632) against
Russia and his native Sweden. On occasion, these campaigns
brought Poland near to conquest of Muscovy and the Baltic
coast, but they compounded the military burden imposed by
the ongoing rivalry with the Turks, and the Swedes and
Russians extracted heavy repayment a few decades
later. Eastern
Regions
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Library of Congress Country Study
The
Elective Monarchy
Library of Congress Country Study
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