Passage
of the constitution alarmed nobles who would lose
considerable stature under the new order. In autocratic
states such as Russia, the democratic ideals of the
constitution also threatened the existing order, and the
prospect of Polish recovery threatened to end domination of
Polish affairs by its neighbors. In 1792 domestic and
foreign reactionaries combined to end the democratization
process. Polish conservative factions formed the
Confederation of Targowica and appealed for Russian
assistance in restoring the status quo. Catherine gladly
used this opportunity; enlisting Prussian support, she
invaded Poland under the pretext of defending Poland's
ancient liberties. The irresolute Stanislaw August
capitulated, defecting to the Targowica faction. Arguing
that Poland had fallen prey to the radical Jacobinism
then at high tide in France, Russia and Prussia abrogated
the Constitution of May 3, carried out a second partition of
Poland in 1793, and placed the remainder of the country
under occupation by Russian troops. The
second partition was far more injurious than the first.
Russia received a vast area of eastern Poland, extending
southward from its gains in the first partition nearly to
the Black Sea. To the west, Prussia received an area known
as South Prussia, nearly twice the size of its
first-partition gains along the Baltic, as well as the port
of Gdansk (then renamed Danzig). Thus, Poland's neighbors
reduced the commonwealth to a rump state and plainly
signaled their designs to abolish it altogether at their
convenience. In a
gesture of defiance, a general Polish revolt broke out in
1794 under the leadership of Tadeusz Kosciuszko, a military
officer who had rendered notable service in the American
Revolution. Kosciuszko's ragtag insurgent armies won some
initial successes, but they eventually fell before the
superior forces of Russian General Alexander Suvorov. In the
wake of the insurrection of 1794, Russia, Prussia, and
Austria carried out the third and final partition of
Poland-Lithuania in 1795, erasing the Commonwealth of Two
Nations from the map and pledging never to let it
return. Much of
Europe condemned the dismemberment as an international crime
without historical parallel. Amid the distractions of the
French Revolution and its attendant wars, however, no state
actively opposed the annexations. In the long term, the
dissolution of Poland-Lithuania upset the traditional
European balance of power, dramatically magnifying the
influence of Russia and paving the way for the Germany that
would emerge in the nineteenth century with Prussia at its
core. For the Poles, the third partition began a period of
continuous foreign rule that would endure well over a
century. National
Revival
<<< Contents
>>> Chronology
Library of Congress Country Study
Destruction
of Poland-Lithuania
Library of Congress Country Study
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