In the
fourteenth century, after a long period of instability and
growing menace from without, the Polish state experienced a
half century of recovery under the last monarchs of the
house of Piast. By 1320 Wladyslaw Lokietek (1314-33), called
the Short, had manipulated internal and foreign alignments
and reunited enough territory to win acceptance abroad as
king of an independent Poland. His son Kazimierz III
(1333-70) would become the only Polish king to gain the
sobriquet "great." In foreign policy, Kazimierz the Great
strengthened his country's position by combining judicious
concessions to Bohemia and the Teutonic Knights with
eastward expansion. While
using diplomacy to win Poland a respite from external
threat, the king focused on domestic consolidation. He
earned his singular reputation through his acumen as a
builder and administrator as well as through foreign
relations. Two of the most important events of Kazimierz's
rule were the founding of Poland's first university in
Kraków in 1364, making that city an important
European cultural center, and his mediation between the
kings of Bohemia and Hungary at the Congress of
Kraków (also in 1364), signaling Poland's return to
the status of a European power. Lacking a male heir,
Kazimierz was the last ruler in the Piast line. The
extinction of the dynasty in 1370 led to several years of
renewed political uncertainty. Nevertheless, the
accomplishments of the fourteenth century began the ascent
of the Polish state toward its historical zenith.
Library of Congress Country StudyThe
Later Piasts
Library of Congress Country Study
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