Without
question the most significant development of the formative
era of Poland's history was the gradual absorption of the
country into the culture of medieval Europe. After their
relatively late arrival as pagan outsiders on the fringes of
the Christian world, the Western Slavs were fully and
speedily assimilated into the civilization of the European
Middle Ages. Latin Christianity came to determine the
identity of that civilization and permeate its intellect and
creativity. Over time the Central Europeans increasingly
patterned their thought and institutions on Western models
in areas of thought ranging from philosophy, artistic style,
literature, and architecture to government, law, and social
structure. The Poles borrowed especially heavily from German
sources, and successive Polish rulers encouraged a
substantial immigration of Germans and Jews to invigorate
urban life and commerce. From its beginning, Poland drew its
primary inspiration from Western Europe and developed a
closer affinity with the French and Italians, for example,
than with nearer Slavic neighbors of Eastern Orthodox and
Byzantine
heritage. This westward orientation, which in some ways has
made Poland the easternmost outpost of Latinate and Catholic
tradition, helps to explain the Poles' tenacious sense of
belonging to the "West" and their deeply rooted antagonism
toward Russia as the representative of an essentially alien
way of life.
Library of Congress Country StudyIntegration
into European Civilization
Library of Congress Country Study
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