The
sixteenth century was perhaps the most illustrious phase of
Polish cultural history. During this period,
Poland-Lithuania drew great artistic inspiration from the
Italians, with whom the Jagiellon court cultivated close
relations. Styles and tastes characteristic of the late
Renaissance were imported from the Italian states. These
influences survived in the renowned period architecture of
Kraków, which served as the royal capital until that
distinction passed to Warsaw in 1611. The University of
Kraków gained international recognition as a
cosmopolitan center of learning, and in 1543 its most
illustrious student, Nicolaus Copernicus (Mikolaj Kopernik),
literally revolutionized the science of
astronomy. The
period also bore the fruit of a mature Polish literature,
once again modeled after the fashion of the West European
Renaissance. The talented dilettante Mikolaj Rej was the
first major Polish writer to employ the vernacular, but the
elegant classicist Jan Kochanowski (1530-84) is acknowledged
as the genius of the age. Accomplished in several genres and
equally adept in Polish and Latin, Kochanowski is widely
regarded as the finest Slavic poet before the nineteenth
century. The
population of Poland-Lithuania was not overwhelmingly
Catholic or Slavic. This circumstance resulted from the
federation with Lithuania, where ethnic Poles were a
distinct minority. In those days, to be Polish was much less
an indication of ethnicity than of rank; it was a
designation largely reserved for the landed noble class,
which included members of Polish and non-Polish origin
alike. Generally speaking, the ethnically non-Polish noble
families of Lithuania adopted the Polish language and
culture. As a result, in the eastern territories of the
kingdom a Polish or Polonized aristocracy dominated a
peasantry whose great majority was neither Polish nor
Catholic. This bred resentment that later grew into separate
Lithuanian, Belorussian, and Ukrainian nationalist
movements. In the
mid-sixteenth century, Poland-Lithuania sought ways to
maintain control of the diverse kingdom in spite of two
threatening circumstances. First, since the late 1400s a
series of ambitious tsars of the house of Rurik had led
Russia in competing with Poland-Lithuania for influence over
the Slavic territories located between the two states.
Second, Sigismund II Augustus (1548-72) had no male heir.
The Jagiellon Dynasty, the strongest link between the halves
of the state, would end after his reign. Accordingly, the
Union of Lublin of 1569 transformed the loose federation and
personal union of the Jagiellonian epoch into the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, deepening and formalizing
the bonds between Poland and Lithuania (see
fig. 4). Government
<<< Contents
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Noble Republic
Library of Congress Country Study
The
Polish Renaissance
The
Eastern Regions of the Realm
Library of Congress Country Study
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