The Poles possess
one of the richest and most venerable historical traditions
of all European peoples. Convention fixes the origins of
Poland as a nation near the middle of the tenth century,
contemporaneous with the Carolingians, Vikings, and
Saracens, and a full hundred years before the Norman
conquest of Britain in 1066. Throughout the subsequent
centuries, the Poles managed despite great obstacles to
build and maintain an unbroken cultural heritage. The same
cannot be said of Polish statehood, which was notoriously
precarious and episodic. Periods of independence and
prosperity alternated with phases of foreign domination and
disaster. Especially in more recent centuries, frequent
adversity subjected the Poles to hardships scarcely equaled
in European history. Many foreign
observers perceive Poland as a perennial victim of history,
whose survival through perseverance and a dogged sense of
national identity has left a mixed legacy of indomitable
courage and intolerance toward outsiders. To Poles, their
history includes brighter recollections of Poland as a
highly cultured kingdom, uniquely indulgent of ethnic and
religious diversity and precociously supportive of human
liberty and the fundamental values of Western civilization.
The contrast between these images reflects the extremes of
fortune experienced by Poland. The two visions of history
combine in uneasy coexistence in the Polish consciousness.
One striking feature of Polish culture is its fascination
with the national past; the unusual variety and intensity of
that past defy tidy conclusions and produce energetic debate
among Poles themselves on the meaning of their
history.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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