Although
Poland-Lithuania escaped the ravages of the Thirty
Years' War,
which ended in 1648, the ensuing two decades subjected the
country to one of its severest trials. This colorful but
ruinous interval, the stuff of legend and the popular
historical novels of Nobel laureate Henryk Sienkiewicz
(1846-1916), became known as the potop, or deluge,
for the magnitude of its hardships. The emergency began with
an uprising of Ukrainian Cossacks that persisted in spite of
Warsaw's efforts to subdue it by force. After the rebels won
the intervention of Muscovy on their behalf, Tsar Aleksei
conquered most of the eastern half of the country by 1655.
Taking advantage of Poland's preoccupation, Charles X of
Sweden rapidly overran much of the remaining territory of
the commonwealth in 1655. Pushed to the brink of
dissolution, Poland-Lithuania rallied to recover most of its
losses to the Swedes. Swedish brutality raised widespread
revolts against Charles, whom the Polish nobles had
recognized as their ruler in the meantime. Under Stefan
Czarniecki, the Poles and Lithuanians drove the Swedes from
their territory by 1657. Further complicated by noble
dissension and wars with the Ottoman Turks, the
thirteen-year struggle over control of Ukraine ended in the
Truce of Andrusovo in 1667. Although Russia had been
defeated by a new Polish-Ukrainian alliance in 1662, Russia
gained eastern Ukraine in the peace treaty. Despite the
improbable survival of the commonwealth in the face of the
potop, one of the most dramatic instances of the
Poles' knack for prevailing in adversity, the episode
inflicted irremediable damage and contributed heavily to the
ultimate demise of the state. When Jan II Kaziemierz
abdicated in 1668, the population of the commonwealth had
been nearly halved by war and disease. War had destroyed the
economic base of the cities and raised a religious fervor
that ended Poland's policy of religious tolerance.
Henceforth, the commonwealth would be on the strategic
defensive facing hostile neighbors. Never again would Poland
compete with Russia as a military equal. The
Noble Republic
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of the Commonwealth
Library of Congress Country Study
The Deluge,
1648-67
Library of Congress Country Study
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