During the
eleventh century and the first half of the twelfth century,
the building of the Polish state continued under a series of
successors to Boleslaw I. But by 1150, the state had been
divided among the sons of Boleslaw III, beginning two
centuries of fragmentation that brought Poland to the brink
of dissolution. The most fabled
event of the period was the murder in 1079 of Stanislaw, the
bishop of Kraków. A participant in uprisings by the
aristocracy against King Boleslaw II, Stanislaw was killed
by order of the king. This incident, which led to open
rebellion and ended the reign of Boleslaw, is a Polish
counterpart to the later, more famous assassination of
Thomas Á Becket on behalf of King Henry II of
England. Although historians still debate the circumstances
of the death, after his canonization the martyred St.
Stanislaw entered national lore as a potent symbol of
resistance to illegitimate state authority--an allegorical
weapon that proved especially effective against the
communist regime. During the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, Poland lost ground in its
complex triangular relationship with the German Empire to
the west and the kingdom of Bohemia to the south. New
foreign enemies appeared by the thirteenth century. The
Mongol invasion cut a swath of destruction through the
country in 1241; for fifty years after their withdrawal in
1242, Mongol nomads mounted devastating raids into Poland
from bases in Ruthenia to the southeast. Meanwhile, an even
more dangerous foe arrived in 1226 when a Polish duke
invited the Teutonic Knights, a Germanic crusading order, to
help him subdue Baltic pagan tribes. Upon completing their
mission with characteristic fierceness and efficiency, the
knights built a stronghold on the Baltic seacoast, from
which they sought to enlarge their holdings at Polish
expense. By that time, the Piasts had been parceling out the
realm into ever smaller units for nearly 100 years. This
policy of division, initiated by Boleslaw II to appease
separatist provinces while maintaining national unity, led
to regional governance by various branches of the dynasty
and to a near breakdown of cohesiveness in the face of
foreign aggression. As the fourteenth century opened, much
Polish land lay under foreign occupation (two-thirds of it
was ruled by Bohemia in 1300). The continued existence of a
united, independent Poland seemed unlikely.
Library of Congress Country Study
The Medieval
Era
Fragmentation
and Invasion, 1025-1320
Library of Congress Country Study
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