The Jagiellons
never recovered their hegemony over Central Europe, and the
ascendancy of the Ottomans foreshadowed the eventual
subjection of the entire region to foreign rule; but the
half century that followed the Battle of Mohács
marked an era of stability, affluence, and cultural
advancement unmatched in national history and widely
regarded by Poles as their country's golden age. The Teutonic
Knights had been reduced to vassalage, and despite the now
persistent threats posed by the Turks and an emerging
Russian colossus, Poland-Lithuania managed to defend its
status as one of the largest and most prominent states of
Europe. The wars and diplomacy of the century yielded no
dramatic expansion but shielded the country from significant
disturbance and permitted significant internal development.
An "Eternal Peace" concluded with the Ottoman Turks in 1533
lessened but did not remove the threat of invasion from that
quarter. A lucrative
agricultural export market was the foundation for the
kingdom's wealth. A population boom in Western Europe
prompted an increased demand for foodstuffs;
Poland-Lithuania became Europe's foremost supplier of grain,
which was shipped abroad from the Baltic seaport of Gdansk.
Aside from swelling Polish coffers, the prosperous grain
trade supported other notable aspects of national
development. It reinforced the preeminence of the landowning
nobility that received its profits, and it helped to
preserve a traditionally rural society and economy at a time
when Western Europe had begun moving toward urbanization and
capitalism. The
Jagiellon Era
<<< Contents
>>> Government
Library of Congress Country Study
The "Golden Age"
of the Sixteenth Century
Poland-Lithuania
as a European Power
Library of Congress Country Study
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