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
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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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