Poland:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Glossary
This is a partial
glossary, covering only those terms used in the portion of
the chapter presented at the Medieval History site. For the
complete glossary, visit the Library of Congress Country
Studies site.
- Byzantine
- Medieval
Christian civilization that combined European and Asian
cultures on an ancient Greco-Roman foundation. Centered
at Byzantium (known as Constantinople 330-1930, and later
called Istanbul), the Byzantine Empire occupied western
Turkey and the Balkans and, as the center of Orthodox
Christianity, exerted strong influence on many of the
Slavic peoples of Eastern Europe.
-
- Enlightenment
- Philosophical
and spiritual movement in Europe in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries, concerned with the relationship of
God, nature, reason, and man, often challenging the
tenets of conventional Christianity.
-
- Holy Roman
Empire
- Enduring from
A.D. 800 to 1806, official successor under papal
authority to the Roman Empire. The title king of the
Romans, first given to Charlemagne, was borne by a
long succession of German kings. Centered in Germany, the
empire at its peak (thirteenth century to sixteenth
century) extended from the Low Countries to
Czechoslovakia and southward into Italy. Weakened by
struggles with Roman Catholic Church and the Reformation,
then scattered by the results of the Thirty Years' War
(q.v.), 1648.
-
- Jacobinism
- Political
philosophy of the leaders of the French revolutionary
government. After reaching power in the revolutionary
dictatorship of 1793, the Jacobins set about safeguarding
the values of the revolution and public virtue by a Reign
of Terror against opposing views.
-
- Ottoman
Empire
- A Muslim
empire that controlled southeastern Europe, the Middle
East, and most of North Africa between the sixteenth and
eighteenth centuries, and lesser territories from 1300
until 1913. Ottoman occupation was a major influence on
all civilizations of southeastern Europe and caused
ethnic animosities that remained after the disintegration
of the empire.
-
- Reformation
- Sixteenth-century
movement against dogma of the Roman Catholic Church, in
favor of grace through faith, the authority of the
Scriptures, and the direct relationship of believers with
God. Met with resounding force by the established church,
the Reformation influenced Christian practice to varying
degrees in all European countries, resulting in a schism
between the Roman Catholic church and Protestant
reformers.
-
- Teutonic
Knights
- In full,
Knights of the Teutonic Order, an organization of German
crusaders founded in Palestine in 1190. From their base
in Prussia, consolidated the Eastern Baltic into a
powerful feudal state in the fourteenth century,
nominally as agents of the Roman Catholic Church.
Expansion aroused hostility and revolts, which with
Polish and Lithuanian support defeated the knights
decisively at Grunwald in 1410. After rapid decline of
military power and influence in the fifteenth century,
disbanded in 1525.
-
- Thirty
Years' War
- Conventional
name for a fifty-year struggle (1610-60) of various
factions including Protestant nobles and French kings
against the Holy Roman Empire (q.v.) and its
ruling Habsburg Dynasty for control of parts of Europe,
including the Baltic coast. The fiercest period of the
war was 1618-48, hence the misnomer Thirty Years'
War.
Poland:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Bibliography
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