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Towards Partition: Polish Magnates and Russian Intervention in Poland During the Early Reign of Stanisław August Poniatowski*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Jerzy T. Lukowski
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham

Extract

In a report on the state of Poland in 1766 the papal nuncio, A. E. Visconti, observed that the new king, Stanisław August Poniatowski, possessed ‘a burning desire to reform the whole country in one day – if only he could – and the entire nation, in order to bring it up to the level of other, more advanced nations’. The interregnum after the death of Augustus III in October 1763 and Poniatowski's election in September 1764 had inaugurated the most determined campaign for reform within the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth since the Union of Lublin of 1569. By 1763–4 there was little that did not need to be reformed. The accumulation of privilege by the szlachta, the nobility, had attained such dimensions that both the monarchy and the Sejm, the parliament, were almost powerless to govern. The most obvious expression of the impotence of the state and of the refusal of the nobility to submit to the discipline of any centralized authority was, of course, the liberum veto, the use of which, real or threatened, had consigned the majority of the Sejmy of Augustus II (1697–1733) and of Augustus III (1733–63) to nullity. Yet the veto's successful, widespread application was only possible because of a rough equilibrium of political strength between Poland's various magnate factions.After Augustus Ill's death, Russian military backing enabled the so-called ‘Family’, the party led by Michael Czartoryski (1696–1775) and his brother, August (1697–1782), to break through the stalemate. At the Convocation Sejm of 7 May to 23 June 1764, the Czartoryskis pushed through a series of unprecedented reforms aimed at conferring on the monarchy and the Sejm a degree of real authority over the country at large.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

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References

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2 Between the Coronation Sejm (1697) of Augustus II and the last Sejm of Augustus III (1762), thirty-seven Sejmy met. Only twelve enacted any legislation (under Augustus III, only the Pacification Sejm of 1736 did so). In sixteen Sejmy, the liberum veto was formally applied. The remaining nine passed no legislation, as a result of filibustering or of procedural difficulties. Konopczyński, W., Chronologia sejmów polskich 1493–1793 (Kraków, 1948), pp. 159–66Google Scholar.

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29 Treaty of Berlin, 1686, between Sweden and Brandenburg, ibid. XVII, 469; treaties between Russia and Prussia: treaties of St Petersburg, 1720, ibid. XXXI, 158–9, of 1726, ibid. XXXII, 327–8, treaty of Moscow, 1729, ibid. XXXIII, 251–2, treaty of Berlin, 1730, ibid. XXXIII, 286, treaties of St Petersburg, 1743, ibid. XXXVII, 99–101, of 1764, ibid. XLIII, 14, of 1769, ibid. XLIV, 349–50; between Sweden and Russia, treaty of Stockholm, 1724, ibid. XXXI, 477; between Turkey and Russia, treaty of Constantinople, 1720, ibid. XXXI, 275.

30 Secret article three of the treaty of St Petersburg between Saxony and Russia, 6 July 1733, ibid. XXXIV, 59; likewise, article two of the treaty of St Petersburg, 4 February 1744, ibid. XXXVII, 245. Augustus III made a similar commitment to Austria, article six of the treaty of Vienna, 16 July 1733, ibid. XXXIV, 79.

31 Article six of the treaty of Versailles, 18 September 1735, between France and Polish supporters of Stanisław Leszczyński, ibid. p. 281.

32 Quoted in Rostworowski, O polską koronę, p. 271Google Scholar.

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37 Entry for 4/15 September 1767 in zhurnal general-maiora i kavalera Petra Nikiticha Krechetnikova, ed. Bodyansky, O. M. (Moscow, 1863), p. 52Google Scholar. See also Lukowski, G. [J.] T., The szlachta and the confederacy of Radom, 1764–1767/68: a study of the Polish nobility (Rome, 1977), pp. 190, 201Google Scholar.

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40 Act of Confederacy of Radom, in the protocol of the Confederacy, Archiwum Główne Akt Dawnych (hereafter AGAD), Warsaw, Metryka Litewska IX–38, pp. 1–14. There is a translation of the whole in Lukowski, , The szlachta, pp. 257–61Google Scholar.

41 From ‘Finances’, part of a series of projects presented to the Russian court on behalf of the Confederacy of Radom in September 1767, AGAD/Zbiór Anny Branickiej, 3/9, vol. I.

42 Mowa Imci Pana Pocieia…posla od skonfederowanej Rzeczypospolitej do Najyaśniejszej Imperatorowej Jej Mci Calej Rossyi /Warsaw, 1767/Google Scholar.

43 ‘Uniwersał J.O. Xcia marszałka…na sejmiki przedsejmowe…Datum w Radomiu roku 1767 miesiąca lipca 24 dnia’, AGAD/Metryka Litewska IX–36, fos. 44–5.

44 ‘Kopia listu J.W.J.Mć. Pana Jerzego Mniszcha…do województw wielkopolskich na sejmiki przedsejmowe pod konfederacją r. 1767’, AGAD/Archiwum Branickich z Suchej (hereafter Sucha), 19/28.

45 ‘List J.O. Imci Pana Branickiego…na sejmiki przedsejmowe, pisany diebus August 1767 mo anno’, ibid.

46 ‘List J.W. Podczaszego Kor. do J.O. Xcia Imci Radziwilta ze 23 tio Augusti 1767’, ibid. Czacki repeated these sentiments in his second letter, ‘List drugi tegoz J.W. Czackiego…do J.O. Xięcia Imci. Radziwiłła…die 26ta Augusti 1767 mo. Ao. z Porycka’, ibid.

47 ‘Manifest J.O. Xcia biskupa krakowskiego’, ibid. Rudnicki, Soltyk, pp. 183–4 on the registration of the manifest makes no mention of its content as regards Catherine.

48 Manifest J.W.J.P. Karola Litawora Chreptowicza…na Sejm Extraordynaryjny warszawski r. 1767, dn. 5 Oct. (Grodno, 1767). Also circulating as a manuscript, AGAD/Sucha 19/28.

49 Franciszek Rostworowski [?] to Mniszech, 11 June 1767, Biblioteka Polskiej Akadcmii Nauk w Krakowie (hereafter BPAN), 1144, fo. 43.

50 A copy of the original, master instruction issued by Repnin is in B. Cz. 841.

51 ‘Instrukcja’ enclosed with a letter from an unknown correspondent to Aleksander Sapieha, field-hetman of Lithuania, 10 August 1767, Biblioteka Narodowa, Warsaw, 3287/IV. See also the instruction from the palatinate of Mińsk to its envoys, 24 Aug. 1767, AGAD/Sucha 233/281, pp. 533–41

52 ‘List Mazura Prawdeckiego [in some versions, Prawdorzeckiego]’, AGAD/Sucha 19/28, ibid. 88/109. On this letter's popularity see Maciejewski, J., ‘Literatura barska (1767–1772)’, Przmiany tradycji barskiej (Kraków, 1972), p. 69Google Scholar.

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56 Kaplan, H., The First Partition of Poland (New York, 1962), esp. pp. 174–81Google Scholar. The formal guarantees were contained in the three separate treaties of Warsaw that Poland concluded with Austria, Russia and Prussia respectively on 18 Sept. 1773. Parry, XLV, 235–41, 245–52, 255–65.

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60 Quoted in Rostworowski, , O polską koronę, p. 300Google Scholar.

61 J. Kl. Branicki to the French ambassador, the marquis de Paulmy, 26 Jan. 1762, quoted in Kisielewski, , Reforma, p. 147Google Scholar. See also Wroughton, to Sandwich, Warsaw, 14 July, 22 09 1764, Public Record Office, London, State Papers 88/88Google Scholar.

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63 On Wessel's plan see Hoensch, J. K., ‘Znaczenie stronnictw politycznych dla reformy Rzeczypospolitej szlacheckiej przed pierwszym rozbiorem Polski’, Studia Historica Slavo-Germanica, X (1981), 44Google Scholar. For Soltyk's, see ‘Kopia listu Xcia J.M.Ci. Biskupa Krakowskiego na sejmik poselski do województwa krakowskiego z Bodzęcina 18 Aug. 1766’, BPAN, 314, fos. 41–2. Also Rudnicki, , Soltyk, p. 117Google Scholar.

64 Czacki to the wife of the starosta of Stężyca (copy), 7 April 1767, B. Cz. 3862, no. 63.

65 ‘Minuta Gravaminów projective ulozonych, w miesiącu Februar. roku 1767, kilka miesiącami przed zaczęciem Konfederacji’, BPAN, 313, fo. 3.

66 Konopczyński, W., ‘Zdziejów naszej partyjności’, Mroki Świt: studyahistoryczne (Warsaw, 1911), pp. 1115Google Scholar.

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