INTRODUCTION.
The history of the origin and
career of the two Slav States, Poland and Russia, is interesting
not
merely because it contains a vast number of surprising scenes and
marvellous pictures of life, not merely because it gives us a
kaleidoscope as it were of the acts of men, but because these acts
in
all their variety fall into groups which may be referred each to
its
proper source and origin, and each group contains facts that
concern
the most serious problems of history and political
development.
The history of these two
States should be studied as one, or rather as two parts of one
history, if we are to discover and grasp the meaning of either part
fully. When studied as a whole, this history gives us the life
story
of the greater portion of the Slav race placed between two hostile
forces,--the Germans on the west, the Mongols and Tartars on the
east.
The advance of the Germans on
the Slav tribes and later on Poland presents, perhaps, the best
example in history of the methods of European civilization. The
entire Baltic coast from Lubeck eastward was converted to
Christianity by the Germans at the point of the sword. The duty of
rescuing these people from the errors of paganism formed the moral
pretext for conquering them and taking their lands. The warrior was
accompanied by the missionary, followed by the political colonist.
The people of the country deprived of their lands were reduced to
slavery; and if any escaped this lot, they were men from the higher
classes who joined the conqueror in the capacity of assistant
oppressors. The work was long and doubtful. The Germans made many
failures, for their management was often very bad. The Slavs west
of
the Oder were stubborn, and under good leadership might have been
invincible; but the leadership did not come, and to the Germans at
last came the Hohenzollerns.
For the serious student there
is no richer field of labor than the history of Poland and the
Slavs
of the Baltic, which is inseparable from the history of Mark
Brandenburg and the two military orders, the Teutonic Knights and
the
Knights of the Sword.
The conquest of Russia by the
Mongols, the subjection of Europeans to Asiatics,--not Asiatics of
the south, but warriors from cold regions led by men of genius; for
such were Genghis Khan, Tamerlane, and the lieutenants sent to the
west,--was an affair of incomparably greater magnitude than the
German wars on the Baltic.
The physical grip of the
Mongol on Russia was irresistible. There was nothing for the
Russian
princes to do but submit if they wished to preserve their people
from
dissolution. They had to bow down to every whim of the conqueror;
suffer indignity, insult, death,--that is, death of individuals.
The
Russians endured for a long time without apparent result. But they
were studying their conquerors, mastering their policy; and they
mastered it so well that finally the Prince of Moscow made use of
the
Mongols to complete the union of eastern Russia and reduce all the
provincial princes of the country, his own relatives, to the
position
of ordinary landholders subject to himself.
The difference between the
Poles and Russians seems to be this,--that the Russians saw through
the policy of their enemies, and then overcame them; while the
Poles
either did not understand the Germans, or if they did, did not
overcome them, though they had the power.
This Slav history is
interesting to the man of science, it is interesting also to the
practical statesman, because there is no country in the Eastern
hemisphere whose future may be considered outside of Russian
influence, no country whose weal or woe may not become connected in
some way with Russia. At the same time there are no states studied
by
so few and misunderstood by so many as the former Commonwealth of
Poland,--whose people, brave and brilliant but politically
unsuccessful, have received more sympathy than any other within the
circle of civilization,--and Russia, whose people in strength of
character and intellectual gifts are certainly among the first of
the
Aryan race, though many men have felt free to describe them in
terms
exceptionally harsh and frequently unjust.
The leading elements of this
history on its western side are Poland, the Catholic Church,
Germany;
on the eastern side they are Russia, Eastern Orthodoxy, Northern
Asia.
Now let us see what this
western history was. In the middle of the ninth century Slav tribes
of various denominations occupied the entire Baltic coast west of
the
Vistula; a line drawn from Lubeck to the Elbe, ascending the river
to
Magdeburg, thence to the western ridge of the Bohemian mountains,
and
passing on in a somewhat irregular course, leaving Carinthia and
Styria on the east, gives the boundary between the Germans and the
Slavs at that period. Very nearly in the centre of the territory
north of Bohemia and the Carpathians lived one of a number of Slav
tribes, the Polyane (or men of the plain), who occupied the region
afterwards called Great Poland by the Poles, and now called South
Prussia by the Germans. In this Great Poland political life among
the
Northwestern Slavs began in the second half of the ninth century.
About the middle of the tenth, Mechislav (Mieczislaw), the ruler,
received Christianity, and the modest title of Count of the German
Empire. Boleslav the Brave, his son and successor, extended his
territory to the upper Elbe, from which region its boundary line
passed through or near Berlin, whence it followed the Oder to the
sea. Before his death, in 1025, Boleslav wished to be anointed king
by the Pope. The ceremony was denied him, therefore he had it
performed by bishops at home. About a century later the western
boundary was pushed forward by Boleslav Wry-mouth (1132-1139) to a
point on the Baltic about half-way between Stettin and Lubeck. This
was the greatest extension of Poland to the west. Between this line
and the Elbe were Slav tribes; but the region had already become
marken (marches) where the intrusive Germans were struggling for
the
lands and persons of the Slavs.
The eastern boundary of Poland
at this period served also as the western boundary of Russia from
the
head-waters of the western branch of the river San in the
Carpathian
Mountains at a point west of Premysl (in the Galicia of to-day) to
Brest-Litovsk, from which point the Russian boundary continued
toward
the northeast till it reached the sea, leaving Pskoff considerably
and Yurieff (now Dorpat) slightly to the east,--that is, on Russian
territory. Between Russia, north of Brest-Litovsk and Poland, was
the
irregular triangle composing the lands of Lithuanian and Finnish
tribes. From the upper San the Russian boundary southward coincided
with the Carpathians, including the territory between the Pruth to
its mouth and the Carpathians. This boundary between Poland and
Russia, established at that period, corresponds as nearly as
possible
with the line of demarcation between the two peoples at the present
day.
During the two centuries
following 1139, Poland continued to lose on the west and the north,
and that process was fairly begun through which the Germans finally
excluded the Poles from the sea, and turned the cradle of Poland
into
South Prussia, the name which it bears to-day.
At the end of the fourteenth
century a step was taken by the Poles through which it was hoped to
win in other places far more than had been lost on the west. Poland
turned now to the east; but by leaving her historical basis on the
Baltic, by deserting her political birthplace, the only ground
where
she had a genuine mission, Poland entered upon a career which was
certain to end in destruction, unless she could win the Russian
power
by agreement, or bend it by conquest, and then strengthened by this
power, turn back and redeem the lost lands of Pomerania and
Prussia.
The first step in the new
career was an alliance with Yagello (Yahailo) of Lithuania, from
which much was hoped. This event begins a new era in Polish
history;
to this event we must now give attention, for it was the first in a
long series which ended in the great outburst described in this
book,--the revolt of the Russians against the Commonwealth.
To reach the motives of this
famous agreement between the Lithuanian prince and the nobles and
clergy of Poland,--for these two estates had become the only power
in
the land,--we must turn to Russia.
Lithuania of itself was small,
and a prince of that country, if it stood alone, would have
received
scant attention from Poland; but the Lithuanian Grand Prince was
ruler over all the lands of western Russia as well as those of his
own people.
What was Russia?
The definite appearance of
Russia in history dates from 862, when Rurik came to Novgorod,
invited by the people to rule over them. Oleg, the successor of
this
prince, transferred his capital from Novgorod to Kieff on the
Dnieper, which remained the chief city and capital for two
centuries
and a half. Rurik's great-grandson, Vladimir, introduced
Christianity
into Russia at the end of the tenth century. During his long reign
and that of his son Yaroslav the Lawgiver, the boundary was fixed
between Russia and Poland through the places described above, and
coincided very nearly with the watershed dividing the two
river-systems of the Dnieper and the Vistula, and serves to this
day
as the boundary between the Russian and Polish languages and the
Eastern and Catholic churches.
In 1157 Kieff ceased to be the
seat of the Grand Prince, the capital of Russia. A new centre of
activity and government was founded in the north,--first at Suzdal,
and then at Vladimir, to be transferred later to Moscow.
In 1240 the conquest of Russia
by the Tartars was complete. Half a million or more of armed
Asiatics
had swept over the land, destroying everything where they went. A
part of this multitude advanced through Poland, and were stopped in
Silesia and Moravia only by the combined efforts of central Europe.
The Tartar dominion lasted about two hundred and fifty years
(1240-1490), and during this period great changes took place.
Russia
before the Tartar conquest was a large country, whose western
boundary was the eastern boundary of Poland; liberated Russia was a
comparatively small country, with its capital at Moscow, and having
interposed between it and Poland a large state extending from the
Baltic to the Black Sea,--a state which was composed of two thirds
of
that Russia which was ruled before the Tartar conquest by the
descendants of Rurik; a state which included Little, Red, Black,
and
White Russia, more than two thirds of the best lands, and Kieff,
with
the majority of the historic towns of pre-Tartar Russia.
How was this state founded?
This state was the Lithuanian
Russian,--Litva í Rus (Lithuania and Russia), as it is called by
the
Russians,--and it rose in the following manner. In the irregular
triangle on the Baltic, between Russia and Poland of the twelfth
century, lived tribes of Finnish and Lithuanian stock, about a
dozen
in number. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries these were
all
conquered,--the Prussian Lithuanians from the Niemen to the
Vistula,
by the Teutonic Knights, aided by crusading adventurers from
western
Europe; the others, Lithuanian and Finnish, by the Knights of the
Sword,--with the exception of two tribes, the Lithuanians proper,
on
the upper waters of the Niemen and its tributaries, and the Jmuds
or
Samogitians on the right bank of the same river, lower down and
between the Lithuanians and the sea. These two small tribes were
destined through their princes--remarkable men in the fullest sense
of the word--to play a great part in Russian and Polish history. It
is needless to say much of the Lithuanians, who are better known to
scholars than any people, perhaps, of similar numbers in Europe.
The
main interest in them at present is confined to their language,
which, though very valuable to the philologist and beautiful in
itself, has never been used in government or law, and has but one
book considered as belonging to literature,--"The Four Seasons"
by Donaleitis.
Though small, the Lithuanian
country, ruled by a number of petty princes, was as much given to
anarchy as larger aggregations of men. United for a time under
Mindog
by reason of pressure from outside, the Lithuanians rose first to
prominence under Gedimin (1315-1340), who in a quarter of a century
was able to substitute himself for the petty princes of western
Russia and extend his power to the south of Kieff. Gedimin was
followed by Olgerd, who with his uncle Keistut ruled till 1377;
during which time the domains of the Lithuanian prince were
extended
to the Crimea, and included the whole basin of the Dnieper with its
tributaries, together with the upper Dvina. Gedimin and Olgerd
respected in all places the clergy of the Eastern Church, and thus
acquired rule over a great extent of country with comparative ease
and rapidity.
Olgerd, who had completed a
great state, left it to his sons and his brother Keistut. Yagello
(Yahailo), one of these sons, had Keistut put to death; his
brothers
and cousins fled; Yagello became sole master. At this juncture the
nobles and clergy of Poland effected an arrangement by which
Yagello,
on condition of becoming a Catholic, introducing the Catholic
religion into Lithuania, and joining the state to Poland, was to
marry the Queen Yadviga (the last survivor of the royal house) and
be
crowned king of Poland at Cracow. All these conditions were carried
out, and with the reign of Yagello Polish history assumes an
entirely
new character.
With the establishment by
Gedimin and Olgerd of the Lithuanian dynasty and its conquests,
there
were two Russias instead of one,--Western Russia, ruled by the
house
of Gedimin, and Eastern Russia, ruled by the house of Rurik. It had
become the ambition of the Lithuanian princes to unite all Russia;
it
had long been the fixed purpose of the princes at Moscow to recover
their ancient patrimony, the lands of Vladimir and Yaroslav; that
is,
all western Russia to the Polish frontier; consequently all the
lands
added by the Lithuanian princes to their little realm on the Niemen
and its tributaries. This struggle between the two houses was very
bitter, and more than once it seemed as though Moscow's day had
come,
and Vilna was to be the capital of reconstituted Russia.
When the question was at this
stage, Yagello became King of Poland. The union, purely personal at
first, became more intimate later on by means of the two elements
of
Polish influence, the Church and the nobility. Catholicism was made
the religion of the Lithuanians at once; and twenty-seven years
later, at Horodlo, it was settled that the Lithuanian Catholics of
the higher classes should receive the same privileges as the Polish
nobility, with whom they were joined by means of heraldry,--a
peculiar arrangement, through which a number of Lithuanian families
received the arms of some Polish house, and became thus associated,
as the original inhabitants of America are associated under the
same
totem
by the
process of adoption.
Without giving details, for
which there is no space here, we state merely the meaning of all
the
details. Lithuania struggled persistently against anything more
than
a personal union, while Poland struggled just as persistently for a
complete union; but no matter how the Lithuanians might gain at one
time or another, the personal union under a king influenced by
Polish
ideas joined to the great weight of the clergy and nobility was too
much for them, and the end of the whole struggle was that under
Sigismond Augustus, the last of the Yagellon kings, a diet was held
at Lublin in which a union between Poland and Lithuania was
proclaimed against the protest of a large number of the Lithuanians
who left the diet. The King, who was hereditary Grand Duke of
Lithuania, and childless, made a present to Poland of his
rights,--made Poland his heir. The petty nobility of Lithuania were
placed on the same legal footing as the princes and men of great
historic families. Lithuania was assimilated to Poland in
institutions.
The northern part of West
Russia was attached to Lithuania, and all southern Russia merged
directly in Poland. If the work of this diet had been productive of
concord, and therefore of strength, Poland might have established
herself firmly by the sea and won the first place in eastern
Europe;
but the Commonwealth, either from choice or necessity, was more
occupied in struggling with Russians than in standing with firm
foot
on the Baltic. Sound statesmanship would have taught the Poles that
for them it was a question of life and death to possess Pomerania
and
Prussia, and make the Oder at least their western boundary. They
had
the power to do that; they had the power to expel the two military
orders from the coast; but they did not exert it,--a neglect which
cost them dear in later times. Moscow would not have escaped the
Poles had they been masters of the Baltic, and had they, instead of
fighting with Cossacks and Russians, attached them to the
Commonwealth by toleration and justice.
The whole internal policy of
Poland from the coronation of Yagello to the reign of Vladislav IV.
was to assimilate the nobility of Lithuania and Russia to that of
Poland in political rights and in religious profession. The success
was complete in the political sense, and practically so in the
religious. The Polish nobility, who were in fact the state,
possessed
at the time of Yagello's coronation all the land, and owned the
labor
of the people; later on they ceased to pay taxes of any kind. It
was
a great bribe to the nobles of Lithuania and Russia to occupy the
same position. The Lithuanians became Catholics at the accession of
Yagello, or soon after; but in Russia, where all belonged to the
Orthodox Church, the process was slow, even if sure. The princes
Ostrorog and Dominik Zaslavski of this book were of Russian
families
which held their faith for a long time. The parents of Prince
Yeremi
Vishnyevetski were Orthodox, and his mother on her death-bed
implored
him to be true to the faith of his ancestors.
All had been done that could
be done with the nobility; but the great mass of Russian people
holding the same faith as the Russians of the East, whose capital
was
at Moscow, were not considered reliable; therefore a union of
churches was effected, mainly through the formal initiative of the
King Sigismond III. and a few ecclesiastics, but rejected by a
great
majority of the Russian clergy and people. This new or united
church,
which retained the Slav language with Eastern customs and liturgy,
but recognized the supremacy of the Pope, was made the state church
of Russia.
From this rose all the
religious trouble.
The Russians, when Hmelnitski
appeared, were in the following condition: Their land was gone; the
power of life and death over them resided in lords, either Poles or
Polonized Russians, who generally gave this power to agents or
tenants, not infrequently Jews. All justice, all administration,
all
power belonged to the lord or to whomsoever he delegated his
authority; there was no appeal. A people with an active communal
government of their own in former times were now reduced to
complete
slavery. Such was the Russian complaint on the material side. On
the
moral side it was that their masters were filching their faith from
them. Having stripped them of everything in this life, they were
trying to deprive them of life to come.
The outburst of popular rage
against Poland was without example in history for intensity and
volume, and this would have made the revolt remarkable whatever its
motives or objects. But the Cossack war was of world-wide
importance
in view of the issues. The triumph of Poland would have brought the
utter subjection of the Cossacks and the people, with the
extinction
of Eastern Orthodoxy not only in Russia but in other lands; for the
triumph of Poland would have left no place for Moscow on earth but
a
place of subjection. The triumph of the Cossacks would have brought
a
mixed government, with religious toleration and a king having means
to curb the all-powerful nobles. This was what Hmelnitski sought;
this was the dream of Ossolinski the Chancellor; this, if realized,
might possibly have saved the Commonwealth, and made it a
constitutional government instead of an association of
irresponsible
magnates.
It turned out that the
Cossacks and the uprisen people were not a match for the Poles, and
it was not in the interest of the Tartars to give the Cossacks the
fruits of victory. It was the policy of the Tartars to bring the
Poles into trouble and then rescue them; they wished the Poles to
have the upper hand, but barely have it, and be in continual danger
of losing it.
The battle of Berestechko,
instead of giving peace to the Commonwealth, opened a new epoch of
trouble. Hmelnitski, the ablest man in Europe at that time, could
be
conquered by nothing but death. Though beaten through the treachery
of the Khan at Berestechko and perhaps also by treason in his own
camp, he rallied, concluded the treaty of Bélaya Tserkoff, which
reduced the Cossack army from forty to twelve thousand men, but
left
Hmelnitski hetman of the Zaporojians. That was the great mistake of
the Poles; every success was for them a failure so long as
Hmelnitski
had a legal existence.
The Poles, though
intellectual, sympathetic, brave, and gifted with high personal
qualities that have made them many friends, have been always
deficient in collective wisdom; and there is probably no more
astonishing antithesis in Europe than the Poles as individuals and
the Poles as a people.
After Berestechko the Poles
entered the Ukraine as masters. Vishnyevetski went as the ruling
spirit. To all appearance the time of his triumph had come; but one
day after dinner he fell ill and died suddenly. The verdict of the
Russian people was: The Almighty preserved him through every
danger,
saved him from every enemy, and by reason of the supreme wickedness
of "Yarema," reserved him for his own holy and punishing
hand.
The old order of things was
restored in Russia,--landlords, garrisons, Jews; but now came the
most striking event in the whole history.
Moldavia, the northern part of
the present kingdom of Romania, was at that time a separate
principality, owning the suzerainty of the Sultan. Formerly it had
been a part of the Russian principality of Galich (Galicia), joined
to Poland in the reign of Kazimir the Great, but connected, at the
time of our story, with Turkey. The Poles had intimate relations
with
the country, and sought to bring it back. The Hospodar was Vassily
Lupul, a man of fabulous wealth, according to report, and the
father
of two daughters, whose beauty was the wonder of eastern Europe.
Prince Radzivil of Lithuania had married the elder; the younger,
Domna (Domina) Rosanda, was sought in marriage by three men from
Poland and by Timofei Hmelnitski, the son of Bogdan. The first of
the
Poles was Dmitry Vishnyevetski; the second was Kalinovski, the aged
hetman of the Crown, captured by Hmelnitski at Korsún, but now free
and more ambitions than any man in the Commonwealth of half his
age,
which was then near seventy.
Lupul, who had consented to
the marriage of his daughter with young Hmelnitski, preferred
Vishnyevetski; whereupon Bogdan exclaimed, "We will send a
hundred thousand best men with the bridegroom." Thirty-six
thousand Cossacks and Tartars set out for Yassy, the residence of
Lupul. Kalinovski, the Polish hetman, with twenty thousand men,
barred the way to young Hmelnitski at Batog on the boundary. It was
supposed that Timofei was attended by a party of only five
thousand,
and Kalinovski intended to finish a rival and destroy the son of an
enemy at a blow. This delusion of the hetman was probably caused,
but
in every case confirmed, by a letter from Bogdan, in which he
stated
that his son, with some attendants, was on his way to marry the
daughter of the Hospodar; that young men are hot-headed and given
to
quarrels, blood might be spilled; therefore he asked Kalinovski to
withdraw and let the party pass.
This was precisely what
Kalinovski would not do; he resolved to stop Timofei by force. The
first day, five thousand Cossacks and Tartars, while passing to the
west, were attacked by the Poles, who pursued them with cavalry.
When
a good distance from the camp, a courier rushed to the hetman with
news of a general attack on the rear of the Polish army. The Poles
returned in haste, pursued in their turn.
Young Hmelnitski had fallen
upon a division of the army in the rear of the camp, and almost
destroyed it. Darkness brought an end to the struggle. No eye was
closed on either side that night. One half of the Polish army
resolved to escape in spite of the hetman. At daybreak they were
marching. "They shall not flee!" said Kalinovski "Stop
them with cavalry; open on the cowards with cannon!" One part of
the Polish army hurried to stop the other; there was a discharge of
artillery; some of the fugitives rushed on, but most of them
stopped.
Then a second discharge of artillery, and a battle began. The
Cossacks gazed on this wonderful scene; when their amazement had
passed, they attacked the enemy, and indescribable slaughter began.
It was impossible for the Poles to re-form or make effective
defence.
At this moment the army-servants, many of whom were Russians, set
fire to the camp. Outnumbered and panic-stricken, thousands of
Poles
rushed into the Bug and were drowned. The Cossacks, with
Berestechko
in mind, showed mercy to no man; and of the whole army of twenty
thousand, less than five hundred escaped. The peasants in all the
country about killed the fugitives with scythes and clubs. Those
who
crossed the river were slaughtered on the other bank; among them
was
Samuel Kalinovski, son of the hetman. Then Kalinovski himself,
seeing
that all was lost cried, "I have no wish to live; I am ashamed
to look on the sun of this morning!" and rushed to the thick of
the fight. He perished; and a Nogai horseman raced over the field,
while from his saddle-bow depended the head of the hetman with its
white streaming hair. After the battle the body was discovered; on
it
the portrait of Domna Rosanda and the letter of Bogdan.
Farther on, near the Bug, was
a division of five thousand Germans under command of Marek
Sobieski,
the gifted chief who had fought at Zbaraj. Attacked in front by the
Cossacks, they stood with manful persistence till Karach Murza, the
Nogai commander, at the head of fourteen thousand men, descended
upon
them from the hills of Botog like a mighty rain from the clouds or
a
whirlwind of the desert, as the Ukraine chronicler phrases it.
Split
in the centre, torn through and through, the weapons dropped from
their hands, they were ridden down and sabred by Nogais and
Cossacks.
Sobieski perished; Pshiyemski, commander of artillery, was
killed.
A year later the Poles at
Jvanyets were in greater straits than ever before. They were
surrounded by Hmelnitski and the Khan so that no escape was
possible;
but they had more gold to give than had the Cossacks. They
satisfied
those in power, from the Khan downward, with gifts, and covenanted
to
let them plunder Russia and seize Russian captives during six
weeks.
On these conditions the Tartars deserted Hmelnitski, peace was
concluded, and the Polish army and king were saved from
captivity.
This was the last act of the
Cossack-Tartar alliance. Hmelnitski now turned to Moscow; the
Zaporojian army took the oath of allegiance to Alexis, father of
Peter the Great. Lithuania and western Russia were overrun by the
forces of Moscow and the Cossacks. The Swedes occupied Warsaw and
Cracow. Karl Gustav, their king, became king of Poland. Yan Kazimir
fled to Silesia.
Again the Polish king came
back, but soon resigned, and ended his life in France.
The eastern bank of the
Dnieper, with Kieff on the west, went to Russia; but it was not
till
the reign of Katherine II. that western Russia was united to the
east, and Prussia and Austria received all the lands of Poland
proper.
I feel constrained to ask
kindly indulgence from the readers of this sketch. I am greatly
afraid that it will seem indefinite and lacking in precision; but
the
field to be covered is so great that I wrote with two kinds of
readers in view,--those who are already well acquainted with Slav
history, and those who do not know this history yet, but who may be
roused to examine it for themselves. I hope to give a sketch of
this
history in a future not too remote, with an account of the sources
of
original information; so that impartial students, as Americans are
by
position, may have some assistance in beginning a work of such
commanding importance as the history of Poland and Russia.
Jeremiah
Curtin.