How Russia, Prussia, and Austria Partitioned Poland
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
- Kings and Generals animated historical documentary series on the Early Modern Ages continues with a video in which we talk about the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth also known as Rzeczpospolita, as we discuss how Poland was partitioned by Prussia, Austria and Russia in the late 18th century. We will talk about the Poniatowski’s Election, War of the Bar Confederation, First Partition, Great Parliament, Second Partition, Kosciuszko Uprising and Third Partition
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#Documentary #Poland #Lithuania
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WRONG TITLE, edit for you : How Muscovy , Prussia, and Austria Partitioned Poland and Belarus (GDL)
its great also you coul make a video about the two uprinsings of the congres of poland before WW1
Why no more Napoleonic wars
Source of information?
You don"t know, or just ignore many details, how it started - ended (Saying it as lithuanian)
On the one hand, I'm very glad that you are talking about the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. On the other hand, the video was a bit lackluster. Beyond the (arguably understabe) simplifications, it had some mistakes. Prussia did not acquire the important port city of Gdańsk (Danzig) in the first partition, which stayed a Polish exclave until the second partition. During the War in Defense of the Constitution in 1792, Prince Józef Poniatowski was not commanding in the Lithuanian theater. Both he and Kościuszko were in the South. The command of the Lithuanian army was given to the Duke Ludwig (Louis) of Württemberg (it was a terrible idea. It's a long story). Kościuszko was not sent to Siberia but was imprisoned in the famous Peter and Paul fortress in Petersburg. I could go on. Oh, and the clothes in the images used in the video were some weird anachronism stew.
Despite all that, I still gave this video a like because I hope you will continue to cover topics related to the Commonwealth, preferably with more attention to details.
definitely felt lackluster after finishing the video. I felt like a lot of detail was glazed over to fit a certain narrative (style), or something
They also got the flag wrong which is just amazing
give them a break, they're trying xd
@@jakubkulakowski I know, I know.
Yes - but history needs to be related factually and correctly.
For many ppl now - UA-cam is "a primary source", not just entertainment.
I'm sure these criticisms will be taken in the light that was meant.
Fun fact: Our Turkish Emperors and state which didn't wanted to accept ending of the Polish-Lithvanian state, entered a war against Russia to save the Polish-Lithvanian state but lost it. But when every year in a state gathering where all ambassodors assemble, sultan always asked: "Where is the ambassador of Lehistan?(Poland)"... Turkish Statesman always replied not to upset sultan and to commerate the fact that Turkish Empire did not recognised the trilateral partion, dismantling and the ending of the state which greatly shifted balance of power and dynamics against us, Turkish statesman in front of all other ambassadors, replied: "Ambassador of Lehistan(Poland) is on his way"...
When Poland finally joined EU in 2004, when a EU conference was held in Istanbul in honary to Polish entry, a Polish diplomat who knew about this historical events, made a reference to it when he was on the stage and his first sentence was: "The Polish ambassador has arrived" ... :)
Also a side note: When Nazi Germany blitzted through Poland and Europe and when Nazi's were at our border, former Nazi prime minister then 3. Reich ambassador to Turkish Republic, Von Papen asked the handover of Polish embassy in Turkey to Nazis reasoning it didn't exist anymore. Our president a former WW1 and The War of National Libaration general İsmet İnönü replied: "We don't act upon such demands, we don't have such accoustoms in our state traditions." Referencing Turkish Empire didn't also acknowleged the trilateral sack. :D
Why did the ottomans refer to Poland as Lehistan?
Start making kebab
kebab is 💯💯💯
@@theliato3809 I am interested in knowing too, a lot of languages change the entire name of countries it’s pretty cool
@@theliato3809because the first tribes to live in poland were the Lechites (Silesians, Poles, Kashubs, Masurians) and the suffix -stan means 'land' in the turkic languages. So Lehistan means 'land of the Lechs (Lechites)
The event of the partitions of Poland are usually just a side story to the many wars of 1700, so I'm glad you give them context and covered them in detail
Austria: Hey Poland, remember how you saved Vienna from the Ottomans? Well guess how we are paying you back.
Exactly.
They did not save them from ottomans. Literally most of the heavy work done by infantry. They just a meme at this point.
@@funbun420 ing?
@@funbun420 more ''fun'' on those ''buns''...
*"Hey Teresa, remember when you where trying to destroy my state as an concept, well, why don't we all make that happen but with poland? Such an brilliant idea!"*
The impact of first partition cannot be overstated enough. By claiming the coast the Prussians crippled Polish economy since most profits came from selling wheat and other goods to the rest of Europe, brought to Gdańsk (Danzig) by Wisła river. This meant that in order to trade through this route any merchant had to pay hefty tolls. And most of their cargo came from lands owned by nobility. On one hand this weakened the Commonwealth immensely, but on the other it also gave a very personal reason for nobility to finally consider reforming the country.
Although many nobles tried to recuperate losses by... establishing pubs within their domains so that the peasants instead of getting more material rewards (they weren't paid in money) would be rewarded with alcohol made from the grains they grew.
Was the Lithuanian coast not good enough of an alternative?
@@Carl-p3e7z While some trade was made that way, most of it due to lower cost of transport by river compared to ox wagons meant that trade was done mostly through Danzig or Königsberg and when Prussians took hold of the land in first partition, one of their trade policies was to encourage trade via the latter by imposing tariffs on boats going toward Danzig (the map in the video is wrong since Danzig and Toruń were still considered Commonwealth's).
This way the Prussian Königsberg gained in prominence at Danzig's expense.
During the first partition neither Gdansk nor Torun, two biggest towns of lower Wisla, has been incorporated into Prussia. All land along Wisla between these two towns however was and with that Prussians could very much disturb any navigation down the river from Poland to Gdansk.
Thanks for covering Poland, been waiting for it for some time, much appreciated!
I hope you continue to cover the history of Poland-Lithuania more in the future! It seems from other comments there were some errors, but I’m glad to see this covered at all. Such important yet lesser-known history.
Now I am Genuinely concerned you uploaded 4 Videos In 1 week you guys really are something else
Was just thinking the same thing. They gotta have a sweatshop to be making this many this fast
Lol
@@liamhowlin5936lol
@@liamhowlin5936 yep
They might be videos that were early releases for members/patrons
Absolutely love early modern History! Keep doin that stuff! I hope ghat the Spanish succession series gets continued!
Same here, seems like the 1700s had so many wars , maybe the most wars not battles in history idk
There's a bridge in New York named after Tadeusz Kościuszko. I guarantee most New Yorkers don't know who he was.
Yeah I had no clue who he was until I was in my 30s. They don't teach any of this stuff in school.
I've heard the name Kosciuszko, but only because it's the tallest mountain in Australia. It is named after him but I didn't know that at the time.
Americans don't know many things
Tadas Kosčiuska is how his name should be spelt
@@Aprylius I don't think he himself spelled it that way. The guy was Polish af
I just watched your “was Poland-Lithuania a republic” earlier! What good timing?! 🍻
Thank you for covering this tragic period in my homeland history!
Gdańsk (Danzing) was not taken over by Prussia until the Second Partition. The city remained loyal to Poland since Thirteen Years' War (15th c.) all the way up until the Partitions (18th c.) Despite majority & the elites being German. Johannes Hevelius, mayor of the city & scientist, called himself „civis Orbis Poloniae”, the citizen of the Polish world. 'Good ol' days before nationalism. We all know what sadly happened in relation to Gdańsk during WW2.
Even in ww2, after decades of forced germanisation, almost half of the city, including polish-kashubian minority (~15%) and most of the catholic germans (~40%) supported Poland instead of Germany. Gdańsk has always been very loyal to Poland.
"Good ol' days before nationalism. " nationalism doesnt mean that if you speak other language you cant beccome Polish.
@@galaxypl7756 Yes. and Gdańsk itself war founded by Polish Piast princes somwewhere in the X century
Around 975, on the Motława River, on the initiative of Mieszko I, a stronghold with a port was built. The name of the city was immortalized in the Roman "Life of St. Wojciech" as Gyddanyzc. Gdańsk received city rights in 1236 from the Pomeranian Duke Świętopełk II.
@@galaxypl7756 when I read "forced germanisation" - I wonder, if the same person sometime also reflects on " forced polonisation"?!
lots of love to my polish brothers from lithuania
Love from Masovia.
Love from Gdansk
Please make this love more concrete by allowing Polish schools and Polish orthography of family names again.
@@mikolajtrzeciecki1188 Polish schools in Lithuania never were disallowed.
Greetings from Poland! 🙂
To be brief, prince Poniatowski during the war of 1792 was commander at ukrainian front, not lithuanian. And Kościuszko was his subordinate then. In Lithuanian part commander was prince von Wittenberg who betrayed the cause. And insurrection of 1794 was started by calvary brigade in Ostrołęka (brigadier Madaliński), not Kraków - they were marching from Mazovia to Kraków to join Kościuszko forces.
outstanding coverage
O Greetings from Turkey to Poland I'll see you at the match on Sunday 🇹🇷❤️🇵🇱
Greetings from Poland to Turkey! We here remember well that your country didn't accept the partitions of Poland.
@@RR-nh8noMy father was Turkish millitary atteche to poland back in 2006. When we were visiting a museum in Krakow a young polish coupled came to us and said “i think you are Turkish, thank you for everything your nation did in our darkest day.” My fathers eyes still get wet whenever he remember that moment. Warsaw will never fall as long as Turkish horses drink from the Vistula River!
@@gokcancakmak3739 There is a lot of things our cultures and countries do not have in common, but we Poles will never forget what the Turks did for us! Thank you, I hope we can repay you the dept one day!
@@maskerade7258 divided by culture united by existential struggle!
Finaly the nation with the most underrated history getting what it deserves one more video from Kings and generals
Yes the Austrian-Habsburgs and Holy Roman Empire gets no love at all by History UA-cam.
they forgot that it was Poland AND LITHUANIA.
Official name was "Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth"
@@tawmas1593 no it wasn't official name. It is modern historians who use this name. In their time it was called Poland or the Republic. It's the same case as Kievan Rus or Byzantine Empire. It's modern name. Nobody in those times called it Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
@@tawmas1593 well I think we can call it Poland because most of its inhabitants were poles in the parlement polish was spoken and the language that was used it the governance was polish BUT we should remember that Lithuania was part of the commonwealth and it wasn't entirely Polish
@@MrNonejmBut it wasn't though? Officially it was The Kingdom of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The use of just Poland omitting Lithuania entirely became more widespread later.
I recommend you all to check out some paintings depicting these events, some of them are:
1. The Panorama of the Battle of Racławice
2. Constitution of 3rd May
3. Rejtan
Racławice panorama and Rejtan, as well as Stańczyk, are some of my favourite paintings. 2 of them are very emotional and thought-provoking, and Racławice is just epic. I recommend seeing it in person should someone be visiting Wrocław
Great video, can we please get a full Series on the 7 years war
7 yrs war ? The israel war x factions from like every country around them ? It's kinda funny how the country/state of Israel started eh
@@AnglephileSwedenGerman
What does Israel have to do with the 7 years war
@@AnglephileSwedenGerman You prolly mean the 6 days war in 1967. The 7 years war was a few hundred years ealier
Look at house of history
@@TheBigWindows1973 kippur WAR SAME.
Actually, Poniatowski king was abducted by Pulaski, who had to escape to America and became hero of war of independence there.
I very much enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
France was urging the Ottoman Empire to enter the war against Russia, and the Ottomans were also annoyed by the presence of Russian army in Poland ...and before 1768, no European kingdom alone without an ally could defeat the Ottomans in a war...the war of 1768-1774 was the first victory for an European kindgom to defeat the Ottoman Empire and was the main reason for the Partition of Poland, which was under the protection of the Ottomans, even if nominally..also Ottomans was again defeated in 1797-1792 war against Russia& Austria ..encouraging them to divide Poland again in 1792 and 1795
That is some top tier historical data on Commonwealth history, nice one👍
Hi, good video as always. I am from the South of France and I was wondering of you planned on doing a video on the « Albigeois » or « Cathares » crusade ? There are interesting characters, strategic moves and everything.
They already covered it for a Patreon Exclusive series, a few months ago. Full series too.
you won't believe how long I've been waiting for a video like this
The Kalmar Union and Swedish War of Liberaration 1521-1523 is something I would like to see.
me too
Thank you for the video and information
Waiting for this topic❤❤
0:51 Prussia didn't take Gdańsk (Danzig) in the first partition. It remained Polish.
I'm glad you mention, I'm native of Gdańsk (very rich history)
@@maciejniedzielski7496 Pozdro
Btw. also Napoleon made it a free city, there was a precedence. It was always a special city in Poland anyway.
it still was 95% German.
@@benjaminbritsch1749 Gdańsk 95% German after a century an a half of intense en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanisation
Stunned this wasn't a 3 part series 😅
Very interesting, thank you.
this brings tears to my eyes for some reason....Well, i have met very good polish gamers who are extremely kind to me and helped me as well.
“She wept, but she took nonetheless” - Frederick the Great in regards to Empress Maria Teresa of Austria
This year marks the 230th anniversary of the Kościuszko Uprising. On this occasion historian Dawid Gralik from the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, has been posting a series of lenghtly threads (in English) on certain social media platform formerly known as Twitter. He just posted another one, because today is the anniversary of the battle of Szczekociny.
If would be a dream come true to me if K&G would team up with him (or a similar expert) and made a proper detailed series about the war of 1792 and the Kościuszko Uprising.
BTW, while my initial comment under this video was rather critical, there were some aspects which I really liked l. Like the inclusion of the short poem (fable) by Ignacy Krasicki. If anyone is wondering, it rhymes in the original. 😉
Ambassador of Poland is on his way your grace!
Kosciuszko did not die in Poland, but in Solothurn, Switzerland where he lived in exile (until his death) after moving to the U.S. and then returning to Europe, after the final partitions of Poland. Upon his death, his heart was interred in Warsaw while his body can today be found among the kings of Poland in the crypt under Wawel castle in Krakow.
And krol Poniatowski returned to Poland in 1938
I love these videos! Would also love to see you guys cover lesser known parts of history like SE Asia
great video, explains well Polish spirit and political sitation in Poland to this day.
13:03 Prince Poniatowski didn't lead Polish army in Lithuania. He led units in Ukraine while Kosciuszko was his subordinate. Polish-Lithuanian forces in Lithuania were led by duke of Wurtemberg but he was a Prussian traitor who faked the illness not to lead Polish army against Russians. His Polish wife divorced him because of that.
I'm surprised this video is unlisted. In either case, it's a cautionary tale on what happens when leaders are too concerned about doing whatever they want to see the bigger threats breathing down their collective necks.
It is unlisted because we are giving youtube members and patrons early access.
Lol
Sorry my English is not so great, could you write your comment a little simpler for me, sorry to bother you
@CombatRing I disagree with the statement that the leaders were entirely responsible, If the people can't agree what's best for everyone someone else will decide it for you. The century or more of stagnation made most people so Indifferent to the wellbeing of the state that the fall was inevitable and well deserved.
@@AnglephileSwedenGerman This video was posted out of the list. Its a story of a caution in which the leaders are too busy trying to make their own goals to be finished rather than taking in consideration a larger problem that looms over the horizon.
I would be interested in seeing @kingsandgenerals doing a partition history of Luxembourg. It might be a good complementing video to this one's topic of great power games
Poland saved Austria from the Ottomans, and when Austria took part of Poland in the partition, the Ottomans supported them. Politics is a very funny business.
Don’t you cry.
We are still here. 🇵🇱
Stanislaw Leszczynski became King of Lorraine and his daughter married king of France.
Lorraine was not a kingdom.
But you are right, Leszczynski's role during the "Saxon Era" in Poland was more important than this. In short, he was a continuation of Sobieski's legacy.
Great animation, Very Informative Content and Great video
Thank you Kings and Generals for best historical Content video 👍👍💐💐
It’s an interesting timeline to consider a history where the PLC did not freeze up and was able to keep together.
Damn, even the Ottomans felt bad about what Polands neighbours did to their former saviour.
Argument for Austria is that they also didn't prefer the partition but since the other two participates were Russia and Prussia it needed to also join in the partition to limit the influence of both in Central Europe which in all account preferable to most poles under occupation as the Austrian Empire was already a Multi-ethic mess at that point and they at least have institutions and including the Catholic Majority means that Austria participating in the partition actually helped in the survival of the polish identity since both Prussia and Russia would have eradicated the nominally Catholic Slavic state.
So Napoleonic wars actually didnt help poles at all because Austria lost most of polish teritorries
@@jirin8080 Yeah, Austria was in the talks of also giving up their polish territory for a independent Polish state during the Congress of Vienna however the balance of power and the stubbornness of both prussia and Russia while also trying keep Saxony intact destroyed any chance for poland to come out as a independent state after alexander of Russia degraded the new polish constitution overtime.
Ottomans were afraid that Russia and Austra will push them out of Balkan countries.
@@lettuceman9439With this preservation of Polish identity is probably some form of joke, unless Joseph II's attempt at colonization and Germanization is considered as such. The Austrians not only participated in the partition, but also financially drained Galicia by sending Poles to war with the French or imposing huge taxes. Kaunitz's argument that Austria had to participate because Prussia would strengthen itself was probably ultimately validated anyway by the later unification of Germany by Prussia and the weakening of Austria's position, since Silesia could not be regained in the future anyway, even in alliance with Russia, and Prussia would be strengthened more in the long run. Austrian diplomacy should press with the French to preserve territorial integrity and strengthen the reforms of Stanisław August, who counted on Austrian friendship.
im doing a history IA on this!!! thank you for reminding me to work on it....
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍
A yes the story of my country, so epic, so fantastic and so tragic...
Kings and Generals should do a video series of Russification in Poland, Ukraine, the Baltic States, Georgia, the Caucasus region and in Finland.
In Belarus as well.
And Königsberg (Kaliningrad).
Polaków nie udało się zRusyfikowac w żadnym stopniu i nigdy nie uda nikomu
Why don't you add a 'year date' annotation to the corner of each video? That will help us be chronously oriented. Just a label with the year you are talking in, around the corner.
The partition and rebirth of Poland seems to tell us that uniting the national community could be so vital
Maravilloso trabajo... enhorabuena desde España
Great video!
Informative, thanks .
Pokazana mapa (ok. 4 minuta filmu) przedstawia, że ok. 1700 r. Śląsk oddzielający Saksonię od Rzeczypospolitej, należał do Prus. Jest to nieprawda, Śląsk należał wówczas do Austrii, a został podbity przez Prusy poźniej - w latach 1740-1763.
Don't cry don't cry don't cry...
Why would we cry
@@AnglephileSwedenGerman commonwealth destroyed 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
No joke
@@AnglephileSwedenGerman
Poland got smooshed, that's why we cry.....
Don't cry copper_corgi a.k.a RedL!ghtS0n 😂
Watch as any Russian who sees this say, that Poland was always Russian and make a poor excuse to invade it next.
кто о чем,а поляки о русских
thats so not true 😂😂 cant believe yall falling for that western propaganda shi
hey, look! They are already here.
Oh thanks for the idea 😁
Rissia in this time was imperialist Russia..
I had tears in my eyes listening to this.
Role of personality in history, i guess.
Between Russia and Poland (both sorta backward European powers with a chance to catch up by the late XVIIth century), only one got Peter I.
Poland didn't, and paid dearly for that - despite having a far better initial position in European affairs.
liberum veto @@neniAAinen
I think it’s safe to say that the war against the Russian empire was the most major impact for the Ottomans decline besides their own domestic issues also Kings and Generals I just wanted to know if you guys ever plan to do the Russo Turkish war of 1768 to 1774 mass battles incredible commanders such as Alexander Suvorov were involved in this conflict and of course, Samuel Greig maybe I feel like you should do this as part of your Russia series, especially since the great Northern wars is pretty much over the Ottoman part one series wraps up
of course, you'll say that Ivan... but that isn't true... it took combined forces of western powers and local revolutions to hurt the beast... but still that wasn't enough... the fatal blow came from an ''ally'... the trust on Kaizer's promise of reinstalled lands after ''victory''... a victory that never came of course... but still a someone ''Laurence'' twisted the blade that finally put it down..([ to rise again on another form...)
''Beasts shouldn't be put to sleep... but cooked and eaten!...''
How did the Ottoman empire lose a fight against the Russ boys?
the biggest impacts were the wars against Austria, as they fought each other way longer than the Russian Empire. The deciding factor was the great turkish war and the defeat at Vienna and the concluding treaty in 1699.
@MohamedAli-xu3uw OTTOMAN BEAT RUSSO BOYS MANY BATTLE BUT RUSSO COALAYİON FORCES AGAİNST OTTOS DEFEAT.
@@Echoak95OTTOMANS VS WHOLE EUROP. YeaE
Great video well done
I hope you guys would consider covering the january uprising in poland.
guess which power opposed the partition of poland
Ottoman Empire and Denmark as far as I know
@@WodospadPelagia tbh non - Ottomans just used a phrase to trigger Russians, that's all it was to it. 2nd that is sometimes listed is Persia, but there's no source for that whatsoever
@@patryk4198 could you give any source?
@@GdzieJestNemo Well, it depends also on interpretation of what "opposed" means, right? They weren't clapping hands, so that's something :)
*Prussia, Austria, and Russia:* Just think of the bunnies Poland.
Poland: so many stars in the sky tonight
please make more videos about Poland
Thank you.
idea : a compilation/remaster of the first to third mithridtic wars, the history of judea (from it being a kingdom to being a province of the babylonians, persians, greeks, and the romans), and a compilation of all the germanic tribes and barbarian kingdoms pre roman collapse and post roman collapse.
Could you do a series on Portugal and the Azores n the Portuguese expansion into south America and Africa and China? Thank you for the brilliant video, went by a lil too fast so i had to keep rewinding at parts going on an hour an a half edit: my father served in the Portuguese army n was soldiering in Africa, angola i think, not sure i only seen photos n never heard of talk , but my one of my grandfathers born in 1925 the other 1920 join during war n were sent to canada , idk why
This and the German 1848 revolution are why my ancestors moved to America. I'm glad Polish Culture survived
Not for long.
The Prussian ambassador Bucholtz recieved money and instructionsto aid the Polish reforms and delivered a promise of military aid from his king. The speed with which the Poles began modernizing caused concern however so when the Russians did invade the Prussians refused to intervene by claiming the alliance was no longer binding as it had been signed with a republic whereas after the declaration of the constitution the PLC was a monarchy.
Among the most pressing reforms was the modernisation of the army, new arms factories were built and a compromise project was intitiated forseeing of the creation of a 100 thousand strong force.
An interesting point of this plan was the creation of two rifle regiments, one in the Crown the other in Lithuania (rifled muskets were still a new concept and most armies didn't see the value in them compared to smoothbore muskets).
The plan also introduced several elements of uniform that became standard for the Polish army with the "rogatywka" probably being the most enduring.
The PLC's performance was mixed. The made many mistakes in deployment and often showed a lack of initiative however they were also capable of taking on Russian veterans from the Turkish wars and not only fight them to a standstill but outright break them such as at Zielence.
Jozef Poniatowski was CiC of the ukrainian front, Kosciuszko was one of his subordinates. Kosciuszko was in overall command at Dubienka where he established a strong defence but failed to account for the Austrians giving the Russians permission to pass through their territory to outflank him.
Dubienka also saw the new riflemen engaged in heavy fighting for most of the day repulsing both jeagers and cossacks before giving ground to grenadiers. Their performance would lead to Poniatowski arguing with Napoleon about the creation of a regiment for the Duchy of Warsaw, Napoleon apparently begrudgingly gave permission only in 1812 and as such was never created.
Polish cossacks declared Jozef Poniatowski their ataman and gifted him a camel hair cloak which he apparently wore for most of his life, including the day he died at Leipzig.
It might be interesting to make a video about the Reapers War (of Catalonia) in 1640, the subsequent 1st Catalan Republic (1641), the French county of Barcelona, the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659) and the partition of the Principality of Catalonia between Spain and France (consolidated in the War of the Spanish Succession) where the Castilian King Philip V of Borbón still swore to defend the French municipalities on his take of possession as Count of Barcelona in 1701 and in the dispute until after the Treaty of Utrecht (1713) and with Catalan law in use in the British Menorca until 1782, with an interesting episode of an attempt to recover Sardinia in 1723 by the county of Barcelona (king of Spain).
13:15 more importantly Poniatowski would pledge his allegiance to Catherine couple weeks into the war which completely devastated morale and hope
Poland is not yet lost!
Why did you guys name the Netherlands "Flanders"????? at 2:43 . i am appalled
Because it's rightful Flemish clay. 😆
At 17:46. Yep, here in America this Polish hero has left his name in lots of places. The Americans don’t like naming places and streets after foreigners, so his name sticks out. There’s a major street, a large bridge and a subway station here in NYC named after him. And I can’t for the life of me remember how to pronounce it or spell it. Lol.
First Partition of Poland 1772🗿
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact 1939
💀
First Partition of Poland 1772
Second Partition of Poland 1793
Third Partition of Poland -- 1795
Forth Partition of Poland (Congress of Vienna) -- 1815
Fifth Partition of Poland (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact) -- 1939
Sixth Partition of Poland (Potsdam Conference) -- 1945
@@robertab929prawda.
Not Poland, but Poland-Lithuania commonwealth!
You wouldn't say Austria instead of Austria-Hungary Empire, would you?
It’s too long to keep saying it all the time
Nawet w tamtych czasach w całej Europie była nazywana po prostu Polska,lub Rzeczpospolity nikt nie mówił Polska Litwa bo Polska dominowała wtym tandemie pod każdym względem, z Litwy został tylko tytuł
@@konradg1397it is not a guy way to talk about your smaller brothers
244 years later some Mustache man :
two mustache men actually
@@localpianoteacher little moustache man and big moustache man.
@@localpianoteacher one of them was from Austria/Germany and another from Russia, what a coincidence.
Mr Hussein was badass 😎
poland: not again
so interesting and so well done
Of the dividing countries, it could be said they all got a case of what comes around goes around, most prominently Prussia, the territory of which is now divided between Germany and Poland.
Of all fallen monarchies of Europe, the 3 monarchies which divided up Poland suffered the worst financial losses, almost all their properties lost and confiscated
The question is how the hell is prussia a slavic country(not a country but is made up of several slavic principalities, duchy, counties, tribes, etc) became german.
Repressions on the Polish language for over a century
Prussia was never slavic but baltic and the country became settled by german colonists in the medieval period
@@user-mh2uj7ns6h Prussians being baltic might be true since they were targeted by the Teutonic Order since the slavs(most of them) were already christianized, only the balts still practiced paganism. Prussia did not exist during the medieval period it was merely a county that was a part of the kingdom of pomerania and later acquired by the grand duchy of poland(which were all slavic kingdoms hence being colonized by germans during the medieval period is not possible.
Again you state that the king of Poland was chosen by the parliament and again you are wrong. The king was chosen by the assmebly of all nobility. Please change this.
Jeszcze Polska nie zginęła. 🇵🇱 Poland is not yet lost. 🇵🇱
Awesome video! You suggested a long time ago that you would be covering Charles V's Spanish/German/American/Italian empire in depth. Is that still coming?
the french revolution could have ended much more sourly if not for the poles, as in 1792 while prussia was invading France, most of its forces were at the polish border and not in France
First Partition of Poland 1772
Second Partition of Poland 1793
Third Partition of Poland -- 1795
Forth Partition of Poland (Congress of Vienna) -- 1815
Fifth Partition of Poland (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact) -- 1939
Sixth Partition of Poland (Potsdam Conference) -- 1945
Shouldn’t exist in the first place
Thanks for this material, but you forgot to mention a few things: Before Kościuszko's uprising, the country was in total decay. At that time, there was huge corruption in the country. Military orders could be purchased for gold or cash like an ordinary item. After the dissolution of the Jesuit brotherhood, the Most Important Catholic Bishops confiscated millions of Polish zlotys for their expenses. This money, instead of going to the education of the nobility, went to the private expenses of the bishops. That's why there was a shortage of so many officers and engineers in the country. During the Kościuszko Uprising, both the nobility and the priests did not tell their peasants that they were free and could fight because the harvest was approaching. For them, profit was more important than saving the independence of their homeland. General Kościuszko tried to enlist 300,000 men. He managed to collect only half of this amount. Most of them were poorly armed nobility and peasants. Peasants living around Krakow stopped working on the land and promised that they would stop fighting the enemy only when they expel all foreign armed forces from the country. During the Kościuszko Uprising, there was a shortage of weapons, ammunition and fortifications, and many forts had to be built from scratch. Many of the Polish and Lithuanian fortifications were simple wooden forts. Such forts were very easy to build, but in the fight against an enemy who had more artillery, it was not enough. At first, King Poniatowski eagerly supported the Kościuszko Uprising, but after the successes of the Russian and Prussian armies, he joined the Targowice Confederation. In the process, they destroyed the work of the Four-Year Sejm, which adopted the Constitution of May 3. During the last battle of the uprising near Warsaw, Russian soldiers under the command of General Suvorov murdered 20,000 inhabitants of Prague. Women and children were not spared and their belongings were stolen. During the occupation of the country in the 19th century, there would be three great national uprisings of Poles and Lithuanians: the November Uprising of 1830-1831, the Krakow Uprising of 1846 and the January Uprising of 1863-1864. The children and grandchildren of people who sold their country during the Targowice Confederation will also fight in the ranks of the insurgent army. Many of them will lose their own lives trying to wash away the shame of betrayal.
Constitution of May 3. !791 was only 100 days Catherine of Russia didint like it
One correction. In the video it's made to look as if the Prussians wanted to help Poland before 2nd partition and changed it's mind later. That is not the case. They were indeed egging Poles on in the hopes of Poland angeroing Russia, to trigger a new partition, which is what happened. They didn.t change their mind, it was their plan all along. This is evident from the correspondance between King of Prussia, and the prussian ambassador to Warsaw - Girolamo Lucchesini.
I'm surprised you don't have a series covering the Mexican drug war...would be a great watch
Hey @Kings and Generals, Poniatowski capture is not considered anymore a de facto situation, it has alot to do with Casimir Pulaski (he was a war hero leading entire nation during the Bar Confederation), it is now believed that he was tricked by the king and made him loose his support from abroad by creating a mirage of abduction of the King of PLC. Let's consider it for a moment, what did Pulaski (a briliant strategist, briliant spokeperson, briliant and loved man) get from abducting the King? Remember that during Bar Confederation Pulaski not once criticized the King himself (he probably knew that doing so in monarchical Europe would create push back). It was a set up that prevented Bar Confederation from receiving outside help.
Now do another video in your Knight Orders series. This time one about the Teutonic Knights. The other famous christian military order aside from the Templars.
It could have been Dresden the capital of Germany not Berlin if polish commonwealth alliance with Saxony had survived .The problem was in Augustus who wanted revenge with Swedes who looted his country
It's really sad that you took so little time for the war that we call "war in defence of the 3rd May Constitution of 1792 (or just polish-russian war of 1792). As one comment already wrote there is a mistake about Józef Poniatowski commanding the army of the Lithuania which he never did. He was the leader of the south front, commanded his division same as Kosciuszko and others. But this war is really interesting, we had many sucesses and there was many reasons why we lost, and I'm sure the "professionalism" or better organisation of russian army wasn't the reason. Most of troops were in fact expierienced after the wars with Ottomans but it was their only edge maybe also with little better logistics cause they kept getting our land and often polish armies didn't had time to evacuate magazines and they didn't tried to scorch the landas they retreated. Our army was really good and in some cases nicely defended. King didnt believed in victory and didn't tried that hard to help armies even though he had some kind of power especially when the initial supplies quickly drained out and first weapons started to break. He didn't did anything to help our morale, refused to come when he was invited to camp at Zieleńce after our victory. He argumented that with the concern if he gonna find the good food and conditions there.
We could've won but our country wasn't ready to sacrifice all. And there was a threat of Prussians or Austrians intervening if things would go wrong for Russians.
I read a long book about this war and I'm really fascinated. This short war was our last regular one in long time, after that there waited a long time of uprisings for us.
How it was possible that the other countries in Europe accepted this apparently unprecedented conquest pact ?
Were not asked. Poland-Lithuania didn't have allies at that point. France was still reeling from the loss during the Seven Years War, Spain was not strong enough, Britain generally aligned with Prussia etc.
It is very sad you decided to remove Lithuania part form title... Simplification for more views? OK.
please do a more indepth video on the kosciuszko insurrection!
Thank You for covering the topic of the Partitions of Poland-Lithuania K&G, despite the inaccuracies. 🤍❤️ I would definetly recommend collaborarting with Polish historians when covering topics related to Poland, since the Western sources on our history are often lacking and/or are oversimplified. The maps you use here (as well as in other videos featuring Poland) place the cities in wrong parts of the map etc. Still no hate, Polish history is very much overlooked, especially the history before 20th century.
Hope your wish comes true. I also had commented about Western sources in another scene, and got replies from viewers saying all the historians of my country must be racist and unreliable