THE LAST JAGIELLON KING - Poland In
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- Опубліковано 30 чер 2021
- „The last Jagiellon King” is a story of Sigismund II Augustus - the ruler of Poland and Lithuania in the years 1530-1572. A golden age for both countries whose common future was for 226 years firmly sealed in 1569, when Sigismund II Augustus together with the entire nobility transformed Poland and Lithuania into a dual state, in which the nobility could elect its king.
A system unprecedented in European history, by some historians dubbed the “Noble Democracy”, a prototype for today’s European Union was born, almost 140 years before the English-Scottish Union of the Crowns. Watch and learn more about Poland’s profound input into the Western civilization. TBC
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I have to admit that the end result exceeded my expectations! Congratulations to everyone responsible for this project! :)
Truly well done.
Muszę przyznać, że końcowy efekt przebił moje oczekiwania! Gratulacje dla wszystkich odpowiedzialnych za ten projekt! :)
learn English
Gratulujemy i pozdrawiamy naszego Absolwenta! :)
Pięknie zrobiony program dziękuję bardzo.
Stasiu, świetna robota! Gratuluję.
Świetny materiał, Panie Stanisławie!
An earlier Hapsburg princes was a well liked Queen of Poland. Her Consort was a Malanotti my ancestor.
👍
Im sorry, but Sigismund II weren't the last Jagiellon king of Poland. It was his sister, Anna
💪🇵🇱💪👍
We have a new king
I am his air
Casimir the great
Babolon beware. Indiana county pa
Im the heir of all nations
6.50minuta : opposed to the raising of the King by Italians and womans 😳🤔?
Yes :D I noticed that too :D not everyone is perfect ;)
You have no edia
They tried to steal my royalty
They did steal my royalty!
Tecumseh blood
Died of Syphilis, which he contracted from Barbara Radziwill, which is why he never fathered an heir (fetal morbidity). Or did you forget to mention that?
I’m surprised they didn’t show Kaczynski
Alpha and onega
Chest noka blood
Savior. Benifisher of the poor
Not very "religiously diverse" as claimed. All what is mentioned are Abrahamic monoteistic religions, in other words-all fall under the same umbrella. What about Lithuanian paganism? Everyone, including Poland, wanted to convert Lithuanians to Christianity by force. Jogaila had to confirm to Catholicism in order to become Polish king. So where is this "diversity" and "tolerance"? After that Polinization started to spread into Lithuanian culture and language. Lithuanian language was considered "peasant talk" by polish ruling class. Please stop this "diversity" propaganda.
There is no diversity propaganda here, you are mixing today's idealism/ideology to the reality of the XVI c. That's not way to discuss history. Poland was also pagan before it adopted Christianity. Surely wasn't done with no violence but in the case of Poland it wasn't at all comparable to the way Teudonic Knight's "conversted" Prussian's. Jogaila if you knew history had an Orthodox Ruthenian mother, so without a doubte he knew Christianity very well. He was a politician so he did what was rational for the sake of his familly and his country. The accession to Roman Catholicism whether you like it or not was a step thowards the civilized Western world. The fact that Lithuanian elites gradually polonized themself is not a reflexion of "Polish chauvinism" but a natural tendency to adopt a more elite culture by the elites of a country. The same process of partial or total polonization happend to the Ruthenian nobility and part of the Russian elites (in the XVII c.)
Poland lost Silesia and Pomerania in the course or the XIV and XV c. The local Polish nobility was germanized, do you understand where I'm going?
Unfortunetely XIX c. nationalism is still hurting ppls understanding of the past. I'm very happy that the Lithuanians are taking their fate into their hands but this war against Poland is leading you nowhere and your political elites are starting to understand it, especially with regards to what is happening in Ukraine...
That's when Lithuania was Europeanised. If you didn't adopt parts of Polish culture and stuck to your isolationist, pagan fantasy, you may well have ended up adjacent to Europe to this day. And please don't give this BS about Abrahamic umbrella: Jews may be in that, but it still didn't stop them from being the worst treated of any minority in European history. Plenty of Lithuanians adopted Christianity out of their own free will.
@@semperardens8711 Thank you for sharing. It was enlightening for me.
However, I dont think nimrod accepts logical explanations or anything truthful, aka enlightening. He sounds like a masonic plebe; ie ' abrahamic ' religion ... he's a typical Babylonian hellhound.
First, nobody cares. Diversity *as such* is of no value for its own sake, so there is no reason to brag about diversity of religion as if that were a good thing in itself. But it is true that the greater tolerance of Poland toward other religions was both pragmatic and rooted in the Catholic understanding that conversion cannot be forced. Compare that with the tyrannical religion of liberalism, with all its neutrality pretense.
Second, Poland did not convert Lithuania by force. This just sounds like a bunch of silly Lithuanian kvetching rooted in nationalistic low self-esteem and coping. Try ridding yourself of this misinformation and learning to become comfortable with reality, and maybe the truth won't cause you so much pain and sleepless nights.
Third, Poland didn't polonize the Lithuanians. Polish culture was the elite culture of the Rzeczpospolita, and Polish an official and dominant language of the Commonwealth, so naturally, the Lithuanian nobility became gradually polonized simply by participating in the elite culture. Poles were also the most numerous. So the Lithuanian nobility (like other nobles of German, Ruthenian, etc. origin) did so voluntarily, and why wouldn't they? So I'm not sure what kind of grievance you have toward Poles. Even in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Ruthenian was an official language, not Lithuanian. Barely anyone spoke Lithuanian in Lithuania (save for some northern regions). It's quite sad to see Lithuanians so ill-informed about such basic history. It's just weird.