Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II POPULATION, COMMERCE AND ECONOMIC IDEAS
- CHAPTER III LITERATURE AND THOUGHT: THE ROMANTIC TENDENCY, ROUSSEAU, KANT
- CHAPTER IV MUSIC, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER V SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- CHAPTER VI EDUCATIONAL IDEAS, PRACTICE AND INSTITUTIONS
- CHAPTER VII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII EUROPEAN RELATIONS WITH ASIA AND AFRICA
- CHAPTER IX EUROPEAN DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS, 1763–90
- CHAPTER X THE HABSBURG POSSESSIONS AND GERMANY
- CHAPTER XI RUSSIA
- CHAPTER XII THE PARTITIONS OF POLAND
- CHAPTER XIII IBERIAN STATES AND THE ITALIAN STATES, 1763-1793
- CHAPTER XIV THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES OUTSIDE BRITISH RULE
- CHAPTER XV SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA
- CHAPTER XVI THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONO, 1763–93: CONSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS
- CHAPTER XVII THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION IN ITS IMPERIAL, STRATEGIC AND DIPLOMATIC ASPECTS
- CHAPTER XVIII AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE IN ITS AMERICAN CONTEXT, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ASPECTS, WESTERN EXPANSION
- CHAPTER XIX THE BEGINNINGS OF REFORM IN GREAT BRITAIN, IMPERIAL PROBLEMS, POLITICS AND ADMINISTRATION, ECONOMIC GROWTH
- CHAPTER XX FRENCH ADMINISTRATION AND PUBLIC FINANCE IN THEIR EUROPEAN SETTING
- CHAPTER XXI THE BREAKDOWN OF THE OLD RÉGIME IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XXII THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XXIII THE OUTBREAK OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XXIV REFORM AND REVOLUTION IN FRANCE: OCTOBER 1789–FEBRUARY 1793
- APPENDIX Estimated growth of population in Europe and North America in the eighteenth century
- References
CHAPTER XII - THE PARTITIONS OF POLAND
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II POPULATION, COMMERCE AND ECONOMIC IDEAS
- CHAPTER III LITERATURE AND THOUGHT: THE ROMANTIC TENDENCY, ROUSSEAU, KANT
- CHAPTER IV MUSIC, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER V SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- CHAPTER VI EDUCATIONAL IDEAS, PRACTICE AND INSTITUTIONS
- CHAPTER VII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII EUROPEAN RELATIONS WITH ASIA AND AFRICA
- CHAPTER IX EUROPEAN DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS, 1763–90
- CHAPTER X THE HABSBURG POSSESSIONS AND GERMANY
- CHAPTER XI RUSSIA
- CHAPTER XII THE PARTITIONS OF POLAND
- CHAPTER XIII IBERIAN STATES AND THE ITALIAN STATES, 1763-1793
- CHAPTER XIV THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES OUTSIDE BRITISH RULE
- CHAPTER XV SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA
- CHAPTER XVI THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONO, 1763–93: CONSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS
- CHAPTER XVII THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION IN ITS IMPERIAL, STRATEGIC AND DIPLOMATIC ASPECTS
- CHAPTER XVIII AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE IN ITS AMERICAN CONTEXT, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ASPECTS, WESTERN EXPANSION
- CHAPTER XIX THE BEGINNINGS OF REFORM IN GREAT BRITAIN, IMPERIAL PROBLEMS, POLITICS AND ADMINISTRATION, ECONOMIC GROWTH
- CHAPTER XX FRENCH ADMINISTRATION AND PUBLIC FINANCE IN THEIR EUROPEAN SETTING
- CHAPTER XXI THE BREAKDOWN OF THE OLD RÉGIME IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XXII THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XXIII THE OUTBREAK OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
- CHAPTER XXIV REFORM AND REVOLUTION IN FRANCE: OCTOBER 1789–FEBRUARY 1793
- APPENDIX Estimated growth of population in Europe and North America in the eighteenth century
- References
Summary
Voyez ce qu'ont fait les encyclopédistes; de francs ignorants les rois sont devenus des menteurs moraux. On partage savamment les royaumes, comme autrefois on divisait les sermons, et Ton massacre le peuple avec autant de sang-froid qu'on les ennuyait. Voila un siécle de lumiéres!
HORACE WALPOLE to Madame du Deffand, 13 April 1773No sooner were the partitions of Poland accomplished than political thinkers and historians began to investigate the circumstances that had brought them about. The accounts and aspersions of eye-witnesses and contemporaries were followed in the next generation by rueful tales of misgovernment and, after the failure of the uprising of 1830–1, the whole question of national existence was sublimated and poeticised. The messianic hopes of the romantic poets were dashed by a series of setbacks beginning with the Galician massacre of 1846 and ending with the disastrous uprising of 1863. Thereafter, as Romanticism finally ceased to be the stuff of poetry, history became the object of serious academic study. Already in 1862 a chair of Polish history had been established in Warsaw, the universities of Cracow and of Lvov followed suit in 1869 and 1882. In 1880 Szujski, who occupied the chair at Cracow, expressed the opinion that if a nation failed to maintain law and order within its frontiers and to defend itself from external aggression, it was bound to become incapable of further evolution and to lose its independence. Poland's downfall had been caused by the Poles' own guilt of several centuries' standing. Szujski was apparently influenced by Darwin, though by no means exclusively so, since this thesis—a theological rather than a zoological concept—had first been adumbrated by the precursor of the 'Cracow school', Kalinka. Having set out to estimate the moral worth of Poland in the reign of its last king, Kalinka reached the conclusion (in 1868) that it was the Poles themselves who caused their country's downfall and that the misfortunes that had since afflicted them were a well-deserved penance
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- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 333 - 359Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1965
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