History of Poland. Elected kings: the decline of the Polish state. Which of the Polish kings was not a Pole at all and why this happened Who rules Poland

Standard of the rulers of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Since ancient times, the banners of Polish monarchs depicted a white eagle on a red field. The standard of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was originally a white cloth with the image of the small coat of arms of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. But since red and white were the national colors of both Poland and Lithuania, single state from the 17th century, a standard began to be used, consisting of three or four horizontal stripes of red and white flowers, ending with a dovetail. In addition, the standard contained the coat of arms of the Commonwealth (in the picture - a standard with the coat of arms of the Vasa dynasty).

Historical coat of arms of the Piasts

Tradition says that the legendary ancestor of the Poles founded his capital, Gniezno, in the place where he saw a white eagle sitting on the branches of trees, against the backdrop of a sky flaming from the sunset, and since then the white eagle has become a symbol of Poland. However, if we proceed not from legends, but from historical facts, then the white eagle was originally a personal sign, and became a national symbol at the end of the 14th - beginning of the 15th century.

The coat of arms of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the combined coat of arms of Poland and Lithuania in a four-part shield, in the first and fourth parts - the Polish white eagle, in the second and third - the Lithuanian "Pursuit". A small shield with the coat of arms of the reigning monarch was usually superimposed on the main shield.

Crown of Boleslaw the Brave
(modern copy)

Kingdom of Poland
Królestwo Polskie(Polish)

People inhabited the territory of modern Poland already during the Paleolithic period, approximately 800 thousand years ago. By the period of classical antiquity (400 BC - 500 AD), tribes of Celts, Germans and Balts lived here. They did not have their own writing, but, according to indirect evidence, they reached high level V material culture And social organization. Perhaps they already had "princes". At least some of the burials discovered by archaeologists are significantly richer.

The Slavs entered Poland around V-VI centuries as a result of the Great Migration. In ancient chronicles, there are widespread legends about the rulers of those times, who, as usual, allegedly traced their ancestry to the biblical patriarchs and were related to the Roman Caesars. These legends are distinguished by a variety of variants (the same deeds are attributed to different princes with the same name) and chronological inconsistencies. Thanks to these legends, Poland acquired two centers of statehood - Krakow, allegedly built by the first legendary prince of the Lechites, where subsequent monarchs were crowned and the possession of which meant supremacy over all rulers of the Polish land, and Gniezno, the former residence of the first historical rulers of Poland.

More or less reliable information about the Polish princes begins in the 10th century, when he adopted Christianity. The subsequent history of Poland until the 14th century was a series of ups and downs, when some sovereigns collected lands, trying to equal the power of the German emperors, while others divided them among their children. And one of their descendants began the process of unification again. Poland achieved the first at . Having united the Polish lands after the death of his father, he assumed the royal title shortly before his death in 1025. However, his death was followed by the traditional feud between his sons, as a result of which he lost a significant part of his lands and his royal title. It was not for nothing that he was called the Restorer who put an end to it. His son influenced affairs in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Kievan Rus and in 1076 he was proclaimed king. Under his grandson, Ancient Poland reached . annexed Pomerania and repelled the attack of the German emperor. However, his “Statute” (testament), issued with the intention of preventing internecine wars between his sons, marked the beginning of more than two hundred years of feudal fragmentation.

According to the "Statute of Boleslav Wrymouth" in 1138, Poland was divided into four parts between his sons. The Krakow Land, the Sieradz-Lenczyca Land, Western Kuyavia and the eastern part of Greater Poland stood out as special "hustler", which was supposed to belong to the eldest of the Piasts. Descendants began a long struggle for seignorate, even though over time, possession of Krakow became simply a matter of prestige and did not provide any real advantages. Pomerania was abandoned, the northern regions came under the control of the Teutonic Knights, the Germans began to advance from the west, and the Tatar-Mongols attacked from the east. At the end of the 13th - beginning of the 14th centuries, most of Poland became part of Poland, and in 1300 he was crowned with the Polish crown in Krakow.

Against the backdrop of numerous turmoil, centripetal trends began to be observed again in Poland. In 1295, the Greater Poland prince independently accepted the royal title in Gniezno, but was soon killed by Greater Poland magnates who entered into an agreement with the Brandenburg Elector. In 1306, the Přemyslid Empire suddenly collapsed, and Kraków again fell to Piast, the Prince of Kujaw. The energetic prince quickly annexed Eastern Pomerania and Greater Poland and in 1320 was crowned with the royal crown in Krakow, although he failed to achieve complete unity of the Polish lands. This was achieved by his son, the only one Polish kings earning the nickname The Great. He managed to restore order in internal affairs and achieve success in foreign policy using diplomacy rather than force. Unfortunately, he did not leave any sons, which is why the Polish throne for the first time went to a foreigner - his nephew. Owning from the Baltic to the Black and Adriatic seas, he did not have the strength and time to carefully delve into the affairs of a country foreign to him. Without a strong foothold in Poland, in 1374 he issued the Privilege of Koshitsy, which granted all magnates and gentry rights and privileges that had previously been enjoyed only by the highest secular and spiritual feudal lords. Priviley gave impetus to the growth of the power of the Polish nobility and the decline in the authority of the king. The Koszycki privilege was intended as a means of securing the Polish throne for one of the daughters.

about 811-861 about 861-892 about 892-930 about 930-964

Old Polish state

Princes and kings of Poland

prince around 964-992
prince 992-1025
king 1025
(1) king 1025-1031
prince 1031-1032
(2)

princes-co-rulers 1032-1033
(3) prince 1033-1034
Bezkrulevye1034-1038
prince 1039-1058
prince 1058-1076
king 1076-1079
prince 1079-1102
(part of Poland)
(part of Poland)
princes 1102-1106
prince 1106-1138

(titular prince) 1291-1295 (Prince of Krakow)
(King of Poland) 1295 1295-1300

Kings of Poland

United Kingdom of Poland

1320-1333
1333-1370
1370-1382
1384-1386

(co-ruler)
1386-1399
1399-1434
1434-1444
"Bezrulevye" 1444-1447
1447-1492
1492-1501
1501-1506
1506-1529

(co-ruler)
1529-1548
1548-1569
Union of Lublin: unification of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania into the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569

Mieszko I laid the foundations of Polish statehood. It was under this Polish prince that Christianity of the Latin rite was established as the sovereign religion. During the reign of Mieszko I and thanks to him government activities Polish lands were united. Kuyavia, Eastern Pomerania and Mazovia were annexed to the territory of Greater Poland. Poland began to play an important role in political life all over Europe.

Boleslaw I the Brave continued the work of his father Mieszko I in terms of collecting Polish lands. The Krakow land was annexed to Poland. In 999, the prince managed to capture Moravia. And a year later, even part of the Slovak lands. In 1025 Bolesław was crowned King of Poland in Gniezno. He glorified himself in numerous battles and received the nickname Brave. But he made many enemies. Almost all neighbors were hostile to Poland.

Mieszko II continued the expansionist policy of his father Bolesław I the Brave. During his reign, raids were made on the Czech Republic and Saxony. However, Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II pacified Mieszko II's attempts to increase his influence. In 1034, the Polish king was brutally murdered. The Polish feudal lords were dissatisfied with the policies he pursued. But the murder of the king only plunged Poland into even greater chaos and turmoil.

During his reign, he followed the example of Boleslav I the Brave. He continued to interfere in the internal affairs of neighboring states, such as Hungary. In addition, he took part in the Czech internecine wars. But it was Bolesław II who regained his royal title. Under him, no one challenged the independence of the Polish state. As a result of the revolt of the magnates in 1079, Bolesław II was forced to flee the country forever.

after many years of socio-political crisis in Poland, he tried to restore statehood, establish Christianity and raise the broken authority of the Polish government. If it were not for the timely assistance of the Holy Roman Emperor Henry III provided to Casimir, the Polish lands could have become part of the Czech Republic and returned to paganism. But Casimir I was forced to pay for the assistance provided with the independence of Poland.

came to grips with the issue of subjugating Pomerania. Polish troops under his command it was possible to capture Gdansk. Boleslav III did not refuse to intervene in the affairs of foreign states (Kievan Rus and Hungary). But the biggest result of his reign was the Statute, which actually introduced the seignorate system in the country. The statute prescribed that the Polish state was split into many small parts. The era of feudal fragmentation began.

in 1177 he ascended the Polish throne. He managed to become a powerful prince of Poland. Foreign policy The Polish state under him was of a peaceful nature. Casimir III paid more attention to internal problems. His goal was to unite the Polish lands, but he failed to achieve this goal. Bloody unrest broke out again in Poland after the death of Casimir II.

was first married to Versheslav from Novgorod. But after the tragic death of their son Boleslav, the prince chose Maria as his wife. The son of Bolesław IV received an inheritance in Mazovia. The result of the king's reign was a reduction in the powers of the prince-princeps. In practice, the country was led by aristocrats who extended their influence over a certain fiefdom. Due to such fragmentation of the state, Boleslav IV never managed to receive a royal title.

was not a strong ruler. His years in power were not marked by an authoritarian style of government. He relied entirely on the Polish aristocracy when making decisions. Foreign policy turned out to be a failure. Trips to Western Pomerania ended in nothing. And his support (the ruler relied on the provincial aristocracy as the main force) betrayed him and got out of control. Separatist tendencies were intensifying in the country, and the king could not do anything about them.

almost became the last Polish king from the Piast dynasty. He received the crown not without effort, since the previous ruler of Poland, Leszek Chorny, died childless. As a result, a struggle for the throne developed between the Piasts, in which Przemysl II emerged victorious. However, he did not have to rule for long. He would be kidnapped and beaten. The most likely customer of the harsh reprisal against Przemysl II is called Otto of Brandenburg.

received this nickname for his small stature, which did not exceed 140 centimeters. The ruler actively fought for the unification of Polish lands. Although his path to the Polish crown was thorny and difficult, Wladyslaw I was able to annex Greater Poland and Eastern Pomerania to his possessions. In 1293, Jadwiga of Kalisz became the wife of Władysław. In their marriage they had six children.

in 1370 he took the Polish throne. As a result, he owned vast territories from the Baltic shores to the Balkans. Under him, a number of laws were passed on local government, about the rights of the crown and the privileges of cities. But this king cared little about the affairs developing in Poland. Louis I lived permanently on Hungarian territory. After his death, the Polish throne was taken by his daughter from his second marriage, Jadwiga.

Already at the age of eleven she became the Queen of Poland, and a year later she married Prince Jagiello of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Jadwiga remained in the memory of the Poles as a good-natured, wise and pious woman. He constantly provided assistance to the poor, knew the four foreign languages. Helped in the transformation of the University of Krakow. In 1997, the Vatican declared Queen Jadwiga a saint.

, former Grand Duke of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, became engaged to Queen Jadwiga of Poland in 1386. He was baptized into Catholicism, taking the name Vladislav. Among the main achievements of his reign on the Polish throne were the baptism of Lithuanian lands and the victory in the Battle of Grunwald. Thus, the expansion of the German knights to the East was stopped. He competed with the leader of the Lithuanian opposition Vytautas. According to the testimony of Jan Dlugosz, Jagiello died in 1434 from a cold.

did not occupy the Polish throne for long. At first, regents helped him rule the country, and in 1444, at the age of nineteen, the king went on a campaign against the Turkish troops of Murad II. However, the campaign failed miserably. Vladislav III heroically fell in battle near the city of Varna. The body of the Polish king was never found. Because of this, a lot of rumors appeared about his lucky salvation.

waged a fairly successful fight against Teutonic Order. In 1466, the Peace of Torun was concluded, according to which many territories were annexed to Poland. Casimir IV wanted to create close alliances with many of Poland's neighbors, including Prussia and the Czech Republic. During the reign of Casimir IV, the University of Krakow began to play an important role in European education. The Latin language became widespread.

tried to correct the situation with the increased gentry privileges in Poland, but he failed. The king was in a very difficult financial situation, so he had to seek help from the gentry. She took advantage of this situation and further strengthened her position, reducing the rights of the bourgeoisie and actually laying the foundation for serfdom in Poland. The expedition against the Moldavian ruler Stefan ended in failure.

turned out to be a very wasteful king of Poland. Wars with neighbors did not stop throughout his reign. The Tatars attacked Polish territories and literally devastated many lands. In 1505, the Radom Constitution was adopted. The royal power was losing its influence, and the gentry, on the contrary, strengthened their position. Alexander Jagiellonczyk was buried in Vilna, and not, according to tradition, in Poland.

closely took up the issues of defense of his state. Salaries were paid to the troops. There are new rules regarding defense issues. Military-financial reform was also implemented. Sigismund I was a great philanthropist, had an extensive library, and constantly invited eminent artists and sculptors to his palace. It was he who signed a number of letters of safe conduct for the pioneer printer Francis Skaryna.

installed a good relationship with Turkey and Austria. But relations with Moscow were spoiled. As a result of a series of wars, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania lost many important cities, for example, Polotsk. In 1563, a privilege was signed, which equalized the rights of Catholics and Orthodox Christians. During his reign, the gentry continued to prosper, trying not to spoil relations with the authorities. Royal prosecutors appeared in the povets.

had little interest in the internal affairs of Poland. He did not know the language or traditions. Royal ceremonies irritated him. Periodically he took money from the royal treasury to pay off debts due to constant losses at cards. Of course, although short, the memorable reign of the Frenchman on the Polish throne influenced the rapprochement of the two peoples. In 1574, Henry III fled from his residence in Wawel, Poland.

tried in every possible way to strengthen the power of the King of Poland. Fought with tycoons. In defiance of the reform movements, he provided all possible assistance to the Catholic Church and the Jesuits. It was during his reign that numerous Jesuit colleges were opened. Stefan Batory also paid increased attention infrastructure development government controlled ON Under him, the Polish grosz became the main means of payment.

left conflicting feelings in the memory of descendants. On the one hand, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth reached the peak of its development under him. But under the reign of the king, the first shoots of crisis began to be observed Polish-Lithuanian state. The principle of unanimity began to spread at the Seimas. Any attempts by the king to moderate the rights of the gentry ended in failure. Sigismund III tried to unite Poland and Sweden under one rule, but he failed.


started modernization Polish army. Artillery and infantry were improved. He renounced all claims to the Moscow throne. According to the results of the Polyanovsky Peace, Poland confirmed its borders before the Smolensk War of 1632-1634. In the field of religion, Vladislav IV showed religious tolerance and tried to play on the existing contradictions in his own interests. He was a great connoisseur of painting and regularly supported artists financially.

carried out a number of radical reforms in the army, but the Turkish threat again loomed over the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. But this was of little concern to the gentry and Lithuanian magnates. Last years Jan III was also not positive. There was complete discord in the family. The king's sons understood that Jan III Sobieski had little time left to live, so even during his lifetime they began to divide the throne. And the wife openly traded positions.

turned out to be the last king of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the first years of his reign, he tried to save Poland from a deep crisis. Numerous reforms began in the army, treasury, and legislative system. However, Stanislav Poniatowski was never able to cope with his main enemy - the right of “liberum veto”, which impeded the normal legislative process. Although the country adopted a Constitution in 1791, it was already too late. As a result of the partitions, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth ceased to exist.

Jozef Piłsudski was the first head of the revived Polish state. However, it was under him that an authoritarian regime was established in the country. The role of the legislative branch of government was greatly limited. In Poland, a policy of “sanation” (“moral recovery”) was pursued, the real goal of which was to strengthen Pilsudski’s power. In 1935, a new Polish constitution was approved, formally establishing a strong presidential regime.

still receives an ambiguous characterization among Poles. On the one hand, he was the communist leader of Poland for a long time. Under him, many human rights were violated. On the other hand, he was the first president of independent Poland. In 1990, he agreed to hold multi-party elections for the presidency. Wojciech Jaruzelski peacefully transferred power to the victorious Lech Walesa.


, although he was an electrician by profession, was able to become the leader of the Polish Solidarity movement. In 1990 he became president. He faced the difficult task of reviving the Polish state, economic problems, carrying out reforms that are painful for society. As a result of the policy of implementing a set of tough economic transformations, the level of income of the population dropped significantly, but subsequent years showed the effectiveness of the measures taken.

in his election program proclaimed a “return to moral values" Together with his twin brother, he headed the Law and Justice party. He was President of Poland for less than five years. Tragically died in a terrible plane crash in Russia. At the same time, many high-ranking officials died statesmen Poland. Many cities have streets named after Lech Kaczynski.


Graduated from the Faculty of History at the University of Warsaw. For almost ten years he taught history at a Catholic seminary. Then I started political activity. At one time he belonged to the Conservative People's Party. He was elected by the Polish people to the presidency in 2010. Komorowski ran for the Civic Platform party. He defeated his competitor Jaroslaw Kaczynski in the second round.

Andrzej Duda- Current President of Poland.

    - (X century present) History of Belarus ... Wikipedia

    Moravian Eagle (1459) The rulers of Moravia have been known since the 9th century. The list includes the rulers of feudal formations located on the territory of Moravia from the 9th century, when Moravia was the core of the Great Moravian state, and until 1611, when Moravia ... ... Wikipedia

    Contents 1 Legendary rulers of Pomerania 2 Princes of the Slavic tribes of Pomerania ... Wikipedia

    Lorraine emerged in 855 after the division of the “Middle Kingdom” by Emperor Lothair I. At first Lorraine was a kingdom, but at the beginning of the 10th century it became a duchy. Contents 1 Kingdom of Lorraine (855 923) 1.1 Carolingians ... Wikipedia

    Count de Bar le Duc (lat. Barrum Ducis, fr. Barrum Ducis, Bar le Duc) the title of the rulers of the county of Lorraine that arose in the 10th century, and since 1354 the duchy of Bar ... Wikipedia

    List of female heads of state and government ... Wikipedia

    Includes famous politicians, rulers, statesmen who have reached the age of 90 years. Kalnyshevsky, Pyotr Ivanovich, last Koshevoy Ataman of the Zaporozhye Sich, 112 years old. Song Meiling Chinese political figure, wife of Chiang Kai-shek, 106... ... Wikipedia

    Family tree of the Romanovs, beginning of XVIII century The list of illegitimate children of Russian emperors includes both recognized bastards of Russian rulers and children attributed to them by rumors, with most names falling into the latter category... ... Wikipedia

    Contents 1 Merovingian Dynasty 2 Carolingian Dynasty 3 Capetian Dynasty ... Wikipedia

    The Lusatian March (also Margraviate of Lausitz, Mark of Lausitz) was a feudal formation in the Holy Roman Empire. It was created in 965 as a result of the division of the Saxon Eastmark. The Lusatian March was ruled by various German dynasties... Wikipedia

Queens of Poland from 1282 to 1757
I’ve wanted to for a long time and today I’ll tell you about the queens of Poland.

Yadviga Boleslavovna (1266-1339)
The wife of the King of Poland Wladyslaw Loketek (Lokotok - a nickname given for her short stature, some sources indicate 130 cm). Gave birth to six children

Elizabeth of Bosnia (1340-1387)
Daughter of Ban Stefan II of Bosnia from the House of Kotromanić. Her mother, Elisabeth Kujawska, was the granddaughter of the Polish king Władysław Łokietek. Second wife of King Louis I the Great of Hungary and Poland. She had two daughters - Jadwiga and Maria. Elizabeth of Bosnia's youngest daughter, Jadwiga, became Queen of Poland. After the death of her husband, Elizabeth served as regent for her minor daughter Mary, who became the Hungarian queen. During the struggle for power in Hungary, both Elizabeth and Mary were imprisoned. Elizabeth was strangled in prison in front of her daughter.

Elizabeth and Mary in prison (artist Orlai Petrics Soma)

Jadwiga of Anjou (1373-1399)
Queen of Poland. Daughter of the King of Hungary and Poland, Louis I of Anjou. On February 18, 1385 she married Vladislav II Jagiello. Having given birth to a daughter in 1399, who died a month later, Jadwiga then went to the grave herself.

Portrait by Marcello Baciarelli

Anna of Celsa (1381-1416)
After Jadwiga's death, her husband Jagiello became king of Poland. In 1402 he married Anna of Celje, the only daughter of Count William of Celje and Anna of Poland, the youngest daughter of Casimir III the Great. Anna gave birth to a daughter, Jadwiga, in 1408. Little else is known beyond his death in 1416.

Anna and her husband Jagiello (artist unknown)

Elzbieta Granovskaya (1372-1420)
The only child of the Sandomierz governor Otto of Pilecki and, probably, his second wife Jadwiga from Melsztyn (godmother of Jagiello). After her father's death in 1384, she inherited his vast estates, including Pilica and Lancut. Elzbieta became the richest girl in Poland. Before her marriage to Jagiello in 1417, she was allegedly married twice. Queen of Poland from 1417, but two years later the queen began to show symptoms of tuberculosis and died in 1420.

(artist unknown)

Sofya Andreevna Golshanskaya (1405-1461)
The last fourth wife of Jagiello. From noble Lithuanian princely family Golshansky (Olshansky) coat of arms Hypocentaur. The second of three daughters of Andrei Ivanovich Golshansky, the Kyiv governor, Prince of Vyazyn, and Alexandra Dmitrievna, a representative of the princely family of Drutsky. She got married at the age of 17, while Yagalo was supposedly 71 years old. She gave birth to three sons. Two survived - Vladislav and Kazimir. After the death of her husband, she actively helped her sons rule. She was the initiator of the first translation of the Bible into Polish language(the so-called “Queen Sophia Bible”).

Jagiello and Sophia. Drawing by A. Leser

Elisabeth of Habsburg (1436-1505)
Daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Albrecht II, wife of King Casimir IV of Poland. Over 30 years of marriage, she gave birth to 13 children: 6 sons and 7 daughters. Four of her sons became kings, which is why she is also called the "mother of kings."

(artist unknown)

Elena Ivanovna of Moscow (1476-1513)
Daughter of the Grand Duke of Moscow Ivan III, wife of the King of Poland Alexander Jagiellon. I wrote about her

Alexander King of Poland and Queen Helena (unknown Polish artist)

Barbara Zapolya (1495—1515)
The daughter of the Hungarian prince Stefan Zapolya, the first wife of the king of Poland Sigismund I. She gave birth to two daughters - Anna and Jadwiga.

(artist unknown)

Bona Sforza (1494-1557)
Second wife of King Sigismund I, daughter of the Duke of Milan Gian Galeazzo Sforza and Isabella of Aragon. She gave birth to six children (the last boy was stillborn). Bona was famous for her beauty and had great energy. Even during the life of her elderly spouse, she actually ruled the country, but her pride and alien style of governance repelled the then Polish nobility from her.

Engraving depicting Bona, 1517

Elizabeth of Austria (1526—1545)
Daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I and his wife, Anne of Bohemia. The first wife of King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland. Married at age 16. She developed a hostile relationship with her mother-in-law, Bona Sforza, and later her husband began to avoid her proximity - presumably because Elizabeth suffered from epilepsy. She died without leaving children at the age of 19.

(artist unknown)

Barbara Radziwill (1520-1551)
She was born into the family of the most powerful Lithuanian magnates, the Radziwills: her father was Yuri Radziwill, her brother was Nikolai the Red Radziwill, and her cousin was Nikolai the Black Radziwill). In 1547, she secretly married Sigismund II Augustus. In 1548 he officially announced this marriage. Barbara was declared the Polish queen, which was fiercely resisted by the king's mother Bona Sforza and the Polish nobles, who feared the dominance of the Radziwills - supporters of the complete independence of Lithuania from Poland. Only on May 7, 1550, Barbara was crowned in Krakow, but she soon fell ill and died on May 8, 1551. Hypotheses have been put forward that she was poisoned by her mother-in-law Bona Sforza. The husband was in grief, he loved her very much.

Joseph Zimler. Death of Barbara Radziwill (1860)

Catherine of Habsburg (1533—1572)
Third wife of Sigismund II Augustus, sister of his first wife. The king married at the behest of Bona Sforza's mother, but he soon separated from his wife and tried to initiate a divorce. Have no children.


Jan Matejko. “The Death of Sysigmund II in Knyszyn” (Catherine on the left in a green dress)

Anna Jagiellonka (1523-1596)
Daughter of Sigismund I the Old, Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania since 1575. In 1574, when Henry of Valois became king of Poland, one of the conditions was that he would marry Anna. Henry did not fulfill his promise (Anna was 51 years old, he was 23 years old and had no desire) and fled to France as soon as his brother, the French king, died. Anna was declared Queen of Poland and married to Stefan Batory (he was 10 years younger than Anna). Stefan led the country.

(artist Martin Kober)

Anna of Habsburg (1573-1598)
Daughter of Archduke Charles Ferdinand of Styria. In 1592 she married the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa. At first, the Polish gentry did not want to agree to this marriage and even convened an inquisitorial diet, at which it decided to depose the king from the Polish throne, but, having recognized her heart and high quality wow, everyone loved her. Anna was the mother of King Vladislav IV of Poland. She gave birth to five children in six years of marriage. She died in childbirth on her fifth birthday.

(artist unknown)

Constance of Habsburg (1588-1631)
Anna's sister, second wife of Sigismund III. She gave birth to seven children.

(artist - Joseph Heintz the Elder)

Maria Luisa Gonzaga (1611-1667)
Frenchwoman. Queen of Poland (under the name Louis Marie), wife of the last kings of the Vasa dynasty - Wladyslaw IV and John II Casimir. Daughter of the French Duke Charles de Nevers from the House of Gonzaga and Catherine de Mayenne (niece of the famous Duke of Guise). Cardinal Richelieu did not give her permission to marry for a long time for political reasons. Therefore, she married for the first time only in 1645 to Vladislav IV, and after his death in 1648 to his brother John II Casimir. She had great influence on the kings' husbands. But she had no children.

In a portrait by Van Egmont (1645)

Eleanor Maria of Austria (1653-1697)
Daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III and his third wife Eleanora Gonzaga. Archduchess of Austria, married to Michael Koribut of Wisniewiecki, Queen Consort of Poland. The king died three years later, their only son died at birth on November 29, 1670. She married a second time to Charles V, Duke of Lorraine, becoming Duchess of Lorraine.

(artist unknown)

Marysenka - Marie Casimira Louise de Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716)
A Frenchwoman from the Nevers nobility. From the age of 5 - in Poland, in the retinue of Queen Marie Louise of Nevers. At the age of 17, she married the last descendant of the “great hetman,” Jan Zamoyski, and after his death 6 years later, she married the brilliant Jan Sobieski, who had courted her before. She used her extensive connections at the Polish court to get the crown for her husband. And she achieved her goal: her husband became King John III Sobieski of Poland. From her marriage to Sobieski, Marysenka had 14 children (including the mother of Emperor Charles VII).

Maria Kazimira surrounded by children (artist - Jerzy Siemiginowski-Eleuter)

Christiane Ebergardina of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1671-1727)
Wife of August the Strong, Elector of Saxony, titular queen of Poland since 1697. Christiana remained true to her Protestant religion when her husband converted to Catholicism in order to gain the crown of Poland. Christiana was the godmother of “Arap Peter the Great” Abram Petrovich, who later received the surname Hannibal. Christiane lived alternately in palaces in Pretsch and Torgau and rarely appeared at the Dresden court. Christiane Ebergardina died alone at the age of 55 and was buried on 6 September in the Bayreuth city church. Neither her husband nor her only son attended the funeral.

(artist unknown)

Ekaterina Opalinskaya (1680-1747)
Wife of King Stanislaw Leszczynski of Poland. She gave birth to two daughters - Anna and Maria. Mary later became Queen of France, wife of Louis XV.

(artist - Jean-Baptiste van Loo)

Maria Josepha of Austria (1699-1757)
The eldest of the two daughters of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I and Wilhelmina Amalia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. On August 20, 1719, she married Augustus of Saxony, who later became Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. Over the course of 20 years, she gave birth to 14 children, of whom 11 survived.


Maria Josepha of Austria (artist - Rosalba Carriera)- the last queen of Poland, because King Stanisław II August Poniatowski was not married, but the Civil War caused intervention by neighboring powers and led to the first partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772 between them.



Read also: