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The Partitions of Poland (more correctly the partitions of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) happened in the 18th century and ended the existence of a Polish sovereign state. They involved Prussia, Russia and Austria dividing up the Polish lands between themselves. The three partitions occurred:
- February 17, 1772
- January 21, 1793
- October 1795.
The term "Fourth Partition" may refer to one of a number of subsequent divisions of the Polish lands, specifically:
- After the end of the Napoleonic Era, the division of Duchy of Warsaw
- The incorporation of the so-called Congress Kingdom into Russia in 1832 and the subsequent incorporation of the Republic of Kraków into Austria (1846)
- The division of Poland between Germany and the Soviet Union following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in 1939.
Prelude
In traditional history one can find the claim that the regional powers partitioned Poland-Lithuania because of the degeneration of the state and because of the inability of the Poles to rule themselves. Apart from the unkind implications of that view, one can discount this suggestion, since the darkest period of Polish history and the nadir in the degeneration of the state occurred in the first half of the 18th century, whereas the partitions happened when Poland had started (slowly) to recover - in fact one can see the last two partitions as a direct answer to reforms in Poland-Lithuania.
In other words, the partitions did not happen because Poland was a degenerate, weak and backward country; rather, Poland suffered partitioning because it was weak, backward, and tried to reform itself.
One could characterise Poland-Lithuania before the partitions as already not a completely sovereign state: in modern terms it comprised a Russian satellite state, with Russian Tsars effectively choosing the Polish kings.
The neighbours of Poland, Prussia, Austria and Russia, signed a secret agreement in order to maintain the status quo: specifically, to ensure that Polish laws would not change. Their alliance later became known as the "Alliance of the Three Black Eagles", because all three states used a black eagle as a state symbol (in contrast to the white eagle, a symbol of Poland).
The Poles tried to expel foreign forces in an uprising (Bar confederation, 1768 - 1772), but the irregular and poorly commanded forces had no chance in face of the regular Russian army and suffered crushing defeat.
First Partition
Why it happened, reforms in Sejm
Second Partition
Constitution of third may, war of constitution,, targowica
Third Partition
Kosciuszko uprising
Russian part included 120,000km2 and 1.2 mln people with Wilno, Prussian part 55,000 km2 and 1 mln people with Warsaw, Austrian 47,000km2 and 1.2 mln.
Consequences
trauma for Poles, neverending source of troubles for Europe (alliance with Napoleon, uprisings: 1830-1,1846,1848,1863,1905...)
See also: History of Poland.