Prof. Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Teutonic Lies About
History of „Kaliningrad”
Balto-Slavic past of Kaliningrad
should be included in the rich history of this strategically important region
of Europe. Thus the early interest in
establishing an international rule of law in Poland was caused by a forgery
committed by the German Armed Brethren, who obtained a temporary fief of Chełmno from Konrad I of Mazovia (1187–1247) in 1228 in the Act of Kruszwica. The temporary fief of Chełmno
was obtained by the Teutonic Knights for the time needed to convert the
Balto-Slavic Prussians to Christianity.
The forgery by the Teutonic Knights consisted of changing
the text of the Act of Kruszwica into a permanent
grant of the fief of Chełmno. This forgery caused the
successive kings of Poland
to look for an international legal procedure to amend the forgery and avoid an
armed conflict over Prussia
in which the Teutonic Knights committed genocide of the Balto-Slavic Prussians
and violated the Christian principle that the license to convert is not a
license to kill.
Eventually, the military triumphs of the union of Poland and Lithuania over the Teutonic Knight
were soon paralleled by successes in diplomacy. After their defeat by the
Polish king, the armed monks of the Teutonic Order accused Poland of
killing German missionaries and allying itself with pagans. These accusations
were to be investigated at the Council of Constance, (1414–1418), one of the
great diplomatic conferences of the Middle Ages.
Paweł Włodkowicz, (Paulus Vladimiri) of Brudzewo, Polish
ambassador at the Council of Constance, served also as President of the University of Kraków. He was
a Professor of Law. In 1415 at the Council, Włodkowic
proposed the first seventeen basic theses of international law founded on
justice and toleration. His proposal was based on the natural law and the premise
that the license to convert is not a license to kill or expropriate and that
only voluntary conversion is valid. He defined the principle of national
self-determination, the international society, its functions, organs, and laws.
He began to formulate these laws for use by an international tribunal, which he
proposed. He justified only purely defensive wars. Włodkowicz
advocated international mediation and arbitration and an international tribunal
for the peaceful solution of conflicts among nations. He argued that the
Teutonic Order of armed monks lost its missionary character by committing mass
murders and pillage. Therefore, in reality, the German Order constituted a
“Prussian heresy.” On the other hand the Christianization of Lithuania by Poland
represented the greatest medieval missionary deed.
The Council of Constance accepted the arguments of the
Polish Ambassador. The Establishing of due process under the law followed in Poland some 250 years earlier than in England. The
due legal process guaranteed the inviolability of citizen's person (who was not
caught in the act of committing a crime). It was formulated in Poland for the first time in Europe,
in the acts of 1422-1433. This due process was the basis of the legal system in
Poland when absolutism
reigned in the rest of Europe.
German aggression on the Baltic coast caused the formation
of two unions of states. In the south, Poland
and Lithuania
united at Krewo in 1385. In the north all of
Scandinavia united twelve years later at Kalmar in 1397.
In the Union Act of Krewo, Jogaiła or Jagiełło, the Grand
Duke of Lithuania, committed himself to convert Lithuania to Latin Christianity
and to unite with Poland all Lithuanian and Ruthenian
lands as well as to recover Polish territories lost to the Germans, in exchange
for marriage to Polish Queen Jadwiga of Anjou and his
coronation as a Catholic King of Poland. Before his coronation in 1386,
Władys³aw Jagiełło, Ladislas
Jogaiła (1350–1434), confirmed the Act of Koszyce (1374). During the reign of King Władysław Jagiełło (1386–1434),
Polish missionaries converted Lithuania
to Roman Catholicism. In 1387 the Act of Wilno
followed. In it the King Władysław Jagiełło bestowed hereditary ownership of land and freedom
from taxation by the local princes of the newly converted Catholic Lithuanian
nobles, the boyars. Moldavia
became a fief of Poland.
In 1388 in
the Act of Piotrków, King Władysław
Jagiełło increased the civil rights of nobility and
clergy, further limiting the royal power in Poland.
The tyrannical rule of the German monastic orders resulted
in the founding of the “Salamander Society” or “Reptile Association” in 1397.
It was a forerunner of the Prussian Union, which was organized for the
overthrow of the rule of the Teutonic Order and for the unification in freedom
of Prussia with Poland.
In 1401
in the Union Act of Wilno and Radom
the Lithuanian knighthood received the same civil rights as were enjoyed by
Polish knights. Poland
guaranteed the safety of Lithuania
against the aggression by the Armed Brethren of the TeutonicOrder
in 1409.Victory and a new union act of Poland
and Lithuania
in 1410 in
the largest medieval battle of Tannenberg-Grunwald
The Great War against the Teutonic Order by Poland and Lithuania lasted two years
(1409–1411). On June 30, 1410 the decisive victory in the battle of Tannenberg-Grunwald was won by the Polish and Lithuanian
forces assisted by Czech Hussites and auxiliaries
from Smoleñsk. The chief of the Teutonic Order
Eric von Jungingen was killed on the battlefield.
Second victory on October 10, 1410 at Koronowo led to
peace negotiations. The terms of the Peace Treaty of Toruñ
included the return of the province of
Dobrzyñ
to Poland and of the
province of Żmudź to Lithuania
and payment to Poland
of money in the amount of 6,000,000 groszes by the
Teutonic Order. The victory transformed the Polish-Lithuanian union into a
great power and put an end to the expansionist plans of the Teutonic Order and
the Luxemburgers; it put an end to German aggression
in the Baltic area.
In the Union Act of Horodło (1413)
was concluded by the King Władysław Jagiełło, following the victory over German Monastic
State of the Teutonic
Knights in 1410. It was a personal union of Poland
and Lithuania,
which were to remain two separate states. The King established the territorial
office of wojewoda (vo-ye-vo-da)
or provincial governor, and initiated a new administrative and defensive
organizational model, which was followed in central and eastern Europe. (The ancient term wojewoda,
meaning one who leads warriors, is still in use as an administrative title.)
Polish families extended the use and privileges of their coats of arms to the
Lithuanian and Ruthenian clans.
The frontiers of Western civilization were shifted
considerably to the northeast and Polish social and political institutions
penetrated Lithuania, Belarus, and Kievian Ruthenia. New towns were
founded and were granted a wide measure of self-government. Considerable
prosperity was achieved by Polish towns in the 14th and 15th centuries. Those
that were members in the Hanseatic
League shared in the profitable Baltic and Levantine trade.
European balance of power changed as a result of the union
of Poland and Lithuania which became the largest territory in Europe.
29 sierpnia 2010 r. prof. Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Blacksburg, US www.pogonowski.com