A Brief History of Poland, part 6: the fall of the Commonwealth
Listen now
Description
In the sixth part of our Brief History of Poland series, Notes from Poland editor-at-large Stanley Bill looks at the eighteenth-century decline and fall of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, covering the period between 1697 and 1795. He examines the Saxon kings, the descent into political disorder, the Enlightenment and reform, Hasidic Judaism, the Constitution of the Third of May, and the three partitions that wiped the Commonwealth from the map of Europe. The Brief History of Poland series covers over a thousand years of Polish political and cultural history, from 966 until today.  Check out the previous episode in our Brief History of Poland series. Producer: Sebastian Leśniewski Support the show (https://notesfrompoland.com/donations/support-us/)
More Episodes
Published 11/25/22
This week, in a reversal of roles, Notes from Poland editor-at-large Stanley Bill is in the podcast hot seat, speaking about the life and politics of Lech and Jarosław Kaczyński in an interview with Tom Leeman, a researcher based in London. This conversation was recorded jointly with Leeman’s...
Published 11/25/22
This week, Notes from Poland editor-at-large Stanley Bill talks about the Polish government's war reparations claims of approximately $1.3 trillion against Germany with Arkadiusz Mularczyk, an MP from ruling party PiS and chair of the Parliamentary Group for the Estimation of the Amount of...
Published 10/10/22