Proclamation of Połaniec
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Proclamation of Połaniec (also known as Połaniec Manifesto, Polish: Uniwersał Połaniecki) issued on 7 May 1794 by Tadeusz Kościuszko near the town of Połaniec, was one of the most notable events of the Kościuszko Uprising in Poland, and is the most famous legal acts in of the Uprising. This act partially abolished the serfdom in Poland[1], granting significant civil liberties to all peasants. The reasons behind the Połaniec proclamation were twofold: first, Kosciuszko, a liberal and a reformist, believed that the serfdom was an unfair system and should end; second, the uprising was in desperate need for recruits and freeing the peasants would prompt many of them to fight.
The proclamation provided the peasants with the personal freedom[2] right for assistance from the state against the abuses of the Polish nobility (szlachta) and gave them specific property rights[3] to the land they cultivated. Although this new law never fully came into being and was boycotted by much of the szlachta, it also attracted many peasants to the ranks of the revolutionists, resulting in the formation of the famous kosynierzy peasant infantry [4], the most famous of whom, Bartosz Głowacki, became one of the heroes of the Uprising. It was the first time in Polish history when the peasants were officially regarded as part of the nation, the word being previously equal to szlachta.
This was the second legal act issued by the reformed Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (the first being the Constitution of May 3, considered the second oldest constitution in the world [5]), and was the expansion of the 4th act of that constitution. It was also the last legal act of the Commonwealth, and just like the constitution that made it possible, it had a short lifespan and negligible impact on most of Commonwealth citizens. In many places were revolutionary forces could not enforce it, the local szlachta simply ignored the proclamation [6]. However the news of the proclamation spread among the peasantry and was kept alive by the revolutionary and patriotic minded Poles. Over the next several decades, after the partitions of Poland ended the existence of Poland as a separate state, it became one of the symbols of Polish history.
The proclamation specifically granted to peasants:
- limited personal freedom
- reduction of serfdom during the current crisit and promise of further reduction after the end of hostilities
- freeing from serdom of all peasants conscripted to the military
- the right not to be removed from their land
- limited right to appeal to the state's courts
- introduction of the dozorca office, the first government official representing the peasant will to the government. Dozorca represented about 1000 families, and he was supposed to enforce the proclamation
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[edit] See also
- Declaration of the Rights of Man, a similar act [7]
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding Polish Wikipedia article as of 29 March 2006.
[edit] Further reading
- James S. Pula, Thaddeus Kosciuszko: The Purest Son of Liberty, Hippocrene Books, 1998, ISBN 0781805767 - contains the translation of the proclamation
[edit] Quote
Announce to the people that, according to law, they are under the protection of the nation's government; that the person subject to any lord, is liberated.