Duchy of Warsaw
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Location | |||
Official languages | Polish | ||
Established church | Roman Catholic | ||
Capital | Warsaw | ||
Largest City | Warsaw | ||
Head of state | Duke of Warsaw | ||
Area | about 158,000 km˛ | ||
Population | about 3 million | ||
Existed | 1807 - 1814 |
The Duchy of Warsaw (Polish: Księstwo Warszawskie, Latin: Ducatus Varsoviae, French: Duche de Varsovie) was a Polish state established by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1807 from the Polish lands he seized from the Kingdom of Prussia in Treaties of Tilsit. The duchy was in personal union with Saxony under Frederick Augustus I as Duke of Warsaw (1807-1813).
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Name and political status: Duchy (not Grand)
In some contemporary (especially American) sources, this state is erroneously called the Grand Duchy of Warsaw. The title and status of a Grand Duke and Grand Duchy is slightly higher than that of a Duke and Duchy, so if Frederick Augustus had received these titles he would have been the first to tell everybody. Frederick Augustus always called himself the King of Saxony, Duke of Warsaw (Latin: Rex Saxoniae, Dux Varsoviae). During Napoleon's Russian campaign in 1812 the Polish Parliament passed an act restoring the Kingdom, renaming the Duchy of Warsaw the Kingdom of Poland in union with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, but with the campaign's failure, the status of the Duchy of Warsaw was restored.
Area of the Duchy (1806-1809)
Template:Polish statehood The area of the Duchy had already been liberated by a popular uprising in 1806, provoked by proclamation of conscription to the Polish army. The first tasks for the new government included providing food to the French army which was fighting the Russians in East Prussia. According to the Treaties of Tilsit, the area of the Duchy was formed from the Prussian provinces:
- New East Prussia (except Bialystok district which was given to Russia)
- Southern Prussia (Second partition of Poland)
- New Silesia (Second partition of Poland)
- parts of West Prussia (mainly Netze district and Chelmno Land)
- Gdansk was made a free city with French and Polish garrisons there.
Area of the Duchy (1809-1815)
After the ensuing war with Austria in 1809 and the Battle of Raszyn, the Duchy was extended with land from the following provinces:
- West Galicia
- Krakow
- parts of Galicia (district Zamosc)
The area of the Duchy was 158,000 km˛ with a population of over 3 million.
Territorial administration
- Bydgoszcz Department (Departament Bydgoski)
- Kalisz Department (Departament Kaliski)
- Kraków Department (Departament Krakowski)
- Lublin Department (Departament Lubelski)
- Lomza Department (Departament Łomżyński)
- Plock Department (Departament Płocki)
- Poznan Department (Departament Poznański)
- Radom Department (Departament Radomski)
- Siedlce Department (Departament Siedlecki)
- Warsaw Department (Departament Warszawski)
Constitution
The Duchy was endowed with a formal constitution by Napoleon (see Constitution of Duchy of Warsaw).
History
Unlike the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Duchy was highly militarized and overtaxed. In 1812, the state of 3 million people contributed almost 200,000 army recruits for service against Russia.
Poles expected in 1812 that the duchy would be upgraded to the status of a kingdom, and that during Napoleon's march on Russia, it would be joined with the liberated territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. However, Napoleon didn't want to make a permanent decision that would tie his hands before the anticipated peace settlement with Russia. The Grand Duchy was not an independent state. Its ruler was a member of the Confederation of the Rhine and it did not possess its own diplomatic representation. The Armed Forces were completely under French control via its war minister Józef Poniatowski, who was also a French marshal, and had to participate in Napoleon's campaigns.
The Duchy divided (4th partition of Poland)
After the fall of Napoleon, according to the Congress of Vienna (1815), the territory of the Duchy was divided into three parts:
- Kingdom of Poland in personal union with Russia - 128,000 km˛,
- Grand Duchy of Poznan annexed by Prussia - 29,000 km˛
- Free City of Kraków (under protection of the three powers, but in 1846 annexed by Austria) - roughly 1000 km˛ with 88,000 people.
See also
- Poznań (city)
- History of Poznań (city)
de:Großherzogtum Warschau