The Kingdom of Poland is developing as …

Years: 1468 - 1479

The Kingdom of Poland is developing as a feudal state, with a predominantly agricultural economy and an increasingly dominant landed nobility.

Kraków, the royal capital, is turning into a major academic and cultural center, and in 1473 the first printing press begins operating here.

During the rule of Casimir the cultural progress is striking, with the reconstituted and enlarged University of Kraków playing a major role.

Humanist trends find a promoter at Kraków in the Italian scholar Filippo de Buonacorsi, known as Callimachus.

From the pen of Jan Długosz comes the first major, royal history of Poland.

Under favorable social and economic conditions, the crafts and industries in existence already in the preceding centuries become more highly developed, and their products are much more widespread.

Paper production is one of the new industries, and printing develops during the last quarter of the century.

In 1473, Kasper Straube produces in Kraków the first Latin print, in 1475 in Wrocław (Breslau) Kasper Elyan prints for the first time in Polish.

The intervention of the Roman Curia, which hitherto had been hostile to Casimir because of his steady and patriotic resistance to papal aggression, is due to the permutations of European politics.

The pope is anxious to get rid of the Hussite King of Bohemia, George Podebrad, as the first step towards the formation of a league against the Turk.

Casimir is a leading factor in this combination, and he takes advantage of it to procure the election of his son Vladislaus II as King of Bohemia.

He will not commit himself too far, however, and his ulterior plans are frustrated by the rivalry of Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary, who even goes so far as to stimulate the Teutonic Order to rise against Casimir.

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