The territory of the Kingdom of Poland …
Years: 1772 - 1772
The territory of the Kingdom of Poland includes all of present Lithuania and Belarus and half of contemporary Ukraine.
Catholics of Polish ethnic background represent most of the inhabitants of he western and central regions of the Kingdom.
Roman Catholic Poles and Lithuanians live in its northwestern section, which is today Lithuania.
Eastern Catholics of Ruthenian (which is now Belarussian and Ukrainian) background and a small but important Catholic Polish minority inhabit the eastern regions.
Jews (about ten percent of the whole population) who live mostly in shtetls, i.e., small towns, also inhabit all parts of the Polish Kingdom.
Other ethnic groups, such as Germans, Armenians, Tartars, Scots, Dutchmen, etc., are represented.
Russia in the Seven Years War had been first on Austria’s side, then on Prussia’s, but the main loser in this contest is Poland, which Russia, Prussia and Austria partition in 1772: it is to be the first of three such partitions.
Russia is to annex most of Poland’s eastern regions, Austria is to take the Polish Southwest, and Prussia is to take the Northwest.
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth loses about thirty percent of its territory by this partition, together with a population of four million people (one-third of its population).
Prussia, by seizing northwestern Poland, instantly gains control over eighty percent of the Commonwealth's total foreign trade and, through the levy of enormous custom duties, accelerates the Commonwealth's inevitable collapse.
Locations
People
- Catherine the Great
- Frederick the Great
- Maria Theresa
- Stanisław August Poniatowski
- Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg
Groups
- Armenian people
- Jews
- Germans
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Christians, Eastern Catholic (Uniate)
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Commonwealth of the Two Nations)
- Prussia, Royal (Polish province)
- Prussia, Kingdom of
- Russian Empire
- Bar Confederation
