Greater Poland uprising (1918–1919) explained

Conflict:Greater Poland Uprising
Partof:the aftermath of World War I and Revolutions of 1917–1923
Date:27 December 1918 – 28 June 1919
Place:Greater Poland region
Result:Polish victory
Territory:Per Treaty of Versailles: most of Prussian provinces of Posen and West Prussia, eastern Upper Silesia and the area of Działdowo
Combatant1: Polish Insurgents----Supported by:
Commander1:Stanisław Taczak
Józef Dowbor-Muśnicki
Commander2:Friedrich Polach
Strength1:Before the uprising: 10,000
Beginning of January 1919: 27,000
End of the uprising: 100,000
Strength2:Beginning of the uprising: 2,500–4,500
End of the uprising: 20,000–30,000
Casualties1:~2,000 killed
6,000 wounded
Casualties2:1,500–3,500 killed
2,500–5,000 wounded
Units1:People's Guard
P.M.O
Units2: Freikorps

The Greater Poland uprising of 1918–1919, or Wielkopolska uprising of 1918–1919 (pl|powstanie wielkopolskie 1918–1919 roku; de|Großpolnischer Aufstand) or Poznań War was a military insurrection of Poles in the Greater Poland region (German: Grand Duchy of Posen or Provinz Posen) against German rule. The uprising had a significant effect on the Treaty of Versailles, which granted a reconstituted Second Polish Republic the area won by the Polish insurrectionists. The region had been part of the Kingdom of Poland and then Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth before the 1793 Second Partition of Poland when it was annexed by the German Kingdom of Prussia. It had also, following the 1806 Greater Poland uprising, been part of the Duchy of Warsaw (1807–1815), a French client state during the Napoleonic Wars.

Background

After the Third Partition of Poland in 1795, Poland had ceased to exist as an independent state. From 1795 through the beginning of World War I, several unsuccessful uprisings to regain independence took place. The Great Poland Uprising of 1806 was followed by the creation of the Duchy of Warsaw, which lasted for eight years before it was partitioned again between Prussia and Russia. Under German rule, Poles faced systematic discrimination and oppression.[1] [2] [3] The Poles living in the region of Greater Poland were subjected to Germanisation and land confiscations to make way for German colonization.

At the end of World War I, US President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points and the idea of national self-determination were met with opposition from European powers standing to lose influence or territory, such as Germany, which dominated Greater Poland. German politicians had signed an armistice leading to a ceasefire on 11 November 1918. Also, Germany had signed the with Bolshevik Russia to settle the territorial boundaries of the eastern frontiers. That treaty took into consideration of a future Polish state and so from then until the Treaty of Versailles was fully ratified in January 1920 many territorial and sovereignty issues remained unresolved.

Wilson's proposal for an independent Poland initially did not set borders that could be universally accepted. Most of Poland that was partitioned and annexed to Prussia in the late 18th-century was still part of Greater Germany at the close of World War I, the rest of the Kingdom of Poland being in Austria-Hungary. The portion in Germany included the region of Greater Poland, of which Poznań (Posen) was a major industrial city and its capital. The majority of the population was Polish (more than 60%)[4] and hoped to be within the borders of the new Polish state.

Military contact between Poznan and Warsaw

Throughout the month of November, the Polish army sought to recruit Poles from the region into it's military.[5] At the same time, they also held talks with Poznan to organize proper relations between Poznan and Warsaw and to prepare for an armed uprising. Jozef Pilsudski and his government did not intend to enter armed conflict with Germany, this being a major point of disagreement between the two groups, and did not believe any attempts at armed rebellion would work, convinced that only the Entente could grant Poland this region. However, he included it in his plans to rebuild the country and treated it as a part of Poland, it being historically Polish. On 28 October 1918, Major Włodzimierz Zagórski, as Deputy Head of the General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces, established a dedicated command in Kalisz wherein a department of affairs related to Greater Poland was set up. A military regiment was set up in Ostrow, the city being held by the Ostrow People's Council, however it was soonafter dissolved and it's members were sent to Kalisz. To the dismay of the Poles, the Ostrow People's Council addressed a letter to the Supreme Command in Kalisz, renouncing military cooperation, claiming that it only recognises the Commissariat of the Supreme People’s Council on the 17th of November. Nevertheless, the Poznan Central Citizens' Committee delegated Celestyn Rydlewski to visit the Polish General Staff. He suggested conscripting Polish citizens of the Prussian Partition into the Polish Armed Forces. 800 or so were sent into Poland as a result.

Uprising

In late 1918, Poles hoping for a sovereign Poland started serious preparations for an uprising after abdication on 9 November 1918, which marked the end of the German Empire. The monarchy was replaced by the Weimar Republic.

The uprising broke out on 27 December 1918 in Poznań, after a patriotic speech by Ignacy Paderewski, the famous pianist, who would become the Polish prime minister in 1919, with 2,000 men serving in the Guard and Security Service rising up in the city.[6]

The insurrectionist forces consisted of members of the Polish Military Organization, who formed the Polish: Straż Obywatelska (Citizen's Guard), later renamed as Polish: Straż Ludowa (People's Guard), which included many volunteers, who were mainly veterans of World War I. The first contingent to reach the Bazar Hotel, from where the uprising was initiated, was a 100-strong force from Polish: wildecka kompania Straży Ludowej (Wilda's People's Guard) led by Antoni Wysocki. The ruling body was the Polish: Naczelna Rada Ludowa (Supreme People's Council). Initially, the members of the council, including Captain Stanisław Taczak and General Józef Dowbor-Muśnicki were against the uprising, but they changed their minds in support of the insurrection on 9 January 1919.

The timing was advantageous for the insurrectionists since between late 1918 and early 1919, internal conflict had weakened Germany, and many of its soldiers and sailors engaged in mutinous actions against the state. Demoralized by the signing of the armistice on 11 November 1918, the new German government was further embroiled in subduing the German Revolution.

thumb|upright|German armored train during Grenzschutz in the station of Lissa in 1919.By 15 January 1919, Poles had taken control of most of the province, and they engaged in heavy fighting with the regular German army and irregular units such as the Grenzschutz. Fighting continued until the renewal of the truce between the Entente and Germany on 16 February. The truce also affected the front line in Greater Poland, but despite the ceasefire, skirmishes continued until the final signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919.

The uprising is one of the two most successful Polish uprisings, the other being the Great Poland uprising of 1806, which ended with the entry of Napoleon's army on the side of the Poles fighting against Prussia.

Many of the Greater Poland insurrectionists later took part in the Silesian Uprisings against German rule, which started in late 1919 and ended in 1921.

Appraisal

The uprising had a significant effect on the decisions in Versailles that granted Poland not only the area won by the insurrectionists but also major cities with a significant German population like Bydgoszcz (Bromberg), Leszno (Lissa) and Rawicz (Rawitsch), as well as the lands of the Polish Corridor, which were also part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth before the First Partition of Poland in 1772 and connected Poland to the Baltic Sea.

Germany's territorial losses following the Treaty of Versailles incited German revanchism,[7] and created unresolved problems such as the status of the independent Free City of Danzig and of the Polish Corridor between East Prussia and the rest of Germany. This revanchism was not a popular political idea in the Weimar Republic. Attending to these issues was part of Adolf Hitler's political platform, but failed to gain any traction in the 1920s. The idea was relegated to the political margins, until the Nazis seized power.

Nevertheless, Nazi Germany effectively recognised Poland's new borders in the German–Polish declaration of non-aggression of 1934, which normalised relations between the two countries. However, after the death of Polish leader Józef Piłsudski (who was admired by Hitler), the German Anschluss with Austria and the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, Hitler unilaterally withdrew from the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact and invaded Poland in 1939, which led to the outbreak of World War II.

Timeline

Earlier events

Eruption of the fighting

Between ceasefire and reunification

The demarcation line was defined as follows:

Aftermath

Remembrance

The Greater Poland uprising was not remembered as well as the January Uprising or the Warsaw Uprising in Polish history and popular culture, despite it being the only one of the three uprisings cited that succeeded.[8] This was due to three factors, the first due to it being an uprising that didn't apply to Polish tradition. There were no major icons of the uprising, no heroes, no real martyrs. The uprising couldn't be passed down by generations as a heroic fight to the death, no, it was simply a military operation that pushed the Germans out of a section of the Prussian Partition. Secondly, the fighters of the uprising were not engaged for the whole uprising and many of them did not find themselves part of any actual fighting group. Many part of the original uprisings simply took up arms, liberated their towns and by sundown they had eaten dinner and went back to civilian life. Thirdly, there were very few casualties. Though this shows the brilliance of the operation, few perished or were wounded at the hands of the Germans.

Epilogue

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Racisms Made in Germany, edited by Wulf D. Hund, Wulf Dietmar Hund, Christian Koller, Moshe Zimmermann LIT Verlag Münster 2011 pp. 20, 21
  2. The Ideology of Kokugo: Nationalizing Language in Modern Japan, Lee Yeounsuk p. 161 University of Hawaii Press 2009
  3. The Immigrant Threat: The Integration of Old and New Migrants in Western Europe since 1850 (Studies of World Migrations) Leo Lucassen, p. 61, University of Illinois Press, 2005
  4. "Historia 1871–1939" Anna Radziwiłł, Wojciech Roszkowski Warsaw 1998
  5. Web site: Karwat . Janusz . 18 December 2019 . Military contact between Poznań and Warsaw before the outbreak of the Greater Poland Uprising. . live . greaterpolanduprising.eu.
  6. Web site: Karwat . Janusz . 18 December 2009 . The Greater Poland Victory . live . greaterpolanduprising.eu.
  7. Book: The Treaty of Versailles: A Reassessment After 75 Years. Publications of the German Historical Institute. Manfred F.. Boemeke. Gerald D.. Feldman. Elisabeth. Gläser. Cambridge University Press. 1998. 0521621321. 220.
  8. Web site: An unforgettable spurt. The Greater Poland Uprising 1918–1919 . live . ipn.gov.pl.
  9. Web site: 27 December 2020 . On this Day, in 1918: the Greater Poland Uprising broke out against German rule . live.