Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: Difference between revisions

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File:Katarzyna Opalińska.jpg|[[w:Catherine Opalińska|Katarzyna Opalińska]]
File:Katarzyna Opalińska.jpg|[[w:Catherine Opalińska|Katarzyna Opalińska]]
File:Marie Leszczyńska, reine de France, lisant la Bible by Jean-Marc Nattier, 002.jpg|[[w:Marie Leszczyńska|Maria Leszczyńska]]
File:Marie Leszczyńska, reine de France, lisant la Bible by Jean-Marc Nattier, 002.jpg|[[w:Marie Leszczyńska|Maria Leszczyńska]]
File:Maria Karolina Sobieska.JPG|[[w:Maria Karolina Sobieska|Maria Karolina Sobieska]]
File:Mops Ozelska.jpeg|[[w:Anna Karolina Orzelska|Anna Orzelska]]
File:Mops Ozelska.jpeg|[[w:Anna Karolina Orzelska|Anna Orzelska]]
File:Rajecka-dziewczyna.jpg|[[w:Rozalia Lubomirska|Rozalia Lubomirska]]
File:Rajecka-dziewczyna.jpg|[[w:Rozalia Lubomirska|Rozalia Lubomirska]]

Revision as of 14:05, 27 May 2012

The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (or Commonwealth of Both Nations) was a federal aristocratic republic formed by the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1569 with roots in the Polish-Lithuanian Union of 1387, lasting until 1795.

Maps

Partitions

Parliament

Marshals

Senate

Chamber of Deputies

Civitates Orbis Terrarum

People

Women

Army

Economy

Art and culture

Architecture

Fortifications

Tenements

Timber

Town Halls

Painting

Catholic

Eastern

Jewish

Protestant

Armenian

Muslim

Notes

  1. Construction was financially supported by king John III Sobieski - king's coat of arms (Janina) and the Polish eagle were placed inside of the building in gratitude for helping.
    Z wdzięczności Sobieskiemu za pomoc przy budowie synagogi starsi żydowscy kazali umieścić wewnątrz jego herb (Janina) i orła polskiego. Stefan Gąsiorowski (2001) Chrześcijanie i Żydzi w Żółkwi w XVII i XVIII wieku (Christians and Jews in Zhovkva in the 17th and 18th centuries), Polska Akademia Umiejętności, p. 119 ISBN: 83-88857-39-8.
  2. The synagogue was established by Stanisław Lubomirski.
    After a fire had destroyed a wooden synagogue in 1733 Stanislaw Lubomirski decided to found a new bricked synagogue building. Polin Travel. Lancut. www.jewish-guide.pl. Retrieved on 2010-09-02.
  3. Constructed for Stanisław Rupniewski, castellan of Małogoszcz, who converted to Islam.