Abstract

The Polish Republic of Nobles was characterized by the fact that the activities of public authorities were based on statute law. This is a feature that distinguishes this country from the vast majority of European states in the early modern period where the principle of the sovereign power of the absolute monarch was dominant. In Poland, the highest authority in the state was the Sejm, in which the monarch was only one of the three estates in the Sejm, along with the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. The General Sejm was formed in the second half of the 15 th century, expanding its powers over the next two centuries. At the beginning of the 16 th century, the view of the sovereignty of law in the state prevailed among the nobility, to which the monarch himself was also subordinated, according to the principle that in Polonia lex est rex . It can therefore be concluded that in Poland as early as in the 16 th century there was a practical division of powers according to the principle that two centuries later would be formulated by Baron de Montesquieu, and which would underlie the constitutional systems of the bourgeois state. The second half of the 18 th century brought a further change. It was during this period that the subordination of all activities of the state to the applicable law became even more clear. At that time, an essentially hierarchical structure of executive authorities was established with the king, the Guardians of the Law (Pol. Straż Praw ) acting as the government, government commissions constituting central departmental institutions, and commissions of order, which were responsible for the performance of local government. All these collegiate bodies were established by legislation with appropriate Sejm constitutions. Their activity and structure were thus clearly defined by the provisions of law. They could function only within the framework of Sejm statutes and on the basis thereof. In most European countries, it was only the postulates of political liberalism in the 19 th century that brought the possibility of extending legislative control over the government in the form of constitutional and parliamentary responsibility of ministers. In Poland, however, this principle was introduced by the Constitution of 3 May 1791.

Highlights

  • Until the end of the estate monarchy, the political system of Poland did not differ much in form from the systems functioning in other European countries

  • The year 1454 is generally accepted as the end of the state monarchy in Poland, when the nobility won for themselves the leading position in the state, C depriving the king of the exercise of supreme legislative power, the right to levy extraordinary taxes, or the convocation of an assembly without the consent of the local noble assemblies (Pol. sejmiki ziemskie)

  • Unlike in most European countries, it did not come to the development of absolutism in Poland, but rather a peculiar political form was born – the Republic of Nobles

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Until the end of the estate monarchy, the political system of Poland did not differ much in form from the systems functioning in other European countries. C Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania are one indivisible and uniform body, as well as a uniform but single united Commonwealth, which has been brought together from two states and nations into one people”.7 This wording could suggest much more than the Act of the Union of Lublin did in reality, for the particular provisions clearly guaranteed the legal and political autonomy of the Grand Duchy. The common legislation of the Sejm after 1569 gradually made the system of Lithuania and the Crown, which externally formed the Republic of the Two Nations, more similar It was based on constitutional principles established exclusively by General Sejm, realising the principle of the rule of law

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CONCLUSIONS
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