Abstract
This article examines the attitude of the Polish elite towards the Napoleonic legislation at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Based on the primary sources – such as letters, reports, and memoirs – it seeks to prove that this attitude was not as hostile as is commonly believed. From a broader perspective, the article challenges the assumption that the integration of the Napoleonic periphery into the Empire was limited and that the Napoleonic legal project was doomed to failure.
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