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Jozef Pilsudski

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Józef Klemens Pilsudski

(born Dec. 5, 1867, Zulów, Pol., Russian Empire — died May 12, 1935, Warsaw, Pol.) Polish revolutionary leader. Reared with a hatred for Russian oppression, he was politically active and was banished to Siberia for his socialist agitation (1887 – 92), and he became a leader of the Polish Socialist Party on his return. In 1908 he organized the secret Union of Military Action, which fought in World War I under Austro-Hungarian command against the Russians. In 1916 he demanded recognition of Poland's independence, which was granted in 1918. He served as Poland's first head of state until the constitution was established in 1922. After staging a coup in 1926, he served as premier (1926 – 28) and minister of defense (1926 – 35) under handpicked premiers, enabling him to rule as the dictator of Poland.

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Political Biography: Józef Klimens Piłsudski
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(b. Zublów near Vilna, 5 Dec. 1867; d. Warsaw, 12 Mar. 1935) Polish; Leader 1918 – 23, 1926 – 35 Piłsudski was born in Russian Poland into an impoverished noble family. He became a socialist when a student at Kharkov University. Exiled to Siberia in 1887 and released in 1892, he was a founder of the Polish Socialist Party in 1894 and editor of its newspaper, Robotnik ("The Worker") until its suppression in 1902. In 1904, during the Russo-Japanese War he went to Tokyo in an attempt to obtain Japanese support for a Polish uprising. After the Russian revolution of 1905 he was leader of the Polish Socialist Party's military wing, which mounted a terrorist campaign against the Tsarist administration. In the First World War he organized 10,000 volunteers into a Polish Legion which fought for Austria against the Russians. The Germans were suspicious of his national aims and refused to guarantee Polish independence after the war. They imprisoned him from July to November 1917.

From 1918 to 1921 Piłsudski was provisional head of the Polish Republic formed after the break-up of the Austrian, Russian, and German empires. Despite his socialist past he at no time intended to introduce social reforms. From 1918 to 1921 he was the army's Chief of Staff and led Poland to a decisive victory over the Bolsheviks in the Russo-Polish War of 1919 – 20. By the Treaty of Riga in 1921, Poland was granted large parts of Lithuania, Belorussia, and the Ukraine. In 1922 the Poles seized the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, and held it until 1939. In 1923 Piłsudski retired from politics, in part because of his disillusion at the level of corruption. He returned to power in the military coup of 1926 and established an authoritarian regime which still permitted a multi-party system and some freedom of the press. Because of ill-health Piłsudski was incapable of providing consistent leadership. He was Minister of War from 1926 to 1935 and Prime Minister from 1926 to 1928 and again in 1930. In 1930 he ordered the arrest and torture of eighty members of parliament who opposed him. In the 1930s his regime became increasingly anti-Semitic. After Hitler came to power in 1933 he appreciated the threat to Poland and unsuccessfully proposed to the French a pre-emptive strike against Germany. Convinced of the weakness of the Western Powers, he made non-aggression pacts with Germany and the Soviet Union.

Military History Companion: Marshal Jozef Pilsudski
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Pilsudski, Marshal Jozef (1867-1935), Polish general and politician, leader of the first independent Poland for 123 years after WW I. Pilsudski was one of the founders of the nationalist faction of the Polish Socialist Party in 1906. At that time Poland was part of the Russian empire, but Polish nationalists sided with Russia's adversaries, such that Pilsudski commanded the Polish legion which fought with the Austro-Hungarian army during WW I. Despite backing the losing side, Pres Wilson's insistence on self-determination as a principle of the Treaty of Versailles and Allied hostility to the Bolsheviks in Russia enabled Pilsudski to be proclaimed head of state of the newly independent Poland, with dictatorial powers. In 1920 he launched the Russo-Polish war and captured Kiev on 7 May. When the Soviet First Cavalry Army struck behind him, he was initially dismissive of a manoeuvre he described as ‘almost in the manner of nomadic peoples’, but soon found it necessary to fall back on Warsaw, where he rallied his forces and defeated Tukhachevskiy.

A militarist and extreme nationalist, he was again dictator in 1926-8 and from 1930 until his death. Although it was all too obvious what a resurgent Nazi Germany and Soviet Union meant for Poland, instead of seeking an alliance with similarly threatened Czechoslovakia, his foreign minister and eventual successor Józef Beck pursued irredentist claims.

— Christopher Bellamy/Hugh Bicheno

Biography: Joseph Pilsudski
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The Polish general and statesman Joseph Pilsudski (1867-1935) played a large role in the reestablishment of an independent Polish state and became its first president in 1918.

Joseph Pilsudski was born on Dec. 5, 1867, at Zulow in the Vilna district of Russian Poland, the second son of a family of the lower gentry. The harsh treatment of the Poles under Russian rule and the anti-Russian feeling pervading his environment inspired him with a hatred of Russia and a desire to liberate his country from foreign domination.

Suspended from medical school at Kharkov in 1886, Pilsudski returned to Vilna and was exiled for 5 years to Siberia in 1887 for allegedly conspiring to assassinate Czar Alexander III. Pilsudski returned home in 1892, joined the Polish Socialist party, and became its leader in 1894. He soon became editor of its clandestine newspaper, Robotnik (The Worker), but his press was discovered in Lódz, and he and his wife were arrested in 1900. Pilsudski escaped, however, in May 1901, and he settled in Cracow in Austrian Galicia.

Needing foreign aid for Poland's liberation, Pilsudski went to Japan in 1904 during the Russo-Japanese War, but he met resistance there from Roman Dmowski, who had convinced the Japanese that Pilsudski's projects were not feasible. To assist the spread of the revolutionary movement in Russia, Pilsudski entered Russian Poland at the end of 1904, but after the failure of the revolution in 1905 his Polish Socialist party split; Pilsudski's faction insisted on the party's primary goal of creating an independent Poland, whereas the left faction wished this goal to be deemphasized. In Austrian Poland, Pilsudski began to form a secret force in 1908 that would become a Polish national army. By 1910 Pilsudski was receiving assistance from Austrian military forces.

In World War I Pilsudski commanded the 1st Brigade of the Polish Legion against the Russians under Austro-Hungarian command. In order to free their soldiers for duty on the Western front, the Central Powers proclaimed the independence of Poland on Nov. 5, 1916, and Pilsudski was appointed chief of the military section of the Polish State Council; but when the Central Powers refused to accept the polish army as an organ of a Polish state, Pilsudski was defiant and was arrested by the Germans in July 1917, and jailed in Magdeburg.

Released in the fall of 1918, Pilsudski returned to Warsaw in November 1918, where he was proclaimed head of state and commander in chief of the Polish armed forces. Agreeing with the Polish National Committee, which was supported by the Western powers, he named Dmowski, right-wing leader, as first Polish deputy to the Paris Peace Conference. Poland's first Parliament in 1919 confirmed Pilsudski as chief of state, with Ignace Jan Paderewski as prime minister. Almost immediately, Pilsudski needed to defend Polish territory against attack by the Red Army, and initially he was successful in occupying much territory that had belonged to historical Poland but that had long been under Russian rule. He favored a federal organization of the new state to include these territories, whereas Dmowski favored their outright annexation to the Polish state. A Soviet counteroffensive reached the environs of Warsaw, but Pilsudski, created marshal of Poland on March 19, 1920, repelled it with the assistance of French general Maxime Weygand, ending the Soviet threat by August 1920.

The new constitution of March 1921, which limited executive powers considerably, caused Pilsudski's retirement from the presidency, although he continued as army chief of staff; he resigned this post also on May 29, 1923, when a conservative government took power. Disillusioned with the workings of the parliamentary system, Pilsudski marched with troops on Warsaw on May 12, 1926, and though elected president by the National Assembly on May 31, 1926, he refused the position and served as minister of defense until his death.

From late 1926 to 1928, and again in 1930, Pilsudski served as Polish prime minister, ruling dictatorially and arresting members of the Sejm who opposed his rule. He was the real ruler of Poland, choosing the holders of important offices. His associates August Zaleski and Józef Beck held the foreign office during the period, concluding a nonaggression treaty with the Soviet Union in July 1932 and another with Germany in January 1934, although Pilsudski himself had wanted to oppose Adolf Hitler's entry to power with force. On May 12, 1935, Pilsudski died and was buried in Wawel Cathedral in Cracow. His collected works were published at Warsaw from 1930 to 1936 with selections appearing in English in 1931.

Further Reading

Pilsudski wrote Joseph Pilsudski: The Memories of a Polish Revolutionary and Soldier (trans. 1931), which deals with his personal experiences prior to 1923. Alexandra Pilsudski, his wife, wrote Memoirs of Madame Pilsudski (1940). The best biography in English is still William Fiddian Reddaway, Marshall Pilsudski (1939). The definitive account of Pilsudski's seizure of power is Joseph Rothschild, Pilsudski's Coup d'Etat (1966). See also M. K. Dziewanowsk, Joseph Pilsudski: A European Federalist, 1918-1922 (1969).

Additional Sources

Garlicki, Andrzej, Joseph Pilsudski: 1867-1935, London: Scolar Press; Brookfield, VT: Ashgate Publishing, 1995.

Pilsudski, a life for Poland, New York: Hippocrene Books, 1982.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Joseph Piłsudski
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Piłsudski, Joseph (pĭlsʊd'skē), Pol. Józef Piłsudski ('zĕf pēl'sūt'skē), 1867-1935, Polish general and politician. He was exiled (1887-92) to Siberia for an alleged attempt on the life of Czar Alexander III, who ruled a large section of Poland. On his return he joined the Polish Socialist party and began (1894) publication of the Robotnik [worker], a secret party organ. Again imprisoned in 1900, he soon escaped. Piłsudski, who subordinated social aims to national emancipation, struggled exclusively for Polish independence. To that end he organized various anti-Russian militant groups-notably, after the outbreak (1914) of World War I, the Polish Legions, which he commanded under Austrian sponsorship. When the Central Powers demanded extensive Polish mobilization in return for vague promises of independence, Piłsudski refused to give his support and was imprisoned (1917) at Magdeburg. Released in Nov., 1918, he returned to Warsaw, assumed command of the Polish armies, and proclaimed an independent Polish republic, which he headed. Meanwhile a more conservative Polish national committee, that had favored cooperation with the Allies in the war, had established itself at Paris and won Allied recognition. A compromise was reached in 1919, when Paderewski became premier while Piłsudski continued as chief of state. Piłsudski used force to expand the eastern frontier of Poland, and the peace treaty with Russia (see Riga, Treaty of, 1921) incorporated several million Ukrainians and White Russians into Poland. In accordance with the Polish constitution of 1921, Piłsudski surrendered (1922) his powers and soon retired to private life. Disagreeing with the policies of the Witos cabinet, he overthrew the government by a coup in 1926. As war minister he exercised a virtual dictatorship until his death. He also was premier from 1926 to 1928 and in 1930. The constitution of 1935 made a pretense of parliamentary democracy. Piłsudski's authoritarian regime was a military dictatorship with slight fascistic overtones, although it never was formalized as in fascist countries. His succession was assumed by a group of military men, among them Rydz-Smigly.

Bibliography

See Piłsudski's memoirs (tr. 1931, repr. 1972); biographies by his wife, Alexandra Pilsudska (1941, repr. 1970) and W. Jedrzejewicz (1982).

 
 

 

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