Abstrakt:
The imposing fortifications were typical of the Teutonic Order’s heritage in
northern Poland. They were also characteristic of the eastern flank of the Polish-
-Lithuanian state with Kamieniec Podolski in the southeast. Foreign travellers
reporting their visits to Gdańsk mentioned both the fortifications and the
architectural styles in the city centre with the armoury at the forefront. Gdańsk
was for them either a transit city on the way to Königsberg or on the route from
the north along the Vistula to Warsaw and further east, or towards Kraków. The
city walls were an element of urban architecture obvious to both foreigners
in Poland and to Polish travellers in Western Europe. If they were absent,
the authors of the journals noted this fact diligently, not concealing their surprise
and disapproval. The narrative of travelling women is interesting, because ladies
did not necessarily limit themselves to the description of the churches, charity
institutions, and prisons visited, where attempts were made to rehabilitate
prisoners. Teofila Konstancja Morawska, who was by her first husband a Radziwiłł,
stands out among the authors, for in her report we find surprisingly good
knowledge of defence issues on the European scale. However, it should be
remembered that she lived in Lithuania in a land of wars and conflicts on a smaller
(local) and national scale, in which she reportedly defended family property
personally involving the use of firearms. Almost all her relatives, including her
spouse, sooner or later became soldiers. Therefore, she cannot be compared
in any way to another traveller, Sophie Schwarz, who weakened in the Gdańsk
armoury at the sight of large stocks of weapons, emphasizing that the view was
not worthy of the supposedly weaker sex. Foreigners staying in Poland usually
focused on the differences in civilization and culture from Western Europe.
Polish travellers mainly visited churches, started the day with Holy Mass and
possibly confession, and admired the architecture and rich decoration of the
churches. They emphasized their deep faith and most often, their Catholic faith.
One should recall here a general thought that from the first partition of Poland
in 1772 up to 1918, Poland was not an independent country. Independent Poland
appeared on the maps of Europe only after the end of World War I.
Opis:
Articles and longer works from the 36th international research
conference of the Prague City Archives held in cooperation with
the Institute of History at the Academy of Sciences of the Czech
Republic, the Faculty of Humanities at Charles University
in Prague and the Faculty of Arts at Jan Evangelista Purkyně
University in Ústí nad Labem on 10 and 11 October 2017
at the Clam-Gallas Palace in Prague