Following c.865 years of
existence as a state power on the European stage, and also following 23 years of
territorial losses, in 1795 Poland disappeared entirely from the political map. In
1918, after the First World War, and after 123 years of simultaneous partition
by three separate empires – Russia, Germany, and Austria – the ancient Polish
nation regained its independence.
This essay is a hagiography of the Polish independence movement’s
protagonist Józef Piłsudski, and it will broadly outline of how that
independence was achieved. Certain complexities of the wider movement and
society have been deliberately overlooked in this essay. These will be explored
in a future essay, and their omission on this occasion will allow an element of
contrast with the follow-up piece.