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1: INTRODUCTION     7: WARTIME ENGLAND   12: ANCESTORS (1): The Origin
2: OUR FAMILY TREE   8: FAMILY SURVIVORS IN POLAND 12: ANCESTORS (2): The Records
3: MAPS AND POLISH HISTORY   9: AUSTRALIA : 20th cent. The Past 12: ANCESTORS (3): The Family Tree
4: OUR FAMILY ANCESTRY 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 1 13: PRESENT-DAY POLAND
5: UNDER COMMUNIST TYRANNY 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 2 14: Rymaszewskis (1) WORLD-WIDE
5: Link to the MEMOIRS OF MIETEK 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 3 14: Rymaszewskis (2) IN THE USA
6: ESCAPE FROM STALIN 11: POLISH CHRISTMAS and EASTER 15: EMAILS from VISITORS
 

MAPS AND POLISH HISTORY RELEVANT TO RYMASZEWSKI GENEALOGY

9th CENTURY (AD 840 - 966)  :  POLAND (POLSKA)
The name Poland comes from an ancient Slavic people known as the Polanie (field or forest clearing dwellers) who in the early Middle Ages settled between the rivers Odra (Oder) on the present western border of Poland and Wisla (Vistula). The Polanie tribes united about AD 840 under chief Piast and laid the foundation of Polska - the Polish nation.

10th - 14th CENTURY   :  THE KINGDOM OF POLAND

MIESZKO (960 -992)

Poland begun to figure in European written history under the reign of king Mieszko who led the country into Christianity in AD 966 when the Catholic Church was firmly established in Poland. His son Boleslaw was crowned by the Pope in 1025.

For five hundred years till the 15th century the Kingdom of Poland was a state inhabited purely by Poles.


BOLESLAW (992 -1025)

14th CENTURY :  UNION OF THE KINGDOM OF POLAND
WITH GRAND DUCHY OF LITVA

JADWIGA (1384 -1399)

Then in 1386 a marriage took place of Jadwiga, young Queen of Poland, to Jogaila, Grand-Duke of pagan Litva. During the ceremony, the duke was baptized in the Latin rites of the Catholic Church as Wladyslaw Jagiello.

The union between Poland and the adjoining Duchy increased Poland's boundaries and population dramatically. The marriage and union were inspired by the common purpose of resisting the aggressive Prussian Teutonic Order (Krzyzacy) in the north.

Soon in 1410, the Polish, Lithuanian and Ruthenian armies crushed the Teutonic Order at the Battle of Grunwald, thereby raising Poland to a leading position among European nations. The whole Litva was gradually Christianized through Poland.


JAGIELLO (1386 -1434)

14th - 18th CENTURY :  
POLISH  COMMONWEALTH (RZECZPOSPOLITA POLSKA)

Union with Grand Duchy of Litva created one state under Polish Crown, which with time expanded eastwards and northwards, and dominated east-central Europe until the 18th century. Under the Jagiellonian dynasty, during the 15th and 16th centuries, Poland grew into a huge state in the centre of Europe. In the 16th and 17th centuries Poland was a European superpower, stretching the borders of its Commonwealth from "the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea".

In this period Poland attained great heights of power, prosperity and cultural magnificence, e.g. in 1543, a Polish astronomer Mikolaj Kopernik (Nicolaus Copernicus) publishes "On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres", proposing that the earth revolves around the sun.

Polish Republic was a constitutional monarchy. "Szlachta", the landed gentry, acquired extensive privileges, and the Kingdom was often described as "Nobles' Republic".

The Rymaszewski noble families lived in the north-east of the Polish Commonwealth in an administrative region which carried the former Grand Duchy of Litva name. The Polish inhabitants of the Grand Duchy were mostly the landowners throughout this area and had traditional Polish influence over Duchy.

Poles were in the majority in some regions, especially of Wilno and Grodno. Other inhabitants belonged to several ethnic and religious groups. The Baltic peoples speaking Latvian and Lithuanian lived in the northern regions. Large proportion of population were Ruthenian tribes (later Belorussians) living in the east and working on land. Jews, who in the 13th century took refuge in Poland from persecution in Western Europe, were well represented especially in townships where they were engaged in commerce and trade. There were also Gipsies and Muslim Tatars, descendants of former Tatar incursions from the East.


The map shows the Kingdom of Poland as it was in the 17th century.
A large part of Eastern Europe belonged to Poland
.

North-eastern provinces of the Commonwealth of Poland (Grand Duchy of Litva), showing the native areas of the Rymaszewski clan in a circle.      More details at   ANCESTORS, Chapter 12


TWO CENTURIES OF WARS (17th - 18th)
AND DECLINE
OF POLAND

With the extinction of the Jagiellonian dynasty in 1572, Poland entered a two century long period of the political, economic, and military deterioration. Successive and generally disastrous wars with Sweden, Russia, the Ukrainian Cossacks, German Brandenburg, and the Ottoman Turks led to the loss of important Polish territories and the devastation of much of Poland. This period became known as the "Deluge".

During the reign of king Jan III Sobieski, who was an excellent military commander, Polish forces had many victories over the Turks. In 1683 Polish army under king's command soundly defeated, in the battle for the relief of Vienna, a vast Turkish force - an army of Islam, thus halting a serious threat to Christendom in central Europe. But this victory could not halt Poland's decline.

Early in the 18th century the Russian Empire opened a systematic offensive against declining Poland, supplementing military force with bribery and intrigue.

The weakening of the Polish Commonwealth was to a certain extent due to the free veto (liberum veto) in which any noble, a member of "szlachta" had it within his power to prevent the passage of legislation or to dissolve the proceedings of the Polish parliament. Poland had created a unique political republic headed by elected kings who were directly responsible to the Parliament of Nobles.

This system made Poland almost ungovernable. The central powers were unable to control the independence of the landowners (szlachta) and foreign neighbors found it easy to intervene in the struggles between the king and the nobility. By the time the system of liberum veto had been amended, it was too late for Poland and history ran its foreordained destiny.

Historical background of this period has been portrayed in the following Polish films :


End of 18th CENTURY : THE THREE PARTITIONS OF POLAND
1772 - 1793 - 1795

By the end of 18th century, the three combined, successive efforts took place by the neighbouring empires: Prussia, Austria and Russia to weaken Poland by dividing its territories amongst themselves. In 1772 large parts of the country were divided among Frederick II of Prussia, Catherine II of Russia, and Maria Theresa of Austria.

The first partition brought about some reforms in Poland. The Polish Parliament (Seym) passed a constitution called the Constitution of the Third of May. It was the first most democratic document written in Europe and second in the world after the USA Constitution, that outlined the responsibilities of Government.

When it had become apparent that the remaining portion of independent Poland was showing signs of regeneration, Russia and Prussia invaded the country and took more land in 1793.

Only the central section remained independent, and the three powers took that two years later in 1795. Poland became "officially" non-existent for the next 123 years. Russia received much larger share of the central and eastern provinces of Poland, occupying in the second and third partitions the native lands of the Rymaszewski clan.


19th CENTURY : Poland under the rule of foreign powers

1815 Eastern Europe map on the left: Poland disappeared from the map and remained under the yoke of foreign masters for 123 years, from 1795 to 1918 (end of World War One).

Several armed attempts to regain independence were made by Poles, but all the uprisings (1794, 1815, 1831, 1846, 1848, 1863 and 1905) against Russia and Prussia were bloodily suppressed.

Many Poles involved in these various uprisings were either killed or driven into exile. But they kept the national spirit alive. Many people emigrated to France and North America.

KosciuszkoTadeusz Kosciuszko was the famous young general who fought for the American independence. After his return home he led the first insurrection for Polish independence in 1794, but it was not strong enough to defeat the Russians.

NOTE: A Polish geologist,
Strzelecki, surveyor and explorer in Australia at that time, named the highest peak in the Snowy Mountains after Kosciuszko.

Duchy of Warsaw When Napoleon conquered Central Europe and Polish troops were serving in his armies, he restored for a short period Poland as a Duchy of Warsaw dependent on himself, which existed from 1806 to 1815.

After Napoleon's defeat in Russia (retreat from Moscow in 1812) the victorious Russia took control over most of the Duchy of Warsaw. The Tzar created there in 1815 a new "Kingdom of Poland" but dependent on Russia (yellow area on the map) with himself as an Emperor and also the "King of Poland". However, after Polish armed insurrection for independence in 1831, the Poles were deprived of all civil liberties. (Free City of Kraków (Cracow) was taken by Austria in 1846).

The former eastern parts of Poland, where Rymaszewski ancestors lived, were already incorporated into the Russian Empire. They experienced some period of freedom after Napoleons troops, including Polish legions, marched on Moscow. My ancestors and family lived there until Poland regained its independence in 1918. Some Rymaszewskis emigrated to the United States.

During the 19th century the role of the Polish inhabitants in the former eastern Poland under the Russian rule decreased significantly. Many of them, including Rymaszewskis, were expropriated due to the policy of the Tzars, sending dissidents to Siberia.

In 1870s Russia attempted to eradicate Polish culture, making Russian the official language of the Russian partition. Prussia did the same in their portion of Poland, attempting to germanize Poles. My parents learned Polish history, etc. in secret schools. The Catholic Church was also persecuted. The Byzantine Catholic rite was abolished in 1839 and the Belarus populace was forced to convert to Russian Orthodox. Only under the Austrian partition Poles were allowed to retain some autonomy.

In the 1890's Poland experienced mass emigration due to persecutions and poverty. Prior to First World War approximately 4 million out of 22 million Poles from all regions emigrated - mostly to the United States.


20th CENTURY —
1914 - 1918 :  THE FIRST WORLD WAR

By 1914 two strong alliance systems were in place in Europe. The Entente Powers of Britain, France and Tsarist Russia faced the Central Powers of Germany and Austria.

The war was triggered off by the assassination of the heir to the throne of the Austrian Empire. The Austrian government blamed Serbia and declared war on Serbia on 28 July 1914.

At this point the various alliance agreements kicked in. Germany came into the war in support of Austria, and Tsarist Russia came to the assistance of Serbia. Within a week, Britain and France were also at war with the Central Powers. The war had been long expected and peoples were ready for it.

Conscripted into the armies of the three Empires that partitioned Poland, that is Russia and the Central Powers, Poles had to fight in opposing armies in World War One.

After the downfall of the Russian Empire, in March 1917, the provisional government of Russia (not Bolshevik) recognized Poland's right to self-determination. However Russia, in turmoil with the Bolshevik revolution and the civil war, withdrew from the war in December 1917.

A provisional Polish government was subsequently formed in Paris. In 1917 the Germans, then in complete control of the country, created a regency council as the supreme government authority of the so-called Polish Kingdom.

After four years of war, people were fed up with the loss of life and the hardships. There were mutinies by troops of the Central Powers and left-wing revolutionary activity, exported from Bolshevik Russia, demanding an immediate end to the war.

National groups saw their opportunity for independence and refused to play their part in the war effort of the Central Powers. Eventually, the Central Powers disintegrated from June to October 1918.

On the collapse of the Central Powers in the autumn of 1918, the Poles moved swiftly towards statehood. The Republic of Poland was proclaimed in November 1918, and an independent government was installed in January 1919.


20th CENTURY —
1918 :  Restoration of POLAND
 

The First World War brought collapse and disintegration to all three Empires that had once divided Poland.

 

After 123 years of struggle and sacrifice an independent Poland was restored in 1918.

 

At the same time, new Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia (formerly part of the Polish Commonwealth) came into existence as independent states.

The first line of a verse from the marching song of the Polish Legions, who served with Napoleon's army and marched from Italy to Poland, the song that became the national anthem of the Polish nation in 1918, is:

 

"Jeszcze Polska nie zginela, póki my zyjemy" = Poland has not yet perished, as long as we are alive.

 

 
MY  POLAND  —  POLAND  WHERE  I  COME  FROM
 


Polish flag
Polish coat of arms
Polish national anthem
 
 

(Pinsk can be found at the centre of Polesie province in the east).

 

1918 - 1939 :   
21 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE
  Above is the 1939 map of Poland where I was born on 25 October 1923. The only Poland I ever knew and loved, where I was educated and brought up in patriotism and Christian tradition.

And on the map alongside, the yellow area shows where the Rymaszewski families lived on our traditional land in free and independent Poland.

During the 16 years of my young life there, which happened to be between the First and Second World Wars, it was free and democratic country - the Polish Republic (Rzeczpospolita Polska). We lived happily in our own house in Pinsk where I went to a Grammar College (gimnazjum and liceum).

And it is Poland from where I was suddenly and forcibly removed from to Siberian slavery and famine on 13 April 1940, at the age of 16, during the Russian Communist occupation and reign of terror.

 


1939 :
THE OUTBREAK OF SECOND WORLD WAR
and FOURTH PARTITION OF POLAND

Poland, established after the First World War as a sovereign state in 1918, was partitioned for a fourth time in 1939 by Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (former Prussia and Russia).

As the Second World War began, Poland was attacked by Nazi Germany and the Communist Soviet Union. Both totalitarian countries, after dividing Poland, began to persecute her people.

  1939 - Outbreak of war
1939 - 1941
Poland under Soviet and German occupation

The map shows how Poland was divided in 1939 under the German-Soviet agreement signed by Hitler and Stalin.

The Germans incorporated Pomerania, Posnania and Silesia into the Reich whilst the rest was designated as the General-Gouvernement, a colony ruled from Cracow by Hitler's friend, Hans Frank.

The Soviets took and absorbed into the USSR the eastern half. They divided this occupation into Western Belorussia and Western Ukraine, and a small area was allocated to Lithuania (together with Wilno, now Vilnius) as a temporary deceit before the whole of Lithuania was also soon occupied by the Soviet Union.

The Nazis murdered hundreds of thousands of Poles, especially Polish Jews. The Communists also murdered a comparable number of Poles or sent them to slave camps and gulags where 50 percent of them died.

 

AFTER THE END OF WAR, IN 1945,
POST WAR POLAND BECOMES A STALINIST PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC

After this horrible period was over and World War Two had ended in 1945, and Germany, one of the two occupants of Poland, was defeated, new boundaries were established for Central Europe by Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt at Yalta.

Poland lost a third of its pre-war area, which was taken over by the Soviets. The eastern Poland was incorporated into the Soviet Union. It was the area where all the Rymaszewski families lived.

As a "compensation", the Allied powers handed over to Poland a part of defeated Germany up to the Oder and Neisse rivers. These lands belonged historically to very early Poland, during the reign of Piasts, so they were named the "Regained Territories".

The Regained Territories were settled by Polish refugees who either escaped from the eastern Poland to avoid Soviet rule or were later expelled. Also many Polish repatriates from Siberia in the USSR itself were brought here.

Polish territory suffered a net loss of about 76,000 sq. km, as the land ceded to the USSR in the east was nearly double that acquired from Germany in the west.

Because of those population movements, the national minorities in present day Poland amount to about 5 percent of population. This is a situation very different from that throughout most of the Polish history when the country was multicultural with a number of diverse cultures.

1945 - 1989 : 44 years.
POLISH PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC - A COLONY OF THE SOVIET EMPIRE.



The red area shows the spread of Communist Russia's imperialism in Europe. Which also includes the vertically hatched areas totally annexed as part of the by Soviet Union.

A Soviet - controlled communist government ruled Poland from 1945 to 1989.



1980 - 1989 :
THE BIRTH OF FREE, DEMOCRATIC POLAND

August 1980

Workers at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk went on strike led by an electrician Lech Walesa. Inter-factory Strike Committee was formed representing strikers spreading across Poland. Communist Party negotiators begun talks and an agreement was signed, giving workers the right to form free unions independent from previous communist government control.

A nationwide independent trade union, Solidarity, was established growing to 10 million members and becoming a political force. Poland's total population was 38 million. Assuming each member had a family of 3 - that's almost the whole Poland joined the Solidarity union.

December 1981
This situation presented danger to Soviet Union and Moscow-supported communist government in Poland. So the government declared martial law called "a state of war" : suspended Solidarity, stripping away all vestiges of newborn freedom and using force, imprisoned all its leaders. This resulted in violence and loss of life. USA and other Western countries responded to martial law by imposing economic sanctions against Polish regime and the Soviet Union.

Martial law was ended three years later. And Solidarity prisoners including Lech Walesa were released five years later, in 1986. However unrest in Poland continued and Solidarity existed underground.

Early in 1989
The government's inability to forestall Poland's continuing and severe economic decline and industrial unrest forced negotiations between the Communist authorities and the outlawed Solidarity movement. Agreements were reached to legalize the Solidarity trade union again, which demanded, and was permitted, to join in a limited free general elections.

June 1989
The elections were overwhelmingly won by the representatives of Solidarity who obtained ALL SEATS BUT ONE - of 261 seats it was allowed to contest for with the communists. Thus Solidarity formed the first non-communist democratic government in Poland operating under the rule of law since the World War II.

3 months later, in September 1989, my 23 years old son Julian Rymaszewski, born outside Poland in London, went from Australia to see his Polish fatherland for the first time in his life. See Chapter 10.


Contemporary Time magazine cover titled "Shaking Up Communism" shows Poland's Lech Walesa with Solidarity flag and factories on the left and red Soviet Union's shadow and their threatening tanks on the right.

In 1989 Poland was the first country from the Soviet Bloc in Central and Eastern Europe to break out of Communist rule. Thanks to Polish Solidarity Movement this bold move was soon followed by other enslaved nations throughout the region.

In 1990 Lech Walesa was elected President of Poland.


THE SOVIET EMPIRE CRUMBLES : 1989-1993
END OF 20th CENTURY
  • The Soviet Union, the Union of the so called People's Republics, was a State which in fact was against its people.
  • Its rulers in the Kremlin - all Communist Party members protected by the ruthless Secret Police (KGB) - controlled and owned everything, the whole country.
  • They were power drunk men who aimed at world domination. Soviet coat of arms shows hammer and sickle on the whole planet earth.
 
  • To achieve their aims they were prepared to murder, enslave and starve people into submission, while they themselves were living in luxury surrounded by servants.
  • George Orwell aptly portrayed this situation in his book "Animal Farm".
  • This evil empire, as a result of 75 years of inefficiency, corruption, decay, dilapidation of state owned bureaucratic infrastructures, economic chaos, ecological negligence and disasters, and sheer absurdity of the socialist tyrannical system, which ruled over people by deceit, lies, fear, terror and hunger, (described in terminal years as "the colossus on clay legs"), finally COLLAPSED AND CRUMBLED, with Berlin Wall tumbling down last.

21st CENTURY :
SOVEREIGN AND DEMOCRATIC
REPUBLIC OF POLAND

The Republic of Poland is a parliamentary democracy which guarantees the observance of human rights, freedom and civil rights.

Poland's armed forces ensure safety and inviolability of its borders. The armed forces maintain neutrality in political matters and are under civilian and democratic control.

Poland now borders with seven countries:

  • Russia - a stretch of 210 km
  • Lithuania -103 km
  • Belarus - 416 km
  • Ukraine - 529 km
  • Slovakia - 539 km
  • Czech Republic - 790 km
  • Germany - 467 km

One important thing:

  • In the west Poland borders with friendly nations that recognize our new common borders.
  • In the east Poland borders with now democratic and independent states.
  • There are good prospects, therefore, for 21st century Poland to live in peace and regain her historic height of prosperity and cultural excellence.

National symbol and colors.

Territory:
322,577 sq km

Population:
39,000,000

Capital:
Warsaw
pop. 1,700,000

Currency:
zloty (zl)
4 zl ~ 1 US$


From year 2008 Poland, as a full member of the European Union, is having its currency gradually replaced by euros ( € )

1 € ~ 1 US$


Year 2000   :   EPILOGUE
  • Independent POLAND in the centre of Europe.
  • Independent LITHUANIA to the north of Poland.
  • Independent BELARUS (for the first time in history) to the east of Poland
  • Most Rymaszewskis  —  survivors of the Soviet perpetrated holocaust, ethnic cleansing, and post-second-world-war final uprooting from their native land and properties (called "repatriation") —   now live dispersed in present day Poland.

    THE CIRCLE SHOWS WHERE ORIGINAL POLISH HOMELAND, THE HISTORICAL CRADLE OF THE RYMASZEWSKI FAMILIES IS NOW.
 
1: INTRODUCTION     7: WARTIME ENGLAND   12: ANCESTORS (1): The Origin
2: OUR FAMILY TREE   8: FAMILY SURVIVORS IN POLAND 12: ANCESTORS (2): The Records
3: MAPS AND POLISH HISTORY   9: AUSTRALIA : 20th cent. The Past 12: ANCESTORS (3): The Family Tree
4: OUR FAMILY ANCESTRY 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 1 13: PRESENT-DAY POLAND
5: UNDER COMMUNIST TYRANNY 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 2 14: Rymaszewskis (1) WORLD-WIDE
5: Link to the MEMOIRS OF MIETEK 10: AUSTRALIA : 21st cent. Part 3 14: Rymaszewskis (2) IN THE USA
6: ESCAPE FROM STALIN 11: POLISH CHRISTMAS and EASTER 15: EMAILS from VISITORS