- Zamoyski Code
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Zamoyski Code (Polish: Kodeks Zamoyskiego or Zbiór praw sądowych na mocy konstytucji roku 1776 przez J.W. Andrzeja Zamoyskiego ekskanclerza koronnego ułożony...[1] [Collection of court laws requested by constitution of 1776 designed by former chancellor H.E. Andrzej Zamoyski]) was a major, progressive legislation, proposed by Andrzej Zamoyski, Grand Chancellors of the Crown of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, in 1776.[1] This legislation was an attempt of codification of the previously uncodified law of the Commonwealth. It was opposed by several conservative and foreign factions and eventually rejected by the sejm of 1780.[1]
Contents
History
In 1776, the Sejm of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, on the initiative of the Polish king Stanisław August Poniatowski, commissioned former Grand Chancellor of the Crown, Andrzej Zamoyski, to draft a new legal code. A commission, headed by Zamoyski, and including other notable members, such as Józef Wybicki and Joachim Chreptowicz, was created. By 1778, under Zamoyski's direction, a code (Zbiór praw sądowych, also known from his name as Zamoyski's Code[x]) had been produced and published in print.
The code would have strengthened royal power, made all officials answerable to the Sejm, placed the clergy and their finances under state supervision, gave more privileges to the townsfolk, reduced serfdom, and deprived landless szlachta of many of their legal immunities.
Opposition
Zamoyski Code was opposed by several faction. Internally, conservative szlachta was afraid that the Code would strengthen the power of the Polish king and the government, threatening to replace the anarchy-like Golden Freedoms with the absolutist rule. Representatives of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were afraid that it would weaken Duchy's autonomy, part of which was a semi-separate legal system (the code would replace the Third Lithuanian Statue).[2] Those sentiments were used by two foreign powers, which did not want to see the Code pass for their own separate reasons: the Vatican (Holy See) opposed the Code, as it limited ecclesiastical law throughout the Commonwealth, replacing it with the secular law; Russian Empire saw the Code as going to far in reforming and strengthening the inefficient and Russia-dependent Polish governance. Working together, in an unlikely alliance between Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Russia, papal nuncio Giovanni Andrea Archetti and Russian ambassador Otto Magnus von Stackelberg jointly bribed deputies to the Polish Sejm in exchange for their opposition.[3][4]
Foreign influence, fueling secretly the already existing internal opposition, ensured the Code was postponed (it was first to be presented to Sejm in 1778) and then defeat during the Sejm of 1780.[3][4]
Legacy
Zamoyski Code was one of the series of proposed progressive reforms, which would culminate in the Constitution of 3rd May, 1791. The constitution had a provision that the law was to be codified, and the new codification project, Poniatowski Code (named after King Poniatowski), drew much inspiration from the Zamoyski Code.
References
- ^ a b c (Polish) Kodeks Andrzeja Zamoyskiego, Encyklopedia PWN, 2 October 2008
- ^ Daniel Stone, A History of East Central Europe, University of Washington Press, 2001, ISBN 0295980931, Google Print, p.282-283
- ^ a b Richard Butterwick, Poland's Last King and English Culture: Stanisław August Poniatowski, 1732-1798, Oxford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0198207018, Print, p.158-162
- ^ a b Jerzy Kłoczowski, A History of Polish Christianity, Cambridge University Press, 2000, ISBN 0521364299, Google Print, p.186
Further reading
- E. Borkowska-Bagieńska, Zbiór praw sądowych Andrzeja Zamoyskiego [Collection of court laws of Andrzej Zamoyski], Poznań 1986.
- Mieczysław Tarnawski, Kodeks Zamoyskiego na tle stosunków kościelno-państwowych za czasów Stanisława Augusta [Zamoyski Code on the background of state-church relationship of the times of Stanislaw August], Lwów, 1916
Categories:- 18th century in law
- 18th century in Poland
- History of Poland (1569–1795)
- Legal history of Poland
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