The Poswole Expedition of Sigismund August in 1557 Cover Image

Wyprawa pozwolska Zygmunta Augusta w 1557 roku
The Poswole Expedition of Sigismund August in 1557

Author(s): Andrzej Gładysz
Subject(s): History
Published by: Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL & Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Keywords: history of the Polish army; Inflanty; the Inflant Order; Sigismund August; Pozwol (Poswole); historia wojskowości polskiej; Zakon Inflancki; Zygmunt August; Pozwol

Summary/Abstract: Sigismund August’s Poswole expedition of 1557 was the king’s first military campaign. It followed a conflict between the hierarchies of the Inflant Order and the Ryga bishop favoured by the Prussia prince and the Polish king. The conflict concerned coadjutory. In the end of August 1557 the Polish-Lithuanian army, led by Jan Mielecki, Mikołaj Czarny Radziwiłł, and Mikołaj Rudy Radziwiłł, camped in Poswole on the border with the religious state. The army was composed of Polish units, popular defence, and the Lithuanian levy in mass supported by private detachments, a numerous artillery, and a laager. There were, however, only some minor fights on the border. The Master of the Inflanty Order, Wilhelm Fürstenberg, in the face of the outnumbering armies of Sigismund August and Albrecht Hohenzollern, arrived at the camp of the allies in Poswole and humbled himself before the king. The treaty signed in Poswole directly affected the Moscow intervention in the Inflanty and the conflict with Ivan IV the Terrible. A part of the Inflanty was occupied by Sweden and Denmark. It was also an initiative to include Inflanty into Poland in 1561.

  • Issue Year: 56/2008
  • Issue No: 02
  • Page Range: 81-107
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: Polish