Uprowadzanie mieszkańców Rzeczypospolitej do niewoli przez Tatarów i Turków w oczach siedemnastowiecznych pamiętnikarzy
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Author:
Ryba, Renata
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 327, Studia Historicolitteraria 21 (2021), s. [339]-351
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
wiek XVIITurcy
Tatarzy
pamiętniki
niewola
17th century
Turks
Tatars
diaries
thraldom
Date: 2021
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In the 17th century, both the Turks and (much more often) the Tatars invaded Poland. According to historians, the
Tatars in particular treated the Polish Republic as an area of economic exploitation. Its most severe form was the
forced captivity of inhabitants of the south-eastern borderlands. This was documented by diarists and memorialists
of Polish seicento, including Jan Florian Drobysz Tuszyński, Mikołaj Jemiołowski, Joachim Jerlicz, Samuel
Maskiewicz, Zbigniew Ossoliński, and Kazimierz Sarnecki. They drew attention to the mass character of the Tatar-Turkish thraldom: not only soldiers but also many civilians were kidnapped by the Tatars, who benefited from human
trafficking and thus made them captives. The authors of the diaries documented the circumstances of the attacks,
including the time and routes taken by the looters. They drew attention to the state of the captives and
reconstructed the human martyrdom.