Bitwa pod Grunwaldem w polskich podręcznikach do historii
View/ Open
Author:
Chłosta-Sikorska, Agnieszka
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 99, Studia Historica 11 (2011), s. [147]-169
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Date: 2011
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The picture of the battle of Grunwald presented in the Polish history textbooks, from those
published during the partitions through the interwar textbooks to the post-war ones and
those used after the educational reform in 1999 was changing. Each of those periods was
characterised by a particular approach to the battle as it was attempted to make use of the
history for the needs of the current politics. That is why the events of 1409–1411, although
unambiguously interpreted as a great victory, had an undercurrent depending on the planned
and expected effects of the message. Teaching as well as learning is based mainly on words,
that is why textbooks play such an important role in those processes. Textbooks as information
carriers reaching wide audiences are perfectly suitable for the purpose of creating the past
according to the needs of the current political situation. Textbooks published during the
partitions focused mainly on the victories of the Polish army and on those decisions of the
Polish rulers and commanders which contributed to the increase of the country’s power. The
Teutonic Order was identified with Prussia – one of the powers involved in the partitions.
The germanisation period contributed to associating it with the Third Reich. That is why
Poles willingly cast their minds back to the glorious pictures of the past victories over the
contemporary oppressor. When the longed-for freedom came the history textbooks were
not altered in any major way. The positive moments in the history of our country were
emphasised, this time in order to remind those who were born under the foreign ruling that
they should double they effort to unite the brutally torn country. This idea was interrupted
by the outburst of another world conflict. Its aftermath, namely the annexation of Poland
into the Eastern Bloc, had long-lasting consequences. The authority imposed by the Soviet
Union attempted to create an anti-western and anti-imperial myth of Grunwald. The battle
was depicted as an example of a Slavic brotherhood of blood and the victory of the nations of
the Soviet Union over Germany – an enemy of time immemorial identified with the Teutonic
Order. In the textbooks published after 1989 we will not find the identification of the Teutonic
Order with Germany. The authors usually show the holistic European background of the battle
of Grunwald pointing out that the victory had wide repercussions on the international arena
and its consequences had an immense influence on the 14th-century Europe. The power of
the Jagiellonian country increased as it took the helm of the old continent’s politics for a long
time while the influence of the Teutonic Order decreased. The analysis of the Polish history
textbooks suggests that the battle of Grunwald was, and still is, an event of which Poles are
proud and as such occupies special space on the textbooks’ pages.