French Legislation of the Napoleonic Era in the Kingdom of Poland:
The Development of Political and Economic Freedoms in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31168/2619-0877.2024.7.11Keywords:
French Civil Code (Napoleon Code) and the French Commercial Code in the Polish lands, the constitutional period of the history of the Kingdom of Poland, the Russian Empire in the first half of the nineteenth century, systematisation of the legislation of the Russian EmpireAbstract
According to the decision by the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Austria, Prussia and Russia, which included parts of the territory of the Duchy of Warsaw, assumed mutual obligations to ensure the rights of the Polish population. In the Kingdom of Poland, established on Polish lands within the Russian Empire, which was granted a constitution, preserved state institutions and some political and civil liberties, the French Civil Code (Code Napoleon) and the French Commercial Code continued to apply. Thus, the Duchy of Warsaw and the Kingdom of Poland were involved in the process of systematising state and civil law, which took place in many European countries at the beginning of the nineteenth century. At the same time, from the end of the 1820s onwards, the legislation of the Kingdom of Poland was brought closer to that of the Empire. This process, especially after the suppression of the Polish Uprising of 1830-1831, accompanied by the restriction of political and civil liberties granted by the Constitution of 1815, favoured the incorporation of the Polish lands into the Russian state. At the same time, the 1809 incorporation of the French Commercial Code into the national legal system of the Duchy of Warsaw, which was also in force in the Kingdom of Poland, even after the creation of the independent Polish state in 1918, contributed to the creation of legal and economic unity, which was perceived as a manifestation of economic and political freedom under conditions of a significant restriction of national rights. The implementation of French legislation in the early ninettenth century had a significant impact on the systematisation of state and civil law in the Kingdom of Poland.