The Congress Kingdom of Poland was created out of the
Duchy of Warsaw, a French client state, at the
Congress of Vienna in 1815 when the
great powers reorganized Europe following the
Napoleonic Wars. The kingdom was created from parts of the Polish territory that had been
partitioned between
Austria and
Prussia, which had been transformed into the
Duchy of Warsaw by
Napoleon Bonaparte in 1807. After Napoleon's defeat, the fate of the Duchy of Warsaw was dependent on Russia. Prussia insisted on the duchy being eliminated. Tsar
Alexander I intended to annex the duchy and parts of Lithuanian lands which were historically in the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Both Austria and the
United Kingdom, however, disapproved strongly of the idea, Austria issuing a memorandum on returning to the 1795 resolutions with support from the United Kingdom under
Prince George, the Prince-Regent, Prime Minister
Lord Liverpool and the British delegate to the Congress,
Lord Castlereagh. Following the Congress, Russia gained a larger share of Poland (with Warsaw) and, after crushing an
insurrection in 1831, the Congress Kingdom's autonomy was abolished. Poles faced confiscation of property, deportation, forced military service, and the closure of their own universities. The Congress was important enough in the creation of the state to cause the new country to be informally named for it. The kingdom lost its status as a
sovereign state in 1831 and the administrative divisions were reorganized. It was sufficiently distinct that its name remained in official Russian use, although in the later years of Russian rule it was replaced with the "
Vistula Land" (Russian: Привислинский Край). Following the defeat of the
November Uprising, its separate institutions and administrative arrangements were abolished as part of increased
Russification to be more closely integrated with the Russian Empire. However, even after this formalized annexation, the territory retained some degree of distinctiveness and continued to be referred to informally as Congress Poland until the Russian rule there ended as a result of the advance by the armies of the
Central Powers in 1915 during
World War I. The kingdom was 128,500 km2 in area and originally had a population of approximately 3.3 million. The new state would be one of the smallest Polish states ever, smaller than the preceding Duchy of Warsaw and much smaller than the defunct
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth which had a population of over 10 million and an area of 1 million km2. a Pole who aimed to resurrect the Polish state in alliance with
Russia. The Kingdom of Poland was one of the few contemporary
constitutional monarchies in Europe, with the emperor of Russia serving as the self-proclaimed
king of Poland.
Initial independence Theoretically, the Polish Kingdom in its 1815 form was a semi-autonomous state in a
personal union with Russia through the rule of the Russian emperor. The state possessed the
Constitution of the Kingdom of Poland, one of the most liberal in 19th century Europe, Though the absolute rule demanded by Russia was difficult to establish due to Poland's liberal traditions and institutions, the independence of the kingdom lasted only 15 years; initially
Alexander I used the title King of Poland and was obligated to observe the provisions of the constitution. However, in time, the situation changed and he granted the viceroy,
Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, almost dictatorial powers. Following an 11 month military campaign, the Kingdom of Poland lost its semi-independent status and was integrated much more closely with the Russian Empire. This was formalized through the issuing of the
Organic Statute of the Kingdom of Poland by the Emperor in 1832, which abolished the constitution, army and legislative assembly. Over the next 30 years, a series of measures bound Congress Poland ever more closely to Russia. In 1863, the
January Uprising broke out but lasted only two years before being crushed. As a direct result, any remaining separate status of the kingdom was removed and the political entity was directly incorporated into the Russian Empire. Following the defeat of the uprising, the name
Kingdom of Poland was largely replaced in official Russian usage by
Vistula Land (,
Privislinskiy kray), in an effort to remove the Polish national identity from the administrative map. The territory was administered by a
Namestnik (Viceroy) until 1874. After 1874, the office of Namestnik was abolished and the territory was governed by the
Governor-General of Warsaw. == Government ==