. During the first 24 hours of the uprising,
armouries across the country were looted, and many Russian officials were executed on sight. On 2 February 1863, was the start of the first major military engagement of the uprising between Lithuanian peasants armed mostly with
scythes and a squadron of Russian hussars outside Čysta Būda, near
Marijampolė. It ended with the massacre of the unprepared peasants. While there was still hope of a short war, insurgent groups merged into larger formations and recruited new volunteers. The provisional government had counted on an insurgency erupting in Russia, where wide discontent with the autocratic regime then seemed to be brewing. It also counted on the active support of
Napoleon III, particularly after
Prussia, expecting the inevitable armed conflict with France, had made overtures to Russia sealed in the
Alvensleben Convention and offered assistance in suppressing the Polish uprising. Arrangements had already been completed on 14 February and the British Ambassador to
Berlin,
Sir Alexander Malet, informed his government that a Prussian military envoy has concluded a military convention with the Russian Government, according to which the two governments will reciprocally afford facilities to each other for the suppression of the insurrectionary movements which have lately taken place in Poland and Lithuania. The Prussian railways are also to be placed at the disposal of the Russian military authorities for the transportation of troops through Prussian territory from one part of the former Polish-Lithuanian commonwealth to another. and wearing
rogatywka and konfederatka caps, 1863–64 That step by
Otto von Bismarck led to protests from several governments and incensed the several constituent nations of the former Commonwealth. The result was the transformation of a relatively insignificant uprising into another "national war" against Russia. Encouraged by promises made by Napoleon III, all provinces of the erstwhile Commonwealth, acting on the advice of Władysław Czartoryski, had taken to arms. Moreover, to Indicate their solidarity, all Commonwealth citizens holding office under the Russian government, including the
Archbishop of Warsaw,
Zygmunt Feliński, resigned their positions and signed their allegiance to the newly constituted Government, which was composed of the five most prominent representatives of the
Whites. The
Reds, meanwhile, criticised the
Polish National Government for being reactionary with its policy to incentivise Polish peasants to fight in the uprising. The government justified its inaction on the back of hopes of foreign military intervention promised by Napoleon III that never materialised.
Romuald Traugutt It was only after Polish General
Romuald Traugutt had taken matters into his own hands on 17 October 1863 to unite all classes under a single national banner that the struggle could be upheld. His restructuring in preparation for an offensive in spring 1864 was banking on a European-wide war. On 27 December 1863, he enacted a decree of the former provisional government by granting peasants the land they worked. The land was to be provided by compensating the owners through state funds after the successful conclusion of the uprising. Traugutt called upon all Polish classes to rise against Russian oppression for the creation of a new Polish state. The response was moderate since the policy came too late. The Russian government had already begun working among peasants to grant them generous parcels of land for the asking. The peasants who had been bought off did not engage with Polish revolutionaries to any extent or provide them with support. Fighting continued intermittently during the winter of 1863–1864 on the southern edge of the Kingdom, near the Galician border, from where assistance was still forthcoming. In late December in the
Lublin Voivodeship, General
Michał Heydenreich's unit was overwhelmed. The most determined resistance continued in the
Świętokrzyskie Mountains, where General
Józef Hauke-Bosak distinguished himself by taking several cities from the vastly superior Russian forces. However, he too succumbed to a crushing defeat on 21 February 1864 which presaged the end of the armed struggle. On 29 February, Austria imposed martial law, and on 2 March, the tsarist authorities brought in the
abolition of serfdom in the Polish Kingdom. Both events neutralised Traugutt's concept of developing the uprising with a
general mobilisation of the population in the Russian partition and reliance on assistance from Galicia. In April 1864, Napoleon III abandoned the Polish cause. Władysław Czartoryski wrote to Traugutt: "We are alone, and alone we shall remain". Arrests eliminated key positions in the secret Polish state, and those who felt threatened sought refuge abroad. Traugutt was taken on the night of 10 April. After he and the last four members of the National Council, Antoni Jezioranski, Rafał Krajewski, Józef Toczyski and
Roman Żuliński, had been apprehended by Russian troops, they were imprisoned and executed by hanging on 5 August at the
Warsaw Citadel. That marked the symbolic closure of the Uprising. Only Aleksander Waszkowski, the head of the Warsaw insurgency eluded the police till December 1864, but he too joined the list of "the lost" in February 1865. The war consisting of 650 battles and skirmishes with 25,000 Polish and other insurgents killed, had lasted 18 months. The insurgency persisted in
Samogitia and
Podlasie, where the
Greek Catholic population, outraged and persecuted for their religious observance, "
Kryaki (those baptised into the Greek Orthodox Church), and others like the commander and priest
Stanisław Brzóska, clung the longest to the revolutionary banner until the spring of 1865. File:Romuald Traugutt 111.PNG|
Romuald Traugutt File:Marian Langiewicz 1863 (338183) (cropped).jpg|
Marian Langiewicz File:Zygmunt Szczęsny Feliński 06.jpg|
Zygmunt Feliński, Archbishop of Warsaw File:Stanisław Brzóska (original photo portrait).jpg|Fr. Stanisław Brzóska ==Decades of reprisals==