Piotr Cichoracki
Archeion, 123, 2022, pp. 243-254
https://doi.org/10.4467/26581264ARC.22.003.16464The article offers a detailed critical review of the 7-volume edition of source documents entitled "Wielka Wojna – codzienność niecodzienności. Biblioteka pamiętników z I wojny światowej z zasobu polskich archiwów państwowych" [The great War – the everyday of the extraordinary. The library of World War I diaries from the fonds of Polish state archives]. It is a library of World War I diaries from the fonds of Polish state archives, published in 2014–2021 by the Head Office of State Archives. Individual volumes of the series comprise academically compiled diary documents from the World War I period. The diaries and memoirs included in the series are linked by the theme of their authors’ fates during the war and depictions of daily life in wartime Polish lands. The author analysed and evaluated the publication from the perspective of selection of diary sources used, their editorial preparation, layout of individual volumes, as well as the scholarly apparatus. He also addressed the issue of the academic preparation of individual volumes; he included a number of recommendations and conclusions for the publisher, regarding the improvement of scope and quality of the editorial preparation of diary sources for publication.
Piotr Cichoracki
History Notebooks, Issue 147 (4), 2020, pp. 693-702
https://doi.org/10.4467/20844069PH.20.037.12491The paper deals concisely with issues of the internal security in interwar Poland, especially those related to the political determinants. It contains a discussion of the chronology of the transformations that affected the state of security in the years 1918–1939. In the chronological overview of the changes, several sections can be distinguished: 1) the first months of the formation of the state when the public sentiments were also shaped by the extreme emotions being the effect of the end of the war and by the revolutionary movements in the neighbouring territories; 2) the culmination of the Polish-Bolshevik War in the summer of 1920 when the Soviet Army invaded the territory of Poland under the pretence of social revolution; 3) the relatively peaceful 1920s; 4) the Great Depression (in Poland 1930–1935) with a rapid increase in social unrest; 5) the last four years before the outbreak of WWII, characterised by variable intensity of internal tensions. Of key importance to the internal order was the activity of subversive organisations. The most important ones were the communist movement and the Ukrainian nationalist underground. Both took into account armed fight against the Polish state, either on an ongoing basis or in the future. The state of security was also influenced by legitimate political organisations (socialists, peasants’parties and nationalists) but the threat from them was only of a short-term nature and it was not an immediate effect of the decisions made by leaders of these communities. The state apparatus was forced to struggle against different threats to the internal security. The most severe forms were armed revolts, most of which took place in the early 1920s in the eastern provinces; some of them were provoked by the Soviet secret services. The whole interwar period was full of radical political demonstrations, protests against unemployment, and different forms of peasants’riots. The administration often proved unable to recognise the threats; however, the authorities never allowed the incidents to escalate into a wave of unrest that would jeopardise the national and social order.