@article{94877932-db7b-4226-9b62-f4f89c1e88f1, author = {Katarzyna Kuras}, title = {Anna Grześkowiak-Krwawicz, Can revolution be legal? May 3rd 1791 in the eyes of contemporaries, Wydawnictwo DiG, Warsaw, 2012, 226 p.}, journal = {Cracow Studies of Constitutional and Legal History}, volume = {2013}, number = {Volume 6, Issue 3}, year = {2014}, issn = {2084-4115}, pages = {313-315},keywords = {Constitution of 3rd May 1791; Polish revolution}, abstract = {The book Could Revolution Be Legal? by Anna Grześkowiak-Krwawicz concerns various aspects of how the Constitution of 3rd May 1791 was established and overthrown. It raises, among others, the question whether the act of passing the Constitution was a revolution for contemporary people and why it was understood as treason by some people, especially from Republican milieus. A lot of  attention was paid by the Author to the issue of perception of the Constitution in Poland and abroad as well as to the rise of the myth of 3rd May 1791.}, doi = {}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/kshpp/article/anna-grzeskowiak-krwawicz-czy-rewolucja-moze-byc-legalna-3-maja-1791-w-oczach-wspolczesnych-warszawa-wydawnictwo-dig-2012-226-s} }