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: ''For other nobles of the same name, please see
Sigismund.''
'Sigismund II Augustus' (,
Ruthenian: ''Żygimont III Awgust'', ;
1 August 1520 —
7 July 1572) was King of
Poland and
Grand Duke of Lithuania, the only son of
Sigismund I the Old, whom Sigismund II succeeded in
1548.
Royal titles
★ Royal titles, in
Latin: "''Sigismundus Augustus Dei gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, nec non terrarum Cracoviae, Sandomiriae, Siradiae, Lanciciae, Cuiaviae, Kijoviae, Russiae, Woliniae, Prussiae, Masoviae, Podlachiae, Culmensis, Elbingensis, Pomeraniae, Samogitiae, Livoniae etc. dominus et haeres''."
★ English translation: "Sigismund Augustus, by the Grace of God, King of
Poland, Grand Duke of
Lithuania, of the Lands of
Cracow,
Sandomierz,
Sieradz,
ÅÄ™czyca,
Kuyavia,
Kiev, Hereditary Lord of
Ruthenia,
Volhynia,
Royal Prussia,
Masovia,
Podlachia,
Culmer Land,
Elbing,
Pomerania,
Samogitia,
Livonia etc."
Biography
From the outset of his reign, Sigismund came into collision with the country's ''
szlachta'' (
gentry), who had already begun curtailing the power of the great families. The ostensible cause of the szlachta's animosity to the King was his second marriage, secretly contracted before his accession to the throne, with the beautiful
Lithuanian Calvinist,
Barbara Radziwiłł, daughter of
Hetman Jerzy Radziwiłł.
But the real forces behind the movement seem to have been the
Austrian court and Sigismund's own mother,
Bona Sforza, and so violent was the agitation at Sigismund's first ''
sejm'' (
October 31,
1548) that the
deputies threatened to renounce their allegiance unless the King repudiated his wife Barbara. He refused, and his moral courage and political dexterity won the day.
By
1550, when Sigismund summoned his second ''
sejm'', a reaction had begun in his favor, and the ''
szlachta'' was rebuked by
Piotr Kmita, Marshal of the ''
Sejm'', who accused them of attempting to unduly diminish the legislative prerogatives of the crown.
The death of Queen Barbara, five months after her coronation (
December 7,
1550), under distressing circumstances which led to a suspicion that she had been poisoned by
Bona Sforza, compelled Sigismund to contract a third, purely political union with his first cousin, the Austrian archduchess
Catherine, also the sister of his first wife,
Elisabeth, who had died within a year of her marriage to him, while he was still only crown prince.
The third bride was sickly and unsympathetic, and Sigismund soon lost all hope of children by her — to his despair, for as he was the last male Jagiellon in the direct line, the dynasty was threatened with extinction. He sought to remedy this by liaisons with two of the most beautiful of his countrywomen,
Barbara Giżanka and
Anna ZajÄ…czkowska. The
sejm was willing to legitimatize, and acknowledge as Sigismund's successor, any male heir who might be born to him; however, the King was to die childless.
The King's marriage was a matter of great political import to
Protestants and
Catholics alike. Had Sigismund not been so good a Catholic, he might have imitated
Henry VIII of England by pleading that his detested third wife was the sister of his first wife, and that consequently the union was uncanonical. The Polish
Protestants hoped that he would do so and thus bring about a breach with Rome at the very crisis of the religious struggle in Poland; while the
Habsburgs, who coveted the Polish throne, raised every obstacle to the childless King's remarriage.
Not till
Queen Catherine's death (
February 28,
1572) was Sigismund set free, but less than six months later he would follow her to the grave.
Sigismund's reign was a period of internal turmoil and external expansion.

Coat-of-arms of "the Two Nations."
He saw the invasion of Poland by the
Reformation, and the democratic upheaval that placed all political power in the hands of the ''
szlachta''; he saw the collapse of the
Knights of the Sword in the north (which led to the Republic's acquisition of
Livonia) and the consolidation of
Turkey's power in the south. Throughout this perilous transitional period, Sigismund successfully steered the ship of state amid the whirlpools that constantly threatened to engulf it. A less imposing figure than his father, the elegant and refined Sigismund II Augustus was nevertheless an even greater statesman than the stern and majestic
Sigismund I the Old.
Sigismund II possessed to a high degree the tenacity and patience that seem to have characterized all the
Jagiellons, and he added to these qualities a dexterity and diplomatic finesse which he may have inherited from his
Italian mother. No other Polish king seems to have so thoroughly understood the nature of the Polish ''
sejm''. Both the Austrian ambassadors and the papal legates testify to the care with which he controlled his nation. Everything went as he wished, they said, because he seemed to know everything in advance. He managed to get more money than his father ever could, and at one of his ''
sejm''s he won the hearts of the assembly by unexpectedly appearing before them in the simple grey coat of a
Masovian squire. Like his father, a pro-Austrian by conviction, he contrived even in this respect to carry with him the nation, always distrustful of the
Germans, and thus avoided serious complications with the dangerous Turks.
Sigismund II mediated for twenty years between the
Roman Catholic Church and the
Protestants without alienating the sympathies of either. His most striking memorial, however, may have been the
Union of Lublin, which finally made of Poland and Lithuania one body politic, the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth — the "Republic of the Two Nations" (, ). This achievement might well have been impossible without Sigismund.
Sigismund died at his beloved
Knyszyn on July 6, 1572, aged 52. In 1573,
Henry III of Valois was elected as King of the Polish-Lithuanian commonwealth for a few months, but then returned to France where he was crowned as King Henry III of France. Shortly thereafter, Sigismund's sister
Anna of Poland married
Stefan Batory, and they ruled as King and Queen of Poland.
Besides very close family connections, Sigismund II was especially allied to the Imperial
Habsburgs by his pledge as member of the
Order of the Golden Fleece.
Ancestors
Marriages and children
He married three times:
★ On
May 5,
1543, Sigismund married his first wife
Elisabeth of Austria (July 9, 1526 - June 15, 1545), eldest daughter of
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and
Anna of Bohemia and Hungary.
★ Between
July 28 and
August 6,
1547, Sigismund married his second wife
Barbara Radziwiłł (
December 6,
1520 -
May 8,
1551).
★ In the summer of
1553, Sigismund married
Catherine of Austria (
September 15,
1533 -
February 28,
1572), a younger sister of his first wife.
Mistresses
★
Diana di Cordona
★
Miss Weiss
★
Miss Relska
★
★ daughter
★
Zuzanna Orłowska
★
Anna ZajÄ…czkowska
★
Barbara Giżycka
★
★ Barbara - married Jakub Zawadzki
See also
★
History of Poland (1385-1569)
★
History of Poland (1569-1795)