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MiedzymorzeMiędzymorze (Myen-dzih-MOH-zheh): name for Jzef Piłsudski's proposed federation of Poland, Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine. The name may be rendered in English as "Tween-Seas": the federation was meant to emulate the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, that — from the late 14th to the late 18th century — had united Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (the latter also incorporating Belarus and Ukraine). The Polish-Lithuanian alliance had come about as a mutual response to a common threat from the Teutonic Order. It had been cemented by the personal union in 1386 of Poland's Queen Jadwiga and Lithuanian Grand Duke Jogaila, who became King Władysław Jagiełło of Poland. It had been further extended by the 1569 Union of Lublin, when the two states merged into a federation, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which would remain until the late 17th century the largest state in Europe. Its combined resources enabled it to withstand the aggressions of the Teutonic Order, the Mongols, the Russians, the Turks and the Swedes, for four centuries, until the partitions of the weakened Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth by its neighbors in the late 18th century. It was Piłsudski's strategic goal to resurrect a modern form of the old Commonwealth, while working for the disintegration of the Russian Empire into its ethnic constituents (the latter was his Promethean project). The accomplishment of these ends — somewhat approximated, decades later, with the creation of the European Union, and with the abolition of the Soviet Union in 1991 — might have made central Europe into a "Third Europe" invulnerable to Poland's historic antagonists, Germany and Russia. Piłsudski's dream was faced with the opposition by virtually all interested parties. Soviets pulled all strings they could to prevent this. Western Allies feared that weakened Germany and Russia may not be able to pay First World War reparations, and that the balance of power in Europe would be offset too much by the newly independent countries. Lithuanians, Ukrainians and many other nations that were approached for entry into the Miedzymorze federation were afraid of any compromise limiting their own, dearly awaited independence, and in many cases had good reasons to be wary of Poland, as various border conflicts and even all-out wars divided their new, respective governments (especially the Polish-Lithuanian War, Polish-Ukrainian War and border conflicts between Poland and Czechoslovakia). Finally, many Polish politicians like Roman Dmowski were opposed to the idea of multi-cultural federation, prefering the creation of nationalistic, pure-ethnic Polish country. Eventually, Piłsudki's dream was lost in the aftermath of the Polish-Soviet War, and the alliance between Central and Eastern European countries was never formed. Less then two decades after Piłsudski first articulated the proposal, and five years after his death, all of the countries that so persistently guarded their independence were again swallowed by their neigbours - Germany and the Soviet Union. A somewhat later version of the concept was attempted by interwar Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Jzef Beck, a Piłsudski protege. It envisioned this central European union as also including Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Scandinavia, the Baltic states, Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Greece: thus stretching not only west-east from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, but north-south from the Arctic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea. Such a polity, comprising some 150 million central Europeans, with a common foreign policy, would have been a force to be reckoned with by Nazi Germany in the west and the Soviet Union in the east.
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