Diet of Galicia and Lodomeria
The Diet of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, and of the Grand Duchy of Cracow was the regional assembly of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, a crown land of the Austrian Empire, and later Austria-Hungary. In the history of the Polish parliaments, it is considered the successor of the former sejm walny, or general sejm of the Kingdom of Poland and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and also of the sejmik, or local councils, in the territories of the Austrian Partition. It existed from 1861 until the dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918.
Name
The multi-ethnic nature of the Kingdom resulted in the diet having multiple different names. In German, the lingua franca of Cisleithania, it was called Landtag von Galizien und Lodomerien, meaning 'Diet of Galicia and Lodomeria'. In Polish, it was called either Sejm krajowy, meaning 'Sejm of the Land', or sejm lwowski, meaning 'Lwów Sejm'. In Ukrainian, it was called Га́лицький крайови́й сейм, transcribed Hálytsʹkyy krayovýy seym, meaning 'Sejm of Galicia'.Landtag is a German word that means 'regional assembly', or 'diet'. In Polish and Ukrainian, the word used was Sejm.
History
Parts of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Lesser Poland territories were included in the Austrian partition as early as the First Partition of Poland in 1772. From about 1775 to 1848, with several gaps, the crown land of Galicia had a relatively powerless parliamentary body, known originally as the Postulate Sejm, and from 1817, as Estates of Galicia. The Diet of Galicia and Lodomeria, which was formed in 1861 following the promulgation of the October Diploma by Emperor Franz Joseph I, had more real power than its predecessors. In Polish parliamentary tradition, it is considered to have continued the history of the general sejm and regional sejmiks on the lands of Lesser Poland and Ruthenia.The Diet was initially dominated by Polish nobles, but in time, it saw the emergence of a strong peasant faction. Another notable change over time included the emergence of a Ruthenian bloc, changing the balance of power within the body. Overall, the Diet preserved the Polish parliamentary tradition during a time in which it waned in the Prussian Partition and the Russian Partition, and saw the emergence of the major political parties and groupings that were to dominate the political life of the Second Polish Republic after World War I. The leader of the Polish peasant movement in the Second Polish Republic, Wincenty Witos, gained his experience in the Diet, elected for the first time in 1908. Similarly, the National Democrats, and the Polish socialists, had their political blocs in the diet around that time.
Composition and organization
As established by the February Patent of 1861, the Diet was unicameral, and was made up of 150 deputies. All but nine were elected by four different "Curiae", or assemblies of the social classes. An electoral system based on curiae was also used in the Imperial Council of Cisleithania, until 1907.- The Curia of the Landowners consisted of fifty-two electors chosen from amongst those people who owned land that had previously been owned by the feudal nobility, and paid at least 100 gulden a year in tax. These electors had the right to elect forty-four deputies to the Diet.
- The Curia of the Chambers of Commerce consisted of thirty-nine electors from the chambers of commerce in Lemberg, Kraków, and Brody. These electors had the right to elect three deputies, one from each city's chamber of commerce.
- The Curia of the Cities consisted of 2264 electors from important cities. The position of "elector" was granted based on status: those within the two-thirds highest tax bracket were eligible, and others became eligible on the basis of their education, or because they held an important office. Electors usually were members of the clergy, office workers, doctors, teachers at the high schools, and directors of primary schools. These electors had the right to elect twenty-three deputies to the Diet.
- The Curia of Other Municipalities consisted of 8764 electors from amongst small-scale rural landowners. There were two stages of voting for this curia. In the first stage, the suffrage was determined in the same manner as with the Curia of the Cities: those in the two-thirds highest tax bracket, with a high level of education, or an important office, were eligible. These voters elected the electors, who then elected seventy-four deputies to the Diet, each holding a constituency equivalent to a rural district.
- Nine deputies sat ex officio: two chancellors of universities, and seven archbishops and bishops. The initial nine were composed of three Greek Catholic bishops, three Roman Catholic bishops, and one Armenian Catholic bishop, along with representatives of Lemberg University and Kraków University. Three seats were added later: an additional Roman Catholic representative, one for the Lemberg Polytechnical University, and one for the Kraków Academy of Learning.
Elections were not held on a regular schedule; they occurred usually every five to six years, upon Emperor's decree. Thus the deputies' term of office lasted about six years. The Diet had ten elections: 1861, 1867, 1870, 1877, 1883, 1889, 1889, 1895, 1901, 1908, and the final one, in 1913.
At first, the deputies met in the Skarbek Theatre. From 1881, the Diet met in a newly constructed building designed by architect Juliusz Hochberger and with a program of architectural sculpture by Teodor Rygier. The building is now owned by the University of Lviv.
Competences
In the period of 1861 to 1873, the Diet elected 38 representatives from among its deputies to be sent to the Imperial Council of Cisleithania.The Diet had legislative powers. The legislative initiative was possessed by the Emperor, along with the Diet executive, and all individual deputies. It could debate and pass laws related to many issues in the field of education, culture, welfare, justice, public works, administration, religion and military. It could also impose supplementary taxes, up to 10% of the direct tax.
Marshal and Vice-Marshal
The position of 'Marshal' was equivalent to the position of 'Speaker' in Westminster-style parliaments. The Marshal was considered the presiding officer of the Diet.- Prince Leon Sapieha
- * Spiridon Lytvynovych
- * Julian Lawriwsky
- * Ivan Stupnytskyi
- Count Alfred Józef Potocki
- * Ivan Stupnytskyi
- Count Włodzimierz Dzieduszycki
- * Ivan Stupnytskyi
- Count Ludwik Wodzicki
- * Ivan Stupnytskyi
- Mikołaj Zyblikiewicz
- * Ivan Stupnytskyi
- * Sylvester Sembratovych
- Count Jan Tarnowski
- * Sylvester Sembratovych
- Prince Eustachy Sanguszko
- * Sylvester Sembratovych
- Count Stanisław Badeni, 1st time
- * Sylvester Sembratovych
- * Kostyantyn Chekhovych
- Count Andrzej Kazimierz Potocki
- * Andrey Sheptytsky
- Count Stanisław Badeni, 2nd time
- * Andrey Sheptytsky
- * Kostyantyn Chekhovych
- * Andrey Sheptytsky
- Adam Gołuchowski von Gołuchowo
- * Kostyantyn Chekhovych
- Stanisław Niezabitowski
Notable members
- Dawid Abrahamowicz
- Stanisław M Badeni
- Michał Bobrzyński
- Jakub Bojko
- Julian A. Dunajewski,
- Aleksander Fredro
- Adam Gołuchowski
- Agenor Gołuchowski
- Kazimierz Grocholski
- Stepan Kachala
- Hryhoriy Khomyshyn
- Stanisław Niezbitowski
- Anthony Petrushevych
- Eustachy Sanguszko
- Leon Sapieha
- Franciszek Smolka
- Jan Stapiński
- Ludwik Wodzicki
- Hryhoriy Yakhymovych
- Filip Zaleski
- Wacław Artur Zaleski
- Mikołaj Zyblikiewicz