An interregnum follows the death of Báthory. …
Years: 1587 - 1587
December
An interregnum follows the death of Báthory.
The election of a new monarch is finally held on August 19, 1587 in the shadow of conflict between the Polish nobility (szlachta), with the two opposing sides gathered around Chancellor Zamoyski and the Zborowscy family.
Báthory’s nephew Sigismund, the devoutly Catholic son of John III Vasa of Sweden and his first wife Catherine Jagiellon of Poland, is with the support of Zamoyski and the former king's wife, Anna Jagiellon, elected King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commnwealth and recognized as such by the interrex, the Primate of Poland, Stanisław Karnkowski.
The election is disputed, however, by the other candidate, Maximilian III of Austria, and opponents of Sigismund choose not to respect the election outcome and decree that Maximilian is the rightful monarch.
Neither Sigismund nor Maximilian are present in the Commonwealth at this time.
After receiving news of his election, Sigismund quickly departs from Sweden and arrives in Oliwa on October 7 (his landing had been delayed due to the hostility from Protestant Gdansk).
In his Pacta conventa, Sigismund accepts a reduction of monarch power in favor of the Sejm (the Diet, or Commonwealth parliament).
Lesser Prussian Treasurer Jan Dulski, representing the Crown Marshall Andrzej Opaliński, proclaims him to be the king.
Sigismund returns to his ship on the same day, arriving in Gdansk the next, and after approximately two weeks, he departs for Kraków, where he is crowned on December 27 of this year as Zygmunt III Vasa.
Locations
People
Groups
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Russia, Tsardom of
- Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Commonwealth of the Two Nations)
