'Polish Republican Discourse in the Sixteenth Century will be read with interest by students and scholars of Poland and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as well as historians of early modern political theory.' Tomasz Grusiecki, Comptes Rendus
Introduction: classical republican tradition and the Polish republican discourse; 1. Polish sixteenth-century political thought in context; 1.1 The fifteenth-century origins of Polish humanism and political thought; 1.2 The political and constitutional background; 1.3 Specific features of sixteenth-century Polish political thought; 2. The commonwealth (res publica): a free political community; 2.1 The commonwealth (res publica) and the concept of political order; 2.2 Justice and law; 2.3 The paradigm of liberty; 3. Virtue and the common good; 3.1 Moral foundations of good order; 3.2 Virtue and the public good; 3.3 Citizenship and duties to the commonwealth; 3.4 Manners, education, emendation; 4. Mixed constitution and the institutional foundations of the commonwealth; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 The sources of power and the principle of supreme authority; 4.3 The mixed form of government and the monarchia mixta; 4.4 The king, senators, and parliamentary envoys; 4.5 Free election; Epilogue.