The Regency Council of the Kingdom of Poland () was a semi-independent and Provisional appointed authority in Poland during World War I. It was formed by Imperial Germany and Austria-Hungary within historically Polish lands in September 1917 after the dissolution of the previous authority, the Provisional Council of State, due to the Oath crisis.
The council was supposed to stay in office until the appointment of a new monarch or regent. On 7 October 1918, the Regency Council declared the independence of Poland. On 11 November, it transferred its military authority, and on 14 November the rest of its authority, to Józef Piłsudski, which led to the dissolution of the Council on the same day. Piłsudski served from 22 November as temporary chief of state of the newly independent Polish state.
Prime Ministers
- Jan Kucharzewski (November 26, 1917 – February 27, 1918)
- Antoni Ponikowski (February 27 – April 3, 1918)
- Jan Kanty Steczkowski (April 4 – October 23, 1918)
- Józef Świeżyński (October 23 – November 5, 1918)
- Władysław Wróblewski (November 5–11, 1918)
References
Further reading
- Zdzisław Julian Winnicki, Rada Regencyjna Królestwa Polskiego i jej organy (1917–1918), Wrocław 2017 (in Polish)
