Michael Wiśniowiecki
- Polish in full:
- MichaŁ Korybut Wiśniowiecki
- Born:
- July 31, 1640, Lwów, Pol.
- Died:
- Nov. 10, 1673, Lwów
- Also Known As:
- Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki
- Title / Office:
- king (1669-1673), Poland
Michael Wiśniowiecki (born July 31, 1640, Lwów, Pol.—died Nov. 10, 1673, Lwów) was the king of Poland (1669–73), whose reign was marked by struggles between the pro-Habsburg and pro-French political factions.
A native Pole and descendant of Korybut, brother of King Władysław II Jagiełło, Michael was freely elected by the unanimous vote of the Polish nobility; but he was chosen chiefly for the merit of his father, Jérémi Wiśniowiecki, a great border magnate who had victoriously kept down the Cossacks, and he proved to be a passive tool in the hands of the Habsburgs. In view of this, the French party rallied round Jan Sobieski, a military commander of rising fame. The dissensions between the two camps cost Poland a new defeat at the hands of the united Turks and Cossacks. Sealed by the Treaty of Buczacz (Buchach; 1672), by which all Polish Ukraine came under Turkish suzerainty, this defeat was wiped out only by a brilliant victory of Sobieski’s at Khotin (1673), which also, after King Michael’s early death, carried him to the throne (as John III Sobieski) against an Austrian candidate.