More polish population in Prussia.

What if in Vienna Congress it was decided that Prussia gains Warsaw Duchy or Prussian and Austrian Partitions? Who and when could unite Germany if Prussia has no Rhineland and is busy in Poland? How could old Commonwealth nations evolve when divided by Prussia and Russia. Would Ukrainians and Belarussians awake or become "Lithuanians" with no that extensive rusification?
 
Prussia would over time turn into Prusso-Polish dual monarchy, something like northern analogue to Austria-Hungary. Meanwhile former Grand Duchy of Lithuania would stil be (unofficially) autonomous-possibly longer than IOTL because anti-Russian Polish uprisings started in Congress Poland and then spread to Lithuania. No uprisings=no repressions. Belarussians and Ukrainians would still develop separate identity from Catholic Poles/Lithuanians. With Lithuanians there are more possibilities:
-similar to IOTL-both Polish and Lithuanian speaking Lithuanians consider themselves Lithuanians and identify with Lithuanian history (Poles living in Vilnius region considered themselves Lithuanians before ww1, it was common in Vilnius Governorate that people stated that they have both Lithuanian and Polish nationality, it was not contradictory back then (like British and Scottish today, "Pole" back then had broader meaning than today, to specify Pole from the Crown term "Koroniarz" or"Mazur" was used). Adam Mickiewicz, who have written Polish national epic poem Sir Thaddeus, or the Last Lithuanian Foray: A Nobleman's Tale from the Years of 1811 and 1812 in Twelve Books of Verse is perfect example of such man, in "Sir Thaddeus" he uses term "Pole" and "Lithuanian" interchangeably, he had also written poems about Medieval Lithuanian history like "Konrad Wallenrod" or "Grażyna"), but Polish speaking Lithuanians also consider themselves in boarder sense part of the same nation as Poles living in Prussian Poland when Lithuanian speaking Lithuanians view themselves as separate nation and exclude Polish speakers.
-Both Polish and Lithuanian speaking Lithuanians consider themselves Lithuanians and at the same time both consider themselves part of Polish nation in broader sense (like Gaelic and English speaking Scots both considering themselves part of the same Scottish nation and as British).
-Both Polish and Lithuanian speaking Lithuanians consider themselves Lithuanians and at the same time both consider themselves as nation separate from Poles from Prussia (like Finnish and Swedish speaking Finns).
 
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