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Augustus III of Poland

Augustus III (Polish: August III Sas, Lithuanian: Augustas III; 17 October 1696 – 5 October 1763) was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1733 until 1763, as well as Elector of Saxony in the Holy Roman Empire where he was known as Frederick Augustus II (German: Friedrich August II).

Augustus III
Portrait by Louis de Silvestre
King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania
Reign5 October 1733 – 5 October 1763
Coronation17 January 1734
Wawel Cathedral, Kraków
PredecessorStanisław I
SuccessorStanisław II Augustus
Elector of Saxony
Reign1 February 1733 – 5 October 1763
PredecessorFrederick Augustus I
SuccessorFrederick Christian
Born17 October 1696
Dresden, Electorate of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
Died5 October 1763(1763-10-05) (aged 66)
Dresden, Electorate of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1719; died 1757)
Issue
More
Frederick Christian, Elector of Saxony
Maria Amalia, Queen of Spain
Maria Anna, Electress of Bavaria
Prince Francis Xavier of Saxony
Maria Josepha, Dauphine of France
Charles, Duke of Courland
Maria Christina, Abbess of Remiremont
Princess Maria Elisabeth
Albert Casimir, Duke of Teschen
Clemens Wenceslaus, Archbishop-Elector of Trier
Maria Kunigunde, Abbess of Essen
HouseWettin
FatherAugustus II of Poland
MotherChristiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
ReligionRoman Catholic (since 1712)
Lutheran (until 1712)
Signature

He was the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, and converted to Roman Catholicism in 1712 to secure his candidacy for the Polish throne. In 1719 he married Maria Josepha, daughter of Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor, and became elector of Saxony following his father's death in 1733. Augustus was able to gain the support of Charles VI by agreeing to the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 and also gained recognition from Russian Empress Anna by supporting Russia's claim to the region of Courland. He was elected king of Poland by a small minority on 5 October 1733 and subsequently banished the former Polish king Stanisław I. He was crowned in Kraków on 17 January 1734.[1]

Augustus was supportive of Austria against Prussia in the War of Austrian Succession and again in the Seven Years' War (1756), both of which resulted in Saxony being defeated and occupied by Prussia. In Poland, his rule was marked by the increasing influence of the Czartoryski and Poniatowski families, and by the intervention of Catherine the Great in Polish affairs. His rule deepened the social anarchy in Poland and increased the country's dependence on its neighbours, notably Prussia, Austria, and Russia. The Russian Empire prevented him from installing his family on the Polish throne, supporting instead the aristocrat Stanisław August Poniatowski, the lover of Catherine the Great. Throughout his reign, Augustus was known to be more interested in ease and pleasure than in the affairs of state; this notable patron of the arts left the administration of Saxony and Poland to his chief adviser, Heinrich von Brühl, who in turn left Polish administration chiefly to the powerful Czartoryski family.

Royal titles edit

Royal titles in Latin: Augustus tertius, Dei gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniæ, Russiæ, Prussiæ, Masoviæ, Samogitiæ, Kijoviæ, Volhiniæ, Podoliæ, Podlachiæ, Livoniæ, Smolensciæ, Severiæ, Czerniechoviæque, nec non-hæreditarius dux Saxoniæ et princeps elector etc.

English translation: August III, by the grace of God, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania, Ruthenia, Prussia, Masovia, Samogitia, Kiev, Volhynia, Podolia, Podlachia, Livonia, Smolensk, Severia, Chernihiv, and also hereditary Duke of Saxony and Prince-Elector, etc.

Biography edit

 
Augustus, aged 19 years in 1715 by Nicolas de Largillière

Early life and education edit

Augustus was born 17 October 1696 in Dresden, the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, Prince-Elector of Saxony and ruler of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth who belonged to the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin. His mother was Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, daughter of Christian Ernst, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth. Unlike his father, Christiane remained a fervent Protestant throughout her life and never set foot in Catholic Poland during her 30-year service as queen consort. Despite the pressure from Augustus II, she was never crowned at Wawel in Kraków and purely held a titular title of queen.[2] This move was viewed by the Polish nobility as a provocation and from the beginning the prince was treated with prejudice in Poland.

 
Prince Frederick Augustus, by Louis de Silvestre, 1727

From his early years, Augustus was groomed to succeed as king of Poland-Lithuania; best tutors were hired from across the continent and the prince studied Polish, German, French and Latin.[3] He was taught Russian, but was unable to speak it fluently,[4] as well as exact sciences including mathematics, chemistry and geography.[4] He also practiced equestrianism in his youth.[5] While his father spent time in Poland, the young Augustus was left in the care of his grandmother, Princess Anna Sophie of Denmark, who initially raised him Lutheran.[6] This was particularly unfavourable for the Poles, who wouldn't accept or tolerate a Protestant monarch. As a consequence, a troubled Augustus II organized a tour of Catholic countries in Europe for his son which he hoped would bring him closer to Catholicism and break the bond between him and his controlling grandmother. In Venice, the Polish entourage thwarted a kidnapping attempt organized by British agents of Queen Anne in order to prevent him from converting.[7][8] He also witnessed the coronation of Charles VI in 1711 after the death of his brother and predecessor, Joseph I.[5]

Augustus eventually converted to Roman Catholicism in November 1712 while extensively touring Italy, and its cultural and religious heritage.[6] He was then under the supervision of the Jesuits, who certainly contributed to the cause. The public announcement of conversion in 1717 triggered discontent among the Protestant Saxon aristocracy.[6][9][10] Faced with a hereditary Catholic succession for Saxony, Prussia and Hanover attempted to oust Saxony from the directorship of the Protestant body in the Reichstag of the Holy Roman Empire, but Saxony managed to retain the directorship.[11]

 
Reception of Augustus at Versailles by Louis XIV, 1714

On 26 September 1714, Augustus was warmly welcomed by Louis XIV of France at Versailles. Louis rejoiced when he heard that Augustus converted to Catholicism and permitted him to stay at the royal court and in Paris. The young prince participated in balls, masquerades and private parties that were hosted by the Sun King himself.[5] During this time, Augustus improved his knowledge of the French language and learnt how to approach politics and diplomacy.[5] In June 1715, he departed Versailles and travelled across France, visiting Bordeaux, Moissac, Toulouse, Carcassonne, Marseille and Lyon.[5] Apart from sightseeing, the purpose of this trip was to understand how cities and villages function. Being brought up in great wealth, Augustus was not entirely aware of how extensive poverty and poor living conditions could be in the countryside.

Marriage and wedding edit

 
Wedding reception of Augustus III and Maria Josepha at the Zwinger Palace in Dresden, 1719

On 20 August 1719, Augustus married Maria Josepha of Austria in Vienna. She was the daughter of the deceased Emperor Joseph I and niece of Charles VI of the Holy Roman Empire, whose coronation young Augustus attended. This marriage wasn't coincidental; Augustus II the Strong orchestrated it to maintain the position of the Saxons within the Holy Roman Empire. The alliance with Catholic Charles would prove fruitful in case of hostile or armed opposition from the Protestant states within the Empire. Ten days earlier, on 10 August 1719, Maria Josepha was forced to renounce her claim to the throne of Austria in favour of her uncle's daughter, Maria Theresa. In accordance with the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 issued by Charles, a female heir or the eldest daughter would be permitted to inherit the throne of Austria. Augustus II also hoped to place Saxony in a better position should there arise a war of succession to the Austrian territories.[12]

 
Royal Monogram of King Augustus III of Poland.

The wedding celebration in Dresden was one of the most splendorous and expensive of the Baroque era in Europe.[13] Over 800 guests were invited for a 2-week celebration. The main banquet was held in a chamber that was transformed into an artificial silver mine to astound the invitees. Apart from exotic dishes, over 500 deer were brought in from the Białowieża Forest for the feast. Approximately 4 million thalers were spent for this occasion.[13]

Succession edit

 
Coronation mantle of Augustus III, National Museum in Warsaw

Augustus II died suddenly on 1 February 1733, following a Sejm (Polish parliament) session in Warsaw. Augustus III inherited the Saxon electorate without any problems, but his election to the Polish throne was much more complicated. Shortly before the ailing king died, Prussia, Austria and Russia signed a pact known as the Treaty of the Three Black Eagles, which would prevent Augustus III and Stanisław Leszczyński from inheriting the Polish throne. The royal elections in Poland and the elective monarchy, in general, weakened the country and allowed other powers to meddle in Polish affairs. The neighbouring countries that signed the treaty preferred a neutral monarch like Infante Manuel, Count of Ourém, brother of John V of Portugal, or any living relative of the Piast dynasty. The agreement had provisions for all three powers to agree that it was in their best interest that their common neighbour, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, did not undertake any reforms that might strengthen it and trigger expansionism. The new king would also have to maintain friendly relations with these countries.

The treaty quickly became ineffective as Prussia began to support Leszczyński and allowed him safe passage from France to Poland through German lands. As a result, Austria and Russia signed on 19 August 1733 the Löwenwolde's Treaty, named after Karl Gustav von Löwenwolde. The terms of Löwenwolde's Treaty were direct; Russia opted for a quid pro quo – they would provide troops to ensure Augustus III was elected king and in turn, Augustus would recognise Anna Ivanovna as Empress of Russia, thus relinquishing Polish claims to Livonia and Courland.[14][15] Austria received a promise that as king, Augustus would both renounce any claim to the Austrian succession and continue respecting the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713.[16]

War of the Polish Succession edit

 
Royal Polish Regalia of Augustus III, made around the time of the Succession War

Augustus on his candidacy to the Polish throne was opposed by Stanisław I Leszczyński (Stanislaus I), who had usurped the throne with Swedish support during the Great Northern War. Reigning from 1706 until 1709, Stanisław was overthrown after the Swedish defeat at Poltava. Returning from exile in 1733 with the support of Louis XV of France and Spain, Stanisław sparked the War of the Polish Succession.

Throughout the spring and summer of 1733, France began mobilizing and stationing forces along its northern and eastern borders, while Austria massed troops on the Polish frontier, reducing garrisons in the Duchy of Milan for the purpose. Prince Eugene of Savoy recommended to the emperor a more warlike posture against its longtime rival, France. He suggested that the Rhine valley and northern Italy should be strengthened with more troops, however only minimal steps were taken to improve imperial defences on the Rhine. In July 1733, Augustus agreed to Austria's and Russia's terms per Löwenwolde's Treaty. During the election sejm in August, Russian troops counting 30,000 men under the command of Peter Lacy entered Poland to secure Augustus' succession. The election was de jure won by Stanisław, with 12,000 votes. Augustus received 3,000, however, he had the support of Poland's influential, wealthiest and most corrupt magnates, such as Michał Serwacy Wiśniowiecki.

The Franco-Spanish coalition declared war on Austria and Saxony on 10 October. The Italian states of Savoy-Sardinia and Parma also joined the struggle against Austrian rule in northern Italy. Most of the battles took place outside of Poland and the main focus of the war was personal interests and demonstration of superiority. The Russian-Saxon forces chased Stanisław until he was besieged at Gdańsk (Danzig) on 22 February 1734. In June, when the garrisons at Gdańsk surrendered, Stanisław fled to Königsberg and then back to France. The Pacification Sejm in 1736 de facto confirmed Augustus III as King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania.

To this day, the aphorism and phrase od Sasa do Lasa (lit. from the Saxon to Leszczyński) exists in the Polish language and is used when describing two completely opposite things in everyday life.[17]

Reign and diplomacy edit

Poland edit

 
Count von Brühl exhibiting his extravagant Meissen porcelain. Brühl was the viceroy of Poland and headed the Saxon court

As King, Augustus was uninterested in the affairs of his Polish–Lithuanian dominion, focusing instead on hunting, the opera, and the collection of artwork at the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister. He spent less than three years of his thirty-year reign in Poland, where political feuding between the House of Czartoryski and the Potocki paralyzed the Sejm (Liberum veto), fostering internal political anarchy and weakening the Commonwealth. Augustus delegated most of his powers and responsibilities in the Commonwealth to Heinrich von Brühl, who served in effect as the viceroy of Poland. Brühl in turn left the politics in Poland to the most powerful magnates and nobles, which resulted in widespread corruption.[18] Under Augustus, Poland was not involved in any major conflicts which further lessened its position in Europe and allowed the neighbouring countries to take advantage of the disorder. Any opposition was violently crushed by Brühl, who used either Saxon or Russian forces that permanently stationed in the country.[18]

Brühl was a skillful diplomat and strategist; Augustus could only be reached through him if an important political feud arose. He was also the head of the Saxon court in Dresden and was fond of collectibles, such as gadgets, jewellery and Meissen porcelain, the most famous being the Swan Service composed of 2,200 individual pieces made between 1737 and 1741.[19] It has been described as possibly "the finest table service ever produced" and part of it are exhibited at the National Museum in Warsaw.[19] He also owned the largest collections of watches, vests, wigs and hats in Europe, though this cannot be accurately assessed.[20][21] Brühl was depicted by his rivals as a nouveau-riche materialist, who used his wealth to gain support. His lavish spending was immortalized by Augustus' reported question to the viceroy "Brühl, do I have money?"[18]

By 1748 Augustus III completed extending the Saxon Palace in Warsaw and made significant contributions in remodelling the Royal Castle. In 1750, von Brühl purchased a residence adjacent to the larger Saxon Palace and transformed it into a rococo masterpiece, which later became known as the Brühl Palace. Both buildings were completely destroyed by the Nazis during World War II.[22]

War of the Austrian Succession edit

 
View of Dresden's Neumarkt in 1747, by Bernardo Bellotto

With the marriage to the Austrian princess Maria Josepha, Augustus was bound to accept the succession of her cousin, Maria Theresa, as Archduchess of Austria and Queen of Hungary and Bohemia. Saxony mediated between the friendly French faction and the Habsburg faction of Maria Theresa. Between 1741 and 1742 Saxony was allied with France, but changed sides with the help of Austrian diplomats.[23]

In the first days of December 1740, the Prussians assembled along the Oder river and on 16 December, Frederick II invaded Silesia without a formal declaration of war. The Austrian troops which then stationed in Silesia were poorly supplied and outnumbered as the Habsburgs concentrated their supreme force on Hungary and Italy. They held onto the fortresses of Glogau, Breslau, and Brieg, but abandoned the rest of the region and withdrew into Moravia. This campaign gave Prussia control of most of the richest provinces in the Habsburg monarchy, with the commercial centre of Breslau as well as mining, weaving and dyeing industries. Silesia was also rich in natural resources such as coal, chalk, copper and gold.

 
Augustus III by Rotari, 1755

Saxony joined Austria in the Second Silesian War, which erupted after Prussia proclaimed its support of Charles VII as Holy Roman Emperor and invaded Bohemia on 15 August 1744. The true cause behind the invasion was Frederick's personal expansionist ideas and goals. On 8 January 1745, the Treaty of Warsaw united Great Britain, the Habsburg monarchy, the Dutch Republic and Saxony into what became known as the "Quadruple Alliance", which was aimed at securing the Austrian throne for Maria Theresa. Soon-after Charles VII died of gout in Munich, which weakened the Prussians. However, Prussia still maintained military superiority; the successful battles of Hennersdorf and Kesselsdorf opened the way to Dresden, which Frederick occupied on 18 December. The Treaty of Dresden was eventually completed on Christmas Day (25 December) and Saxony was obliged to pay one million rixdollars in reparations to the Prussian state. The treaty ended the Second Silesian War with a status quo ante bellum.

Maria Theresa was finally recognized in her inheritance with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, which proved a Pyrrhic victory for Augustus III; the conflict nearly bankrupted Saxony. Meanwhile, the affairs in Poland remained highly neglected.

Seven Years' War edit

The Electorate of Saxony was involved in the Seven Years' War from 1756 to 1763. The Saxons were allied with Austria and Russia against Frederick the Great of Prussia, who saw Saxony as another potential field for expansion. Saxony was then merely a buffer zone between Prussia and Austrian Bohemia as well as Silesia, which Frederick attempted to annex in their entirety. Moreover, Saxony and Poland were separated by a strip of land in Silesia and Lusatia which made the movement of troops even more difficult. Frederick's plans also entailed annexing the Electorate of Hanover, but joining France would trigger an Austro-Russian attack and occupation. On 29 August 1756, the Prussian Army preemptively invaded Saxony, beginning the Third Silesian War, a theatre of the Seven Years' War. Saxony was bled dry and exploited at the maximum extent to support Prussia's war effort. The Treaty of Hubertusburg signed on 15 February 1763 ended the conflict with Frederick's victory and Saxony renounced its claim to Silesia.

Death edit

In April 1763, Augustus returned ill and frail from Poland to Dresden with his closest advisors, leaving Primate Władysław Aleksander Łubieński behind to take care of the affairs in the Commonwealth.[24] He died suddenly on 5 October 1763 in Dresden from apoplexy (stroke).[24] Unlike his father who rests at Wawel in Kraków, Augustus III was buried at Dresden Cathedral and remains one of the few Polish monarchs who were buried outside of Poland.

Augustus's eldest surviving son, Frederick Christian, succeeded his father as elector but died two and a half months later.

In the Commonwealth, on 7 September 1764, with the small participation of the szlachta initiated by the Czartoryski's and the strong support of Russia, Stanisław August Poniatowski was elected king of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania. Reigning under the name Stanisław II Augustus, Poniatowski was the son of the elder Stanisław Poniatowski, a powerful Polish noble and a onetime agent of Stanisław I; in youth he was a lover of Catherine II of Russia and as such enjoyed strong support from that Empress's court.

Legacy edit

Patron of arts edit

 
Saxon Facade of the Royal Castle in Warsaw

Augustus III was a great patron of the arts and architecture. During his reign the Baroque Catholic Church of the Royal Court in Dresden (present-day Dresden Cathedral) was built, in which he was later buried as one of the few Polish kings buried outside the Wawel Cathedral in Kraków. He greatly expanded the Dresden art gallery, to the extent that in 1747 it was placed in a new location at the present-day Johanneum, where it remained until 1855 when it was moved to the newly built Semper Gallery. In 1748 he founded the Opera House (Operalnia) in Warsaw and the Collegium medico-chirurgicum, the first medical school in Dresden.[25] During his reign, the extension of the Saxon Palace in Warsaw, begun by his father Augustus II, was completed, and the reconstruction of the eastern façade of the Royal Castle was ordered, thus creating the so-called Saxon Façade, an iconic part of the Vistula panorama of the Warsaw Old Town.

 
Meissen porcelain figure of King Augustus III

In 1733, the composer Johann Sebastian Bach dedicated the Kyrie–Gloria Mass in B minor, BWV 232 I (early version), to Augustus in honor of his succession to the Saxon electorate, with the hope of appointment as Court Composer, a title Bach received three years later.[26] Bach's title of Koeniglicher Pohlnischer Hoff Compositeur (Royal Polish Court Composer, and court composer to the Elector of Saxony) is engraved on the title page of Bach's famous Goldberg Variations. Augustus III was also the patron of composer Johann Adolph Hasse, who was granted the title of the Royal-Polish and Electoral-Saxon Kapellmeister by his father, Augustus II, in 1731,[27] and thanks to Augustus III the same title was obtained in 1716 by composer Johann David Heinichen.[28]

Personal life and criticism edit

 
Donors to the General Hospital of Infant Jesus; Augustus III is in the top left corner, 18th-century depictions

In 1732, a French priest named Gabriel Piotr Baudouin founded the first orphanage in Poland, situated in Warsaw's Old Town. The facility was later moved to the nearby Warecki Square (now Warsaw Insurgents Square), and in 1758 Augustus III decreed that the new institution be called Szpital Generalny Dzieciątka Jezus (The General Hospital of Infant Jesus). The newly established hospital expanded its operations into treating not only orphans but also the sick and the poor.[29] Augustus remained a charitable man throughout his life and donated to the hospital. His successor, Stanisław Augustus, also contributed to the cause.

Despite his charitable manner, Augustus was viewed in Poland as an impotent monarch, obese, plump, ugly and lazy sybarite with no interest in the affairs of the state.[30] Such harsh critique and opinion continues to this day. On the other hand, historian Jacek Staszewski was able to find a description of Augustus' character in the Dresden archives in the late 1980s; he was considered an honest and affectionate man, who was widely respected during his reign by both the Saxons and the Poles.[30] In his personal life, Augustus was a devoted husband to Maria Josepha, with whom he had sixteen children. Unlike his father who was a notorious womanizer, he was never unfaithful and enjoyed spending time with his spouse, uncommon among the royalty in those days.[31] He also favoured hunting.

Depictions edit

Augustus III was portrayed by Ernst Dernburg in the 1941 film Friedemann Bach.

Issue edit

On 20 August 1719, Augustus married Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria, the eldest child of Joseph I, the Holy Roman Emperor. They had sixteen children, but only fourteen or fifteen are recognized by historians:[9][10]

Gallery edit

Ancestry edit

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ "Augustus III | king of Poland and elector of Saxony". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. ^ Clarissa Campbell Orr: Queenship in Europe 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press (2004)
  3. ^ Jacek Staszewski, August III Sas, Wrocław, 2010, p. 27–29, 70 (in Polish)
  4. ^ a b Staszewski, Op. cit., p. 28
  5. ^ a b c d e "August III - przedostatni król i jego legenda | Łazienki Królewskie". lazienki-krolewskie.pl.
  6. ^ a b c "August III Wettyn (król Polski 1733–1763)". TwojaHistoria.pl.
  7. ^ "Polski slownik biograficzny: Kopernicki, I.-Kozłowska". Skład główny w księg, Gebethnera i Wolffa. 21 March 1935.
  8. ^ Konopczyński, Władysław (21 March 1969). "Polski słownik biograficzny". Nakł. Polskiej Akademii Umiejętności.
  9. ^ a b Flathe, Heinrich Theodor (1878), "Friedrich August II., Kurfürst von Sachsen", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 7: 784–86.
  10. ^ a b Staszewski, Jacek (1996), August III. Kurfürst von Sachsen und König von Polen (in German), Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, ISBN 3-05-002600-6.
  11. ^ Kalipke, Andreas (2010). "The Corpus Evangelicorum". In Coy, J.P.; Marschke, B. Benjamin; Sabean D.W. (eds.). The Holy Roman Empire, Reconsidered. Berghahn. pp. 228–247.
  12. ^ Helen, Watanabe-O'Kelly (2004). "Religion and the Consort: Two Electresses of Saxony and Queens of Poland (1697–1757)". In Campbell Orr, Clarissa (ed.). Queenship in Europe 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press. p. 265. ISBN 0-521-81422-7.
  13. ^ a b "Ostatnia polska królowa. Władczyni. o której nie powiedzieli Ci na lekcjach historii". WielkaHistoria. 30 July 2019.
  14. ^ That effectivity meant supporting the rule of Ernest Biron, a Russian court favourite. Corwin, Edward Henry Lewinski (1917) The Political History of Poland Polish Book Importing Company, New York, page 288, OCLC 626738
  15. ^ Ragsdale, Hugh (1993) Imperial Russian foreign policy Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, page 32–33, ISBN 0-521-44229-X
  16. ^ Corwin, Edward Henry Lewinski (1917) The political History of Poland Polish Book Importing Company, New York, page 286–288, OCLC 626738
  17. ^ "Od Sasa do Lasa". werandacountry.pl. 17 April 2015.
  18. ^ a b c "Zdanie, które podobno mówi wszystko o rządach Augusta III Sasa. Ale czy słusznie?". TwojaHistoria.pl. 16 January 2019.
  19. ^ a b "Swan Service | porcelain tableware". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  20. ^ Różycki, Bogusław Wojciech (22 March 2011). Zachodnie kresy Rzeczpospolitej: wzdłuż granicy na Odrze i Nysie : przewodnik. Oficyna Wydawnicza "Rewasz". ISBN 9788362460113.
  21. ^ Watra-Przewłocki, J. (22 March 1918). "Historya Polski ilustrowana". Nakł. i drukiem Wydawn. Braci Worzałłów.
  22. ^ "Fundacja Warszawa 1939". Fundacja Warszawa 1939.
  23. ^ Browning, Reed S. (1994). War of the Austrian Succession. Alan Sutton. ISBN 978-0-750-90578-7. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  24. ^ a b "250. rocznica śmierci króla Polski Augusta III Wettyna". dzieje.pl.
  25. ^ "Collegium medico-chirurgicum". Stadtwiki Dresden. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  26. ^ "Missa in B Minor ("Kyrie" and "Gloria" of the B Minor Mass)". World Digital Library. 1733. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  27. ^ . KomponistenQuartier. Archived from the original on 25 March 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  28. ^ "Słuchajmy Heinichena..." Radio Kraków. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  29. ^ . dzieciatkajezus.pl. Archived from the original on 24 July 2010. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
  30. ^ a b August III Sas: Amazon.co.uk: Staszewski, Jacek: 9788304050341: Books. ASIN 830405034X.
  31. ^ "August III Sas - Staszewski Jacek - Ossolineum - Księgarnia internetowa czytam.pl". czytam.pl.
  32. ^ "Christine", , Netherlands: Royalty guide, 1735, archived from the original (JPEG) on 28 February 2008.
  33. ^ "Elisabeth", , Netherlands: Royalty guide, 1736, archived from the original (JPEG) on 28 February 2008.

External links edit

  • "Augustus III." . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. III (9th ed.). 1878. p. 85.
  • Bach, Johann Sebastian, "Mass in B Minor", , Oregon Bach festival, archived from the original (Adobe Flash) on 23 July 2011, retrieved 21 August 2011.
Augustus III of Poland (Frederick Augustus II of Saxony)
Born: 17 October 1696 Died: 5 October 1763
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Poland
1733–1763
Succeeded by
Preceded by Elector of Saxony
1733–1763
Succeeded by

augustus, poland, augustus, polish, august, lithuanian, augustas, october, 1696, october, 1763, king, poland, grand, duke, lithuania, from, 1733, until, 1763, well, elector, saxony, holy, roman, empire, where, known, frederick, augustus, german, friedrich, aug. Augustus III Polish August III Sas Lithuanian Augustas III 17 October 1696 5 October 1763 was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1733 until 1763 as well as Elector of Saxony in the Holy Roman Empire where he was known as Frederick Augustus II German Friedrich August II Augustus IIIPortrait by Louis de SilvestreKing of PolandGrand Duke of LithuaniaReign5 October 1733 5 October 1763Coronation17 January 1734 Wawel Cathedral KrakowPredecessorStanislaw ISuccessorStanislaw II AugustusElector of SaxonyReign1 February 1733 5 October 1763PredecessorFrederick Augustus ISuccessorFrederick ChristianBorn17 October 1696Dresden Electorate of Saxony Holy Roman EmpireDied5 October 1763 1763 10 05 aged 66 Dresden Electorate of Saxony Holy Roman EmpireBurialDresden Cathedral DresdenSpouseMaria Josepha of Austria m 1719 died 1757 wbr IssueMoreFrederick Christian Elector of SaxonyMaria Amalia Queen of SpainMaria Anna Electress of BavariaPrince Francis Xavier of SaxonyMaria Josepha Dauphine of FranceCharles Duke of CourlandMaria Christina Abbess of RemiremontPrincess Maria ElisabethAlbert Casimir Duke of TeschenClemens Wenceslaus Archbishop Elector of TrierMaria Kunigunde Abbess of EssenHouseWettinFatherAugustus II of PolandMotherChristiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg BayreuthReligionRoman Catholic since 1712 Lutheran until 1712 SignatureHe was the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong and converted to Roman Catholicism in 1712 to secure his candidacy for the Polish throne In 1719 he married Maria Josepha daughter of Joseph I Holy Roman Emperor and became elector of Saxony following his father s death in 1733 Augustus was able to gain the support of Charles VI by agreeing to the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 and also gained recognition from Russian Empress Anna by supporting Russia s claim to the region of Courland He was elected king of Poland by a small minority on 5 October 1733 and subsequently banished the former Polish king Stanislaw I He was crowned in Krakow on 17 January 1734 1 Augustus was supportive of Austria against Prussia in the War of Austrian Succession and again in the Seven Years War 1756 both of which resulted in Saxony being defeated and occupied by Prussia In Poland his rule was marked by the increasing influence of the Czartoryski and Poniatowski families and by the intervention of Catherine the Great in Polish affairs His rule deepened the social anarchy in Poland and increased the country s dependence on its neighbours notably Prussia Austria and Russia The Russian Empire prevented him from installing his family on the Polish throne supporting instead the aristocrat Stanislaw August Poniatowski the lover of Catherine the Great Throughout his reign Augustus was known to be more interested in ease and pleasure than in the affairs of state this notable patron of the arts left the administration of Saxony and Poland to his chief adviser Heinrich von Bruhl who in turn left Polish administration chiefly to the powerful Czartoryski family Contents 1 Royal titles 2 Biography 2 1 Early life and education 2 2 Marriage and wedding 2 3 Succession 2 4 War of the Polish Succession 2 5 Reign and diplomacy 2 5 1 Poland 2 5 2 War of the Austrian Succession 2 5 3 Seven Years War 2 6 Death 3 Legacy 3 1 Patron of arts 3 2 Personal life and criticism 4 Depictions 5 Issue 6 Gallery 7 Ancestry 8 See also 9 Notes and references 10 External linksRoyal titles editRoyal titles in Latin Augustus tertius Dei gratia rex Poloniae magnus dux Lithuaniae Russiae Prussiae Masoviae Samogitiae Kijoviae Volhiniae Podoliae Podlachiae Livoniae Smolensciae Severiae Czerniechoviaeque nec non haereditarius dux Saxoniae et princeps elector etc English translation August III by the grace of God King of Poland Grand Duke of Lithuania Ruthenia Prussia Masovia Samogitia Kiev Volhynia Podolia Podlachia Livonia Smolensk Severia Chernihiv and also hereditary Duke of Saxony and Prince Elector etc Biography edit nbsp Augustus aged 19 years in 1715 by Nicolas de LargilliereEarly life and education edit Augustus was born 17 October 1696 in Dresden the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong Prince Elector of Saxony and ruler of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth who belonged to the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin His mother was Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg Bayreuth daughter of Christian Ernst Margrave of Brandenburg Bayreuth Unlike his father Christiane remained a fervent Protestant throughout her life and never set foot in Catholic Poland during her 30 year service as queen consort Despite the pressure from Augustus II she was never crowned at Wawel in Krakow and purely held a titular title of queen 2 This move was viewed by the Polish nobility as a provocation and from the beginning the prince was treated with prejudice in Poland nbsp Prince Frederick Augustus by Louis de Silvestre 1727From his early years Augustus was groomed to succeed as king of Poland Lithuania best tutors were hired from across the continent and the prince studied Polish German French and Latin 3 He was taught Russian but was unable to speak it fluently 4 as well as exact sciences including mathematics chemistry and geography 4 He also practiced equestrianism in his youth 5 While his father spent time in Poland the young Augustus was left in the care of his grandmother Princess Anna Sophie of Denmark who initially raised him Lutheran 6 This was particularly unfavourable for the Poles who wouldn t accept or tolerate a Protestant monarch As a consequence a troubled Augustus II organized a tour of Catholic countries in Europe for his son which he hoped would bring him closer to Catholicism and break the bond between him and his controlling grandmother In Venice the Polish entourage thwarted a kidnapping attempt organized by British agents of Queen Anne in order to prevent him from converting 7 8 He also witnessed the coronation of Charles VI in 1711 after the death of his brother and predecessor Joseph I 5 Augustus eventually converted to Roman Catholicism in November 1712 while extensively touring Italy and its cultural and religious heritage 6 He was then under the supervision of the Jesuits who certainly contributed to the cause The public announcement of conversion in 1717 triggered discontent among the Protestant Saxon aristocracy 6 9 10 Faced with a hereditary Catholic succession for Saxony Prussia and Hanover attempted to oust Saxony from the directorship of the Protestant body in the Reichstag of the Holy Roman Empire but Saxony managed to retain the directorship 11 nbsp Reception of Augustus at Versailles by Louis XIV 1714On 26 September 1714 Augustus was warmly welcomed by Louis XIV of France at Versailles Louis rejoiced when he heard that Augustus converted to Catholicism and permitted him to stay at the royal court and in Paris The young prince participated in balls masquerades and private parties that were hosted by the Sun King himself 5 During this time Augustus improved his knowledge of the French language and learnt how to approach politics and diplomacy 5 In June 1715 he departed Versailles and travelled across France visiting Bordeaux Moissac Toulouse Carcassonne Marseille and Lyon 5 Apart from sightseeing the purpose of this trip was to understand how cities and villages function Being brought up in great wealth Augustus was not entirely aware of how extensive poverty and poor living conditions could be in the countryside Marriage and wedding edit nbsp Wedding reception of Augustus III and Maria Josepha at the Zwinger Palace in Dresden 1719On 20 August 1719 Augustus married Maria Josepha of Austria in Vienna She was the daughter of the deceased Emperor Joseph I and niece of Charles VI of the Holy Roman Empire whose coronation young Augustus attended This marriage wasn t coincidental Augustus II the Strong orchestrated it to maintain the position of the Saxons within the Holy Roman Empire The alliance with Catholic Charles would prove fruitful in case of hostile or armed opposition from the Protestant states within the Empire Ten days earlier on 10 August 1719 Maria Josepha was forced to renounce her claim to the throne of Austria in favour of her uncle s daughter Maria Theresa In accordance with the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 issued by Charles a female heir or the eldest daughter would be permitted to inherit the throne of Austria Augustus II also hoped to place Saxony in a better position should there arise a war of succession to the Austrian territories 12 nbsp Royal Monogram of King Augustus III of Poland The wedding celebration in Dresden was one of the most splendorous and expensive of the Baroque era in Europe 13 Over 800 guests were invited for a 2 week celebration The main banquet was held in a chamber that was transformed into an artificial silver mine to astound the invitees Apart from exotic dishes over 500 deer were brought in from the Bialowieza Forest for the feast Approximately 4 million thalers were spent for this occasion 13 Succession edit Main article 1733 Polish Lithuanian royal election nbsp Coronation mantle of Augustus III National Museum in WarsawAugustus II died suddenly on 1 February 1733 following a Sejm Polish parliament session in Warsaw Augustus III inherited the Saxon electorate without any problems but his election to the Polish throne was much more complicated Shortly before the ailing king died Prussia Austria and Russia signed a pact known as the Treaty of the Three Black Eagles which would prevent Augustus III and Stanislaw Leszczynski from inheriting the Polish throne The royal elections in Poland and the elective monarchy in general weakened the country and allowed other powers to meddle in Polish affairs The neighbouring countries that signed the treaty preferred a neutral monarch like Infante Manuel Count of Ourem brother of John V of Portugal or any living relative of the Piast dynasty The agreement had provisions for all three powers to agree that it was in their best interest that their common neighbour the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth did not undertake any reforms that might strengthen it and trigger expansionism The new king would also have to maintain friendly relations with these countries The treaty quickly became ineffective as Prussia began to support Leszczynski and allowed him safe passage from France to Poland through German lands As a result Austria and Russia signed on 19 August 1733 the Lowenwolde s Treaty named after Karl Gustav von Lowenwolde The terms of Lowenwolde s Treaty were direct Russia opted for a quid pro quo they would provide troops to ensure Augustus III was elected king and in turn Augustus would recognise Anna Ivanovna as Empress of Russia thus relinquishing Polish claims to Livonia and Courland 14 15 Austria received a promise that as king Augustus would both renounce any claim to the Austrian succession and continue respecting the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 16 War of the Polish Succession edit Main article War of the Polish Succession nbsp Royal Polish Regalia of Augustus III made around the time of the Succession WarAugustus on his candidacy to the Polish throne was opposed by Stanislaw I Leszczynski Stanislaus I who had usurped the throne with Swedish support during the Great Northern War Reigning from 1706 until 1709 Stanislaw was overthrown after the Swedish defeat at Poltava Returning from exile in 1733 with the support of Louis XV of France and Spain Stanislaw sparked the War of the Polish Succession Throughout the spring and summer of 1733 France began mobilizing and stationing forces along its northern and eastern borders while Austria massed troops on the Polish frontier reducing garrisons in the Duchy of Milan for the purpose Prince Eugene of Savoy recommended to the emperor a more warlike posture against its longtime rival France He suggested that the Rhine valley and northern Italy should be strengthened with more troops however only minimal steps were taken to improve imperial defences on the Rhine In July 1733 Augustus agreed to Austria s and Russia s terms per Lowenwolde s Treaty During the election sejm in August Russian troops counting 30 000 men under the command of Peter Lacy entered Poland to secure Augustus succession The election was de jure won by Stanislaw with 12 000 votes Augustus received 3 000 however he had the support of Poland s influential wealthiest and most corrupt magnates such as Michal Serwacy Wisniowiecki The Franco Spanish coalition declared war on Austria and Saxony on 10 October The Italian states of Savoy Sardinia and Parma also joined the struggle against Austrian rule in northern Italy Most of the battles took place outside of Poland and the main focus of the war was personal interests and demonstration of superiority The Russian Saxon forces chased Stanislaw until he was besieged at Gdansk Danzig on 22 February 1734 In June when the garrisons at Gdansk surrendered Stanislaw fled to Konigsberg and then back to France The Pacification Sejm in 1736 de facto confirmed Augustus III as King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania To this day the aphorism and phrase od Sasa do Lasa lit from the Saxon to Leszczynski exists in the Polish language and is used when describing two completely opposite things in everyday life 17 Reign and diplomacy edit Poland edit nbsp Count von Bruhl exhibiting his extravagant Meissen porcelain Bruhl was the viceroy of Poland and headed the Saxon courtAs King Augustus was uninterested in the affairs of his Polish Lithuanian dominion focusing instead on hunting the opera and the collection of artwork at the Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister He spent less than three years of his thirty year reign in Poland where political feuding between the House of Czartoryski and the Potocki paralyzed the Sejm Liberum veto fostering internal political anarchy and weakening the Commonwealth Augustus delegated most of his powers and responsibilities in the Commonwealth to Heinrich von Bruhl who served in effect as the viceroy of Poland Bruhl in turn left the politics in Poland to the most powerful magnates and nobles which resulted in widespread corruption 18 Under Augustus Poland was not involved in any major conflicts which further lessened its position in Europe and allowed the neighbouring countries to take advantage of the disorder Any opposition was violently crushed by Bruhl who used either Saxon or Russian forces that permanently stationed in the country 18 Bruhl was a skillful diplomat and strategist Augustus could only be reached through him if an important political feud arose He was also the head of the Saxon court in Dresden and was fond of collectibles such as gadgets jewellery and Meissen porcelain the most famous being the Swan Service composed of 2 200 individual pieces made between 1737 and 1741 19 It has been described as possibly the finest table service ever produced and part of it are exhibited at the National Museum in Warsaw 19 He also owned the largest collections of watches vests wigs and hats in Europe though this cannot be accurately assessed 20 21 Bruhl was depicted by his rivals as a nouveau riche materialist who used his wealth to gain support His lavish spending was immortalized by Augustus reported question to the viceroy Bruhl do I have money 18 By 1748 Augustus III completed extending the Saxon Palace in Warsaw and made significant contributions in remodelling the Royal Castle In 1750 von Bruhl purchased a residence adjacent to the larger Saxon Palace and transformed it into a rococo masterpiece which later became known as the Bruhl Palace Both buildings were completely destroyed by the Nazis during World War II 22 War of the Austrian Succession edit Main articles War of the Austrian Succession and Silesian Wars nbsp View of Dresden s Neumarkt in 1747 by Bernardo BellottoWith the marriage to the Austrian princess Maria Josepha Augustus was bound to accept the succession of her cousin Maria Theresa as Archduchess of Austria and Queen of Hungary and Bohemia Saxony mediated between the friendly French faction and the Habsburg faction of Maria Theresa Between 1741 and 1742 Saxony was allied with France but changed sides with the help of Austrian diplomats 23 In the first days of December 1740 the Prussians assembled along the Oder river and on 16 December Frederick II invaded Silesia without a formal declaration of war The Austrian troops which then stationed in Silesia were poorly supplied and outnumbered as the Habsburgs concentrated their supreme force on Hungary and Italy They held onto the fortresses of Glogau Breslau and Brieg but abandoned the rest of the region and withdrew into Moravia This campaign gave Prussia control of most of the richest provinces in the Habsburg monarchy with the commercial centre of Breslau as well as mining weaving and dyeing industries Silesia was also rich in natural resources such as coal chalk copper and gold nbsp Augustus III by Rotari 1755Saxony joined Austria in the Second Silesian War which erupted after Prussia proclaimed its support of Charles VII as Holy Roman Emperor and invaded Bohemia on 15 August 1744 The true cause behind the invasion was Frederick s personal expansionist ideas and goals On 8 January 1745 the Treaty of Warsaw united Great Britain the Habsburg monarchy the Dutch Republic and Saxony into what became known as the Quadruple Alliance which was aimed at securing the Austrian throne for Maria Theresa Soon after Charles VII died of gout in Munich which weakened the Prussians However Prussia still maintained military superiority the successful battles of Hennersdorf and Kesselsdorf opened the way to Dresden which Frederick occupied on 18 December The Treaty of Dresden was eventually completed on Christmas Day 25 December and Saxony was obliged to pay one million rixdollars in reparations to the Prussian state The treaty ended the Second Silesian War with a status quo ante bellum Maria Theresa was finally recognized in her inheritance with the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle in 1748 which proved a Pyrrhic victory for Augustus III the conflict nearly bankrupted Saxony Meanwhile the affairs in Poland remained highly neglected Seven Years War edit Main article Seven Years War The Electorate of Saxony was involved in the Seven Years War from 1756 to 1763 The Saxons were allied with Austria and Russia against Frederick the Great of Prussia who saw Saxony as another potential field for expansion Saxony was then merely a buffer zone between Prussia and Austrian Bohemia as well as Silesia which Frederick attempted to annex in their entirety Moreover Saxony and Poland were separated by a strip of land in Silesia and Lusatia which made the movement of troops even more difficult Frederick s plans also entailed annexing the Electorate of Hanover but joining France would trigger an Austro Russian attack and occupation On 29 August 1756 the Prussian Army preemptively invaded Saxony beginning the Third Silesian War a theatre of the Seven Years War Saxony was bled dry and exploited at the maximum extent to support Prussia s war effort The Treaty of Hubertusburg signed on 15 February 1763 ended the conflict with Frederick s victory and Saxony renounced its claim to Silesia Death edit In April 1763 Augustus returned ill and frail from Poland to Dresden with his closest advisors leaving Primate Wladyslaw Aleksander Lubienski behind to take care of the affairs in the Commonwealth 24 He died suddenly on 5 October 1763 in Dresden from apoplexy stroke 24 Unlike his father who rests at Wawel in Krakow Augustus III was buried at Dresden Cathedral and remains one of the few Polish monarchs who were buried outside of Poland Augustus s eldest surviving son Frederick Christian succeeded his father as elector but died two and a half months later In the Commonwealth on 7 September 1764 with the small participation of the szlachta initiated by the Czartoryski s and the strong support of Russia Stanislaw August Poniatowski was elected king of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Reigning under the name Stanislaw II Augustus Poniatowski was the son of the elder Stanislaw Poniatowski a powerful Polish noble and a onetime agent of Stanislaw I in youth he was a lover of Catherine II of Russia and as such enjoyed strong support from that Empress s court Legacy editPatron of arts edit nbsp Saxon Facade of the Royal Castle in WarsawAugustus III was a great patron of the arts and architecture During his reign the Baroque Catholic Church of the Royal Court in Dresden present day Dresden Cathedral was built in which he was later buried as one of the few Polish kings buried outside the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow He greatly expanded the Dresden art gallery to the extent that in 1747 it was placed in a new location at the present day Johanneum where it remained until 1855 when it was moved to the newly built Semper Gallery In 1748 he founded the Opera House Operalnia in Warsaw and the Collegium medico chirurgicum the first medical school in Dresden 25 During his reign the extension of the Saxon Palace in Warsaw begun by his father Augustus II was completed and the reconstruction of the eastern facade of the Royal Castle was ordered thus creating the so called Saxon Facade an iconic part of the Vistula panorama of the Warsaw Old Town nbsp Meissen porcelain figure of King Augustus IIIIn 1733 the composer Johann Sebastian Bach dedicated the Kyrie Gloria Mass in B minor BWV 232 I early version to Augustus in honor of his succession to the Saxon electorate with the hope of appointment as Court Composer a title Bach received three years later 26 Bach s title of Koeniglicher Pohlnischer Hoff Compositeur Royal Polish Court Composer and court composer to the Elector of Saxony is engraved on the title page of Bach s famous Goldberg Variations Augustus III was also the patron of composer Johann Adolph Hasse who was granted the title of the Royal Polish and Electoral Saxon Kapellmeister by his father Augustus II in 1731 27 and thanks to Augustus III the same title was obtained in 1716 by composer Johann David Heinichen 28 Personal life and criticism edit nbsp Donors to the General Hospital of Infant Jesus Augustus III is in the top left corner 18th century depictionsIn 1732 a French priest named Gabriel Piotr Baudouin founded the first orphanage in Poland situated in Warsaw s Old Town The facility was later moved to the nearby Warecki Square now Warsaw Insurgents Square and in 1758 Augustus III decreed that the new institution be called Szpital Generalny Dzieciatka Jezus The General Hospital of Infant Jesus The newly established hospital expanded its operations into treating not only orphans but also the sick and the poor 29 Augustus remained a charitable man throughout his life and donated to the hospital His successor Stanislaw Augustus also contributed to the cause Despite his charitable manner Augustus was viewed in Poland as an impotent monarch obese plump ugly and lazy sybarite with no interest in the affairs of the state 30 Such harsh critique and opinion continues to this day On the other hand historian Jacek Staszewski was able to find a description of Augustus character in the Dresden archives in the late 1980s he was considered an honest and affectionate man who was widely respected during his reign by both the Saxons and the Poles 30 In his personal life Augustus was a devoted husband to Maria Josepha with whom he had sixteen children Unlike his father who was a notorious womanizer he was never unfaithful and enjoyed spending time with his spouse uncommon among the royalty in those days 31 He also favoured hunting Depictions editAugustus III was portrayed by Ernst Dernburg in the 1941 film Friedemann Bach Issue editOn 20 August 1719 Augustus married Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria the eldest child of Joseph I the Holy Roman Emperor They had sixteen children but only fourteen or fifteen are recognized by historians 9 10 Frederick Augustus Franz Xavier born Dresden 18 November 1720 died Dresden 22 January 1721 Joseph Augustus Wilhelm Frederick Franz Xavier Johann Nepomuk born Pillnitz 24 October 1721 died Dresden 14 March 1728 Frederick Christian Leopold Johann Georg Franz Xavier born Dresden 5 September 1722 died Dresden 17 December 1763 successor to his father as Elector of Saxony Unknown stillborn daughter Dresden 23 June 1723 Maria Amalia Christina Franziska Xaveria Flora Walburga born Dresden 24 November 1724 died Buen Retiro 27 September 1760 married on 19 June 1738 to Charles VII King of Naples later King Charles III of Spain Maria Margaretha Franziska Xaveria born Dresden 13 September 1727 died Dresden 1 February 1734 died in childhood Maria Anna Sophie Sabina Angela Franziska Xaveria born Dresden 29 August 1728 died Munich 17 February 1797 married on 9 August 1747 to Maximilian III Joseph Elector of Bavaria Unknown child 1729 1730 Franz Xavier Albert August Ludwig Benno born Dresden 25 August 1730 died Dresden 21 June 1806 Regent of Saxony 1763 1768 Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria born Dresden 4 November 1731 died Versailles 13 March 1767 married on 9 February 1747 to Louis Dauphin of France 1729 1765 son of Louis XV of France she was the mother of Kings Louis XVI Louis XVIII and Charles X of France Karl Christian Joseph Ignaz Eugen Franz Xavier born Dresden 13 July 1733 died Dresden 16 June 1796 Duke of Courland and Zemgale 1758 1763 Maria Christina Anna Teresia Salomea Eulalia Franziska Xaveria born Warsaw 12 February 1735 died Brumath 19 November 1782 Princess Abbess of Remiremont 32 Maria Elisabeth Apollonia Casimira Francisca Xaveria born Warsaw 9 February 1736 died Dresden 24 December 1818 died unmarried 33 Albert Kasimir August Ignaz Pius Franz Xavier born Moritzburg near Dresden 11 July 1738 died Vienna 10 February 1822 Duke of Teschen and Governor of the Austrian Netherlands 1781 1793 Clemens Wenceslaus August Hubertus Franz Xavier born Schloss Hubertusburg Wermsdorf 28 September 1739 died Marktoberdorf Allgau 27 July 1812 Archbishop of Trier Maria Kunigunde Dorothea Hedwig Franziska Xaveria Florentina born Warsaw 10 November 1740 died Dresden 8 April 1826 Princess Abbess of Thorn and EssenGallery edit nbsp Portrait of Crown Prince Augustus nbsp Augustus III in Sarmatian costume by Louis de Silvestre c 1737 nbsp Coat of arms of Augustus III of Poland as vicar of the Holy Roman Empire nbsp Entry of Augustus III into Warsaw by Johann Samuel Mock nbsp Crown Regalia of King Augustus and Maria Josepha nbsp 6 groschen 1763Ancestry editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Augustus III of Poland8 John George II Elector of Saxony4 John George III Elector of Saxony9 Magdalena Sibylle of Brandenburg Bayreuth2 Augustus II of Poland10 Frederick III of Denmark5 Anna Sophie of Denmark11 Sophie Amalie of Brunswick1 Augustus III of Poland12 Erdmann August Hereditary Prince of Brandenburg Bayreuth6 Christian Ernst Margrave of Brandenburg Bayreuth13 Sophie of Brandenburg Ansbach3 Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg Bayreuth14 Eberhard III Duke of Wurttemberg7 Sophie Louise of Wurttemberg15 Anna Katharina of Salm KyrburgSee also editHistory of Saxony History of Poland 1569 1795 Rulers of Saxony List of Lithuanian rulers Dresden Castle Residence of Augustus IIINotes and references edit Augustus III king of Poland and elector of Saxony Encyclopaedia Britannica Clarissa Campbell Orr Queenship in Europe 1660 1815 The Role of the Consort Cambridge University Press 2004 Jacek Staszewski August III Sas Wroclaw 2010 p 27 29 70 in Polish a b Staszewski Op cit p 28 a b c d e August III przedostatni krol i jego legenda Lazienki Krolewskie lazienki krolewskie pl a b c August III Wettyn krol Polski 1733 1763 TwojaHistoria pl Polski slownik biograficzny Kopernicki I Kozlowska Sklad glowny w ksieg Gebethnera i Wolffa 21 March 1935 Konopczynski Wladyslaw 21 March 1969 Polski slownik biograficzny Nakl Polskiej Akademii Umiejetnosci a b Flathe Heinrich Theodor 1878 Friedrich August II Kurfurst von Sachsen Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot 7 784 86 a b Staszewski Jacek 1996 August III Kurfurst von Sachsen und Konig von Polen in German Berlin Akademie Verlag ISBN 3 05 002600 6 Kalipke Andreas 2010 The Corpus Evangelicorum In Coy J P Marschke B Benjamin Sabean D W eds The Holy Roman Empire Reconsidered Berghahn pp 228 247 Helen Watanabe O Kelly 2004 Religion and the Consort Two Electresses of Saxony and Queens of Poland 1697 1757 In Campbell Orr Clarissa ed Queenship in Europe 1660 1815 The Role of the Consort Cambridge University Press p 265 ISBN 0 521 81422 7 a b Ostatnia polska krolowa Wladczyni o ktorej nie powiedzieli Ci na lekcjach historii WielkaHistoria 30 July 2019 That effectivity meant supporting the rule of Ernest Biron a Russian court favourite Corwin Edward Henry Lewinski 1917 The Political History of Poland Polish Book Importing Company New York page 288 OCLC 626738 Ragsdale Hugh 1993 Imperial Russian foreign policy Cambridge University Press Cambridge England page 32 33 ISBN 0 521 44229 X Corwin Edward Henry Lewinski 1917 The political History of Poland Polish Book Importing Company New York page 286 288 OCLC 626738 Od Sasa do Lasa werandacountry pl 17 April 2015 a b c Zdanie ktore podobno mowi wszystko o rzadach Augusta III Sasa Ale czy slusznie TwojaHistoria pl 16 January 2019 a b Swan Service porcelain tableware Encyclopaedia Britannica Rozycki Boguslaw Wojciech 22 March 2011 Zachodnie kresy Rzeczpospolitej wzdluz granicy na Odrze i Nysie przewodnik Oficyna Wydawnicza Rewasz ISBN 9788362460113 Watra Przewlocki J 22 March 1918 Historya Polski ilustrowana Nakl i drukiem Wydawn Braci Worzallow Fundacja Warszawa 1939 Fundacja Warszawa 1939 Browning Reed S 1994 War of the Austrian Succession Alan Sutton ISBN 978 0 750 90578 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help a b 250 rocznica smierci krola Polski Augusta III Wettyna dzieje pl Collegium medico chirurgicum Stadtwiki Dresden Retrieved 28 November 2019 Missa in B Minor Kyrie and Gloria of the B Minor Mass World Digital Library 1733 Retrieved 8 August 2013 Johann Adolph Hasse Museum KomponistenQuartier Archived from the original on 25 March 2019 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Sluchajmy Heinichena Radio Krakow Retrieved 28 November 2019 Szpital Kliniczny Dzieciatka Jezus O Szpitalu dzieciatkajezus pl Archived from the original on 24 July 2010 Retrieved 22 March 2020 a b August III Sas Amazon co uk Staszewski Jacek 9788304050341 Books ASIN 830405034X August III Sas Staszewski Jacek Ossolineum Ksiegarnia internetowa czytam pl czytam pl Christine Saxony Albert Netherlands Royalty guide 1735 archived from the original JPEG on 28 February 2008 Elisabeth Saxony Albert Netherlands Royalty guide 1736 archived from the original JPEG on 28 February 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Augustus III of Poland Augustus III Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol III 9th ed 1878 p 85 Bach Johann Sebastian Mass in B Minor Cue points Oregon Bach festival archived from the original Adobe Flash on 23 July 2011 retrieved 21 August 2011 Augustus III of Poland Frederick Augustus II of Saxony House of WettinBorn 17 October 1696 Died 5 October 1763Regnal titlesPreceded byStanislaw I King of Poland1733 1763 Succeeded byStanislaw II AugustPreceded byFrederick Augustus I Elector of Saxony1733 1763 Succeeded byFrederick Christian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Augustus III of Poland amp oldid 1210193404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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