fbpx
Wikipedia

Feliks Łubieński

Feliks Walezjusz Władysław Łubieński (born 22 November 1758 Minoga near Olkusz, died 2 October 1848 Guzów) was a Polish politician, jurist, Minister of Justice in the Grand Duchy of Warsaw, starosta of Nakieł, a member of the Friends of the Constitution and a Prussian count.[1] With the Code Napoleon, he introduced civil marriage and divorce in traditionally Catholic Poland.

Count
Feliks Walezjusz Władysław Łubieński


Pomian arms (Łubieński family crest)
Born(1758-11-22)22 November 1758
Minoga, Poland
Died2 October 1848(1848-10-02) (aged 89)
Guzów, Partitioned Poland
Noble familyŁubieński
Spouse(s)Teodora Rogalińska
Tekla Teresa Lubienska, née Bielinska
IssueMaria
Paulina
Róża
Franciszek Ksawery
Tomasz Łubieński
Henryk
Piotr
Tadeusz
Jan
Józef
FatherCelestyn Łubieński
MotherPaula Szembek

Background

The Łubieński clan belongs to the Polish nobility, 'szlachta', and originates from Łubna-Jarosłaj near Sieradz. Feliks was the son of Celestyn and Paula, née Szembek, of Austrian descent. His father died in 1759 and his mother remarried Jan Prosper Potocki, starosta of Guzów, with whom she had a son, Prot. Her second husband died in 1761. She next married Andrzej Ogiński, starosta of Troki, with whom she had a daughter, Józefa. and a third son, Michał Kleofas Ogiński. He became a noted composer and was Polish envoy to London, among other capitals, during the crisis period for his nation that were the Partitions of Poland. Owing to this family connection and a long-standing relationship with the Prussian court, Feliks was able, later in life, to take over the vast estate of Guzów.[2]

Early life

Up to the age of five years, Felix lived with his maternal grandmother, Jadwiga Szembekowa in Minoga. Then his upbringing was taken over by his paternal granduncle, the primate, Władysław Aleksander Łubieński (1703-1767), to whom Feliks owed his 'magnificent' start in life. From 1767, due to the primate's legacies, he passed under the effective guardianship of Frederick William II of Prussia and was educated by the Jesuits in Warsaw, from where he acquired a personal preceptor, the Jesuit John Baptist Albertrandi, himself of Italian descent. This guardianship would prove to be pivotal later in his life. He next studied law at the universities of Siena and Rome. This was followed by a short period of work in the office of the Grand Chancellor of Wilno, Michał Fryderyk Czartoryski. However the latter soon died, and having married Teodora Rogalińska in 1776, Feliks settled with her on his estates near Sieradz at Kalinowa and at Szczytniki. The couple were childless and the marriage was annulled in 1778.[citation needed]

Career

He was elected in 1788 as a member for the Sieradz voivedeship to the Four Years Sejm.[3] Between 1789-1792 he was a captain in the Royal Cavalry. He belonged to the patriotic front and was one of the editors of the Act of Confederation of the Sejm. He guided the passage of the 3rd May Constitution in February 1792 at the local Sejmik of Sieradz. He organised an assembly of the Sieradz nobility that expressed its sympathetic acceptance of the new constitution. He appeared on the list of Russian envoy, Jakov Bułhakow, in 1792, that comprised those people the Russians could rely on in the event of a new confederation and the overthrow of the 3rd May Constitution.[4]

He greeted with 'respect' the news that King Stanisław August Poniatowski had joined the Targowica Confederation, and yet to the king he wrote: 'it confounds me that this has come to pass'. During the Polish-Russian War of 1792 he was Sejm commissioner for Tadeusz Kościuszko. After the struggle he appealed for the release of Polish prisoners in the Prussian kingdom. After the Second Partition of Poland (1793) his estates – Kalinowa and Szczytniki found themselves in the Prussian Partition. In 1793 he entertained at Szczytniki, in the presence of around 100 of the local nobility, Frederick William II of Prussia who had gone on a tour of his conquered territories. Łubieński was both a member of the secret coalition preparing the Kosciuszko Insurrection and a participant in the insurrection itself.[5][6] After the final partition of Poland in 1795, Łubieński's estates found themselves in Prussia, as did that of his widowed mother, Paula Ogińska. Due to its enormous size (6,000 hectares), Guzów was confiscated by the king and given to one of his loyal ministers, Karl Georg von Hoym. Von Hoym was minded to sell it back to Ogińska, its most recent legal owner. Łubieński intervened at this juncture and, with the backing of the king of Prussia, arranged a swap with von Hoym such that he bought him off with his two estates at Kalinowa and Szczytniki in exchange for Guzów. Thus he obtained control of his mother's former property and became starosta of Guzów. He eventually retired there permanently in 1823. In 1798 he was awarded the Prussian hereditary title of count by Frederick Wilhelm III.

Napoleonic era

In 1806 while he was in Warsaw, Napoleon Bonaparte nominated him to the governing commission as Director of Justice and Faiths. Part of Łubieński's role was to prepare the introduction of the Code Napoleon in the Duchy of Warsaw. From 5 October 1807 to May 1813 he was Minister of Justice in the Duchy. In office he demonstrated both his considerable organisational abilities and a desire to broaden legal professionalism. He introduced civil marriage and divorce. In 1808 he funded at his own expense the establishment of a School of Law in Warsaw, based on courses for court officials that had begun in 1807. In 1811 his institute became The School of Law and Administration. For largely practical reasons concerned with the running of estates, Łubieński opposed the ending of serfdom in Poland and was one of the instigators of the December Decree.[7] In 1812 he was appointed to the Central Council of the General Confederation of the Polish Kingdom.

He was not especially liked by his contemporaries: he was considered at once obsequious and a martinet in his official role and a bigot. This view is however disputed by contemporary lawyer and diarist, Kajetan Kozmian, father of the Kozmian brothers.[8] His diaries were published posthumously in 1874.

Family

 
'Count Felix Lubieński'. Lithograph by Józef Sonntag

He was twice married, secondly in 1782 to Tekla Teresa Lubienska, granddaughter of the princely Sanguszko family, a noted children's author, dramatist and translator. In her dowry she brought him a magnificent palace in the centre of Warsaw and the Bielino enclave.[9] They had ten children, three daughters: Maria, Paulina and Róża (later the wife of Ludwik Sobański), and seven sons: Franciszek Ksawery, Tomasz Łubieński, Henryk, Piotr, Tadeusz, Jan and Józef.

His wife died of an aneurysm while visiting Kraków in 1810. During his extended widowhood, Feliks did not remarry, but became a patriarch to his huge extended family and kept up an active correspondence with his children and dozens of grandchildren.[10] He died in Guzów in 1848 and was buried in the cemetery at Wiskitki.

Legacy

A recent historical evaluation of Łubieński's public service lauded his contribution to culture and education in the country through sound public administration, including legal procedures and a court system, the introduction of state archives, a national library, a government printing press and an educated and effective civil service.[11] During his long widowhood he took a close interest in his children's careers and welfare. He encouraged their entrepreneurial spirit by guiding them into 'beneficial' matrimony, as in the case of Józef who married into the Pudliszki estate, where he opened a sugar factory, the precursor of a fruit and vegetable processing factory that operates to this day. Or, in the case of the older brothers, led by Henryk, he donated to them Ruda Guzowska, a tract of land to begin their textile revolution. It rapidly led to the founding of an industry and a successful mill town, known today as Żyrardów.

Awards and distinctions

Bibliography

in Polish

  • Polski Słownik Biograficzny, Tom XVIII (1973 )
  • Encyklopedia Katolicka Tom XI, KUL, Lublin 2006
  • M. Brandys, Koniec świata szwoleżerów, t. I, Warszawa 1972
  • Wł. Chometowski, Pamiętnik hr. Feliksa Łubieńskiego, Warszawa 1890
  • K. Pol, Feliks Łubieński, [w:] „Rzeczpospolita” 28 April 1999
  • A. Ruszkowski, Feliks Walezjusz Pomian Łubieński (1758-1848), jego przodkowie i dzieci, [w:] Na sieradzkich szlakach, nr 1/57/2000XV, p. 26-28

References

  1. ^ Marta Męclewska, Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orła Białego 1705-2008, Zamek Królewski, Warszawa 2008, p. 255.(in Polish)
  2. ^ Łubieński, Tomasz Wentworth. (1886). Henryk Łubieński i Jego Bracia - Wspomnienia Rodzinne odnoszące się do Historyi Królestwa Polskiego i Banku Polskiego. Kraków: Gebethner. https://jbc.bj.uj.edu.pl/dlibra/doccontent?id=305507 pp.17-38. A memoir by his grandson of his father, Henryk, and his uncles and their role in the industrial and banking history of the Kingdom of Poland (in Polish)
  3. ^ Kalendarzyk narodowy y obcy na rok ... 1792. ..., Warszawa 1791, p. 320. (in Polish)
  4. ^ Łukasz Kądziela, Między zdradą a służbą Rzeczypospolitej. Fryderyk Moszyński w latach 1792-1793, Warszawa 1993, p. 46, Сборник Русского исторического общества, t. 47, Petersburg 1885, p. 273. (in Russian)
  5. ^ Bartłomiej Szyndler, Powstanie kościuszkowskie 1794, Warszawa 1994, p. 33. (in Polish)
  6. ^ Marta Męclewska, Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orła Białego 1705-2008, Zamek Królewski, Warszawa 2008, p. 255. (in Polish)
  7. ^ The December 1807 Decree was designed to introduce capitalistic land ownership and end the previous feudal system. However, while it granted peasants the notional freedom to move from one tenancy to another, in practice due to their poverty, they remained tied to their landlords.
  8. ^ "Jpagetitle".
  9. ^ "HISTORIA GMINY KRZEMIENIEWO - Faktyczny KLAN ŁUBIEŃSKICH".
  10. ^ Brandys, Marian, (2010). Koniec świata szwoleżerów, Tom 1, Czcigodni weterani, Warszawa: MG. This the second volume in a hugely popular history series, originally published by Iskra in 1972, about members of the light cavalry who had served in Napoleon's Russian campaign. Much of the material in the book is drawn from Tomasz Łubieński's surviving correspondence to his father, Feliks, and with other relatives.
  11. ^ Żuchlewska Teresa, Feliks Łubieński. Działalność polityczna i jej związek z nauką i Kulturą. Rocznik Żyrardowski 6, 417-439. 2008. Muzeum Historii Polski; http://mazowsze.hist.pl/29/Rocznik_Zyrardowski/658/2008/23611/ Summary in English on p. 439.
  12. ^ Zbigniew Dunin-Wilczyński, Order Św. Stanisława, Warszawa 2006, p. 185.
  13. ^ Marta Męclewska, Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orła Białego 1705-2008, Zamek Królewski, Warszawa 2008, p. 255. (in Polish)

External links

  • Władysław Chomętowski, Pamiętnik Feliksa hr. Łubieńskiego ministra sprawiedliwości, Warszawa 1890 (djvu) Łubieński's diaries
  • Marek Jerzy Minakowski – Genealogia Potomków Sejmu Wielkiego – genealogy service

feliks, Łubieński, feliks, walezjusz, władysław, Łubieński, born, november, 1758, minoga, near, olkusz, died, october, 1848, guzów, polish, politician, jurist, minister, justice, grand, duchy, warsaw, starosta, nakieł, member, friends, constitution, prussian, . Feliks Walezjusz Wladyslaw Lubienski born 22 November 1758 Minoga near Olkusz died 2 October 1848 Guzow was a Polish politician jurist Minister of Justice in the Grand Duchy of Warsaw starosta of Nakiel a member of the Friends of the Constitution and a Prussian count 1 With the Code Napoleon he introduced civil marriage and divorce in traditionally Catholic Poland CountFeliks Walezjusz Wladyslaw LubienskiPomian arms Lubienski family crest Born 1758 11 22 22 November 1758Minoga PolandDied2 October 1848 1848 10 02 aged 89 Guzow Partitioned PolandNoble familyLubienskiSpouse s Teodora RogalinskaTekla Teresa Lubienska nee BielinskaIssueMariaPaulina RozaFranciszek KsaweryTomasz Lubienski HenrykPiotrTadeuszJan JozefFatherCelestyn LubienskiMotherPaula Szembek Contents 1 Background 1 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Napoleonic era 3 Family 4 Legacy 5 Awards and distinctions 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditThe Lubienski clan belongs to the Polish nobility szlachta and originates from Lubna Jaroslaj near Sieradz Feliks was the son of Celestyn and Paula nee Szembek of Austrian descent His father died in 1759 and his mother remarried Jan Prosper Potocki starosta of Guzow with whom she had a son Prot Her second husband died in 1761 She next married Andrzej Oginski starosta of Troki with whom she had a daughter Jozefa and a third son Michal Kleofas Oginski He became a noted composer and was Polish envoy to London among other capitals during the crisis period for his nation that were the Partitions of Poland Owing to this family connection and a long standing relationship with the Prussian court Feliks was able later in life to take over the vast estate of Guzow 2 Early life Edit Up to the age of five years Felix lived with his maternal grandmother Jadwiga Szembekowa in Minoga Then his upbringing was taken over by his paternal granduncle the primate Wladyslaw Aleksander Lubienski 1703 1767 to whom Feliks owed his magnificent start in life From 1767 due to the primate s legacies he passed under the effective guardianship of Frederick William II of Prussia and was educated by the Jesuits in Warsaw from where he acquired a personal preceptor the Jesuit John Baptist Albertrandi himself of Italian descent This guardianship would prove to be pivotal later in his life He next studied law at the universities of Siena and Rome This was followed by a short period of work in the office of the Grand Chancellor of Wilno Michal Fryderyk Czartoryski However the latter soon died and having married Teodora Rogalinska in 1776 Feliks settled with her on his estates near Sieradz at Kalinowa and at Szczytniki The couple were childless and the marriage was annulled in 1778 citation needed Career EditHe was elected in 1788 as a member for the Sieradz voivedeship to the Four Years Sejm 3 Between 1789 1792 he was a captain in the Royal Cavalry He belonged to the patriotic front and was one of the editors of the Act of Confederation of the Sejm He guided the passage of the 3rd May Constitution in February 1792 at the local Sejmik of Sieradz He organised an assembly of the Sieradz nobility that expressed its sympathetic acceptance of the new constitution He appeared on the list of Russian envoy Jakov Bulhakow in 1792 that comprised those people the Russians could rely on in the event of a new confederation and the overthrow of the 3rd May Constitution 4 He greeted with respect the news that King Stanislaw August Poniatowski had joined the Targowica Confederation and yet to the king he wrote it confounds me that this has come to pass During the Polish Russian War of 1792 he was Sejm commissioner for Tadeusz Kosciuszko After the struggle he appealed for the release of Polish prisoners in the Prussian kingdom After the Second Partition of Poland 1793 his estates Kalinowa and Szczytniki found themselves in the Prussian Partition In 1793 he entertained at Szczytniki in the presence of around 100 of the local nobility Frederick William II of Prussia who had gone on a tour of his conquered territories Lubienski was both a member of the secret coalition preparing the Kosciuszko Insurrection and a participant in the insurrection itself 5 6 After the final partition of Poland in 1795 Lubienski s estates found themselves in Prussia as did that of his widowed mother Paula Oginska Due to its enormous size 6 000 hectares Guzow was confiscated by the king and given to one of his loyal ministers Karl Georg von Hoym Von Hoym was minded to sell it back to Oginska its most recent legal owner Lubienski intervened at this juncture and with the backing of the king of Prussia arranged a swap with von Hoym such that he bought him off with his two estates at Kalinowa and Szczytniki in exchange for Guzow Thus he obtained control of his mother s former property and became starosta of Guzow He eventually retired there permanently in 1823 In 1798 he was awarded the Prussian hereditary title of count by Frederick Wilhelm III Napoleonic era Edit In 1806 while he was in Warsaw Napoleon Bonaparte nominated him to the governing commission as Director of Justice and Faiths Part of Lubienski s role was to prepare the introduction of the Code Napoleon in the Duchy of Warsaw From 5 October 1807 to May 1813 he was Minister of Justice in the Duchy In office he demonstrated both his considerable organisational abilities and a desire to broaden legal professionalism He introduced civil marriage and divorce In 1808 he funded at his own expense the establishment of a School of Law in Warsaw based on courses for court officials that had begun in 1807 In 1811 his institute became The School of Law and Administration For largely practical reasons concerned with the running of estates Lubienski opposed the ending of serfdom in Poland and was one of the instigators of the December Decree 7 In 1812 he was appointed to the Central Council of the General Confederation of the Polish Kingdom He was not especially liked by his contemporaries he was considered at once obsequious and a martinet in his official role and a bigot This view is however disputed by contemporary lawyer and diarist Kajetan Kozmian father of the Kozmian brothers 8 His diaries were published posthumously in 1874 Family Edit Count Felix Lubienski Lithograph by Jozef Sonntag He was twice married secondly in 1782 to Tekla Teresa Lubienska granddaughter of the princely Sanguszko family a noted children s author dramatist and translator In her dowry she brought him a magnificent palace in the centre of Warsaw and the Bielino enclave 9 They had ten children three daughters Maria Paulina and Roza later the wife of Ludwik Sobanski and seven sons Franciszek Ksawery Tomasz Lubienski Henryk Piotr Tadeusz Jan and Jozef His wife died of an aneurysm while visiting Krakow in 1810 During his extended widowhood Feliks did not remarry but became a patriarch to his huge extended family and kept up an active correspondence with his children and dozens of grandchildren 10 He died in Guzow in 1848 and was buried in the cemetery at Wiskitki Legacy EditA recent historical evaluation of Lubienski s public service lauded his contribution to culture and education in the country through sound public administration including legal procedures and a court system the introduction of state archives a national library a government printing press and an educated and effective civil service 11 During his long widowhood he took a close interest in his children s careers and welfare He encouraged their entrepreneurial spirit by guiding them into beneficial matrimony as in the case of Jozef who married into the Pudliszki estate where he opened a sugar factory the precursor of a fruit and vegetable processing factory that operates to this day Or in the case of the older brothers led by Henryk he donated to them Ruda Guzowska a tract of land to begin their textile revolution It rapidly led to the founding of an industry and a successful mill town known today as Zyrardow Awards and distinctions Edit1778 Order of Saint Stanislaus 12 1791 Order of the White Eagle Poland 1798 Prussian nobility title of Count 1805 Order of the Red Eagle 13 Bibliography Editin Polish Polski Slownik Biograficzny Tom XVIII 1973 Encyklopedia Katolicka Tom XI KUL Lublin 2006 M Brandys Koniec swiata szwolezerow t I Warszawa 1972 Wl Chometowski Pamietnik hr Feliksa Lubienskiego Warszawa 1890 K Pol Feliks Lubienski w Rzeczpospolita 28 April 1999 A Ruszkowski Feliks Walezjusz Pomian Lubienski 1758 1848 jego przodkowie i dzieci w Na sieradzkich szlakach nr 1 57 2000XV p 26 28References Edit Marta Meclewska Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 Zamek Krolewski Warszawa 2008 p 255 in Polish Lubienski Tomasz Wentworth 1886 Henryk Lubienski i Jego Bracia Wspomnienia Rodzinne odnoszace sie do Historyi Krolestwa Polskiego i Banku Polskiego Krakow Gebethner https jbc bj uj edu pl dlibra doccontent id 305507 pp 17 38 A memoir by his grandson of his father Henryk and his uncles and their role in the industrial and banking history of the Kingdom of Poland in Polish Kalendarzyk narodowy y obcy na rok 1792 Warszawa 1791 p 320 in Polish Lukasz Kadziela Miedzy zdrada a sluzba Rzeczypospolitej Fryderyk Moszynski w latach 1792 1793 Warszawa 1993 p 46 Sbornik Russkogo istoricheskogo obshestva t 47 Petersburg 1885 p 273 in Russian Bartlomiej Szyndler Powstanie kosciuszkowskie 1794 Warszawa 1994 p 33 in Polish Marta Meclewska Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 Zamek Krolewski Warszawa 2008 p 255 in Polish The December 1807 Decree was designed to introduce capitalistic land ownership and end the previous feudal system However while it granted peasants the notional freedom to move from one tenancy to another in practice due to their poverty they remained tied to their landlords Jpagetitle HISTORIA GMINY KRZEMIENIEWO Faktyczny KLAN LUBIENSKICH Brandys Marian 2010 Koniec swiata szwolezerow Tom 1 Czcigodni weterani Warszawa MG This the second volume in a hugely popular history series originally published by Iskra in 1972 about members of the light cavalry who had served in Napoleon s Russian campaign Much of the material in the book is drawn from Tomasz Lubienski s surviving correspondence to his father Feliks and with other relatives Zuchlewska Teresa Feliks Lubienski Dzialalnosc polityczna i jej zwiazek z nauka i Kultura Rocznik Zyrardowski 6 417 439 2008 Muzeum Historii Polski http mazowsze hist pl 29 Rocznik Zyrardowski 658 2008 23611 Summary in English on p 439 Zbigniew Dunin Wilczynski Order Sw Stanislawa Warszawa 2006 p 185 Marta Meclewska Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 Zamek Krolewski Warszawa 2008 p 255 in Polish External links EditWladyslaw Chometowski Pamietnik Feliksa hr Lubienskiego ministra sprawiedliwosci Warszawa 1890 djvu Lubienski s diaries Marek Jerzy Minakowski Genealogia Potomkow Sejmu Wielkiego genealogy service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feliks Lubienski amp oldid 1123481069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.