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Jan Henryk Dąbrowski

Jan Henryk Dąbrowski (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjan ˈxɛnrɨɡ dɔmˈbrɔfskʲi]; also known as Johann Heinrich Dąbrowski (Dombrowski)[6] in German[7] and Jean Henri Dombrowski in French;[8] 2 August 1755[a] – 6 June 1818) was a Polish general and statesman, widely respected after his death for his patriotic attitude, and described as a national hero who spent his whole life restoring the legacy of Poland.[9]

Jan Henryk Dąbrowski
Portrait in the Polish Army Museum

Coat of arms:
Dąbrowski
Born(1755-08-02)2 August 1755[a]
Pierzchów, Poland
Died6 June 1818(1818-06-06) (aged 62)
Winna Góra, Posen, Prussia
Allegiance Electorate of Saxony (1770–1791)
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1791–1794)
Cisalpine Republic (1796–1803)
Italian Republic
Duchy of Warsaw (1807–1816)
Service/branchCavalry
Years of service1770–1816
RankGeneral of Cavalry
Battles/warsKościuszko Uprising
War of the Second Coalition
Battle of Trebbia
Battle of Friedland
Russian Campaign
Battle of Leipzig
AwardsOrder of Virtuti Militari[1]
Order of the White Eagle[2]
Officer of the Legion of Honour[3][4]
Order of the Iron Crown[3]
Order of St. Vladimir[5]
Order of St. Anna[5]
Other workSenator of Congress Poland
Signature

Dąbrowski initially served in the Saxon Army and joined the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Army in 1792, shortly before the Second Partition of Poland. He was promoted to the rank of general in the Kościuszko Uprising of 1794. After the final Third Partition of Poland, which ended the existence of Poland as an independent country, he became actively involved in promoting the cause of Polish independence abroad. He was the founder of the Polish Legions in Italy serving under Napoleon from 1795, and as a general in Italian and French service he contributed to the brief restoration of the Polish state during the Greater Poland Uprising of 1806. He participated in the Napoleonic Wars, taking part in the Polish-Austrian war and the French invasion of Russia until 1813. After Napoleon's defeat, he accepted a senatorial position in the Russian-backed Congress Poland, and was one of the organizers of the Army of Congress Poland.

The Polish national anthem, "Poland Is Not Yet Lost", written and first sung by the Polish legionnaires, mentions Dąbrowski by name, and is also known as "Dąbrowski's Mazurek".[10]

Early life and education Edit

In Saxony and Poland Edit

Dąbrowski was born to Jan Michał Dąbrowski and Zofia Maria Dąbrowska, née Sophie von Lettow,[11] in Pierzchów, Crown of the Kingdom of Poland,[10] on 29 August 1755.[a] He grew up in Hoyerswerda, Electorate of Saxony, where his father served as a colonel in the Saxon Army.[14] He joined the Royal Saxon Horse Guards in 1770[15][16] or 1771.[7][17] His family was of Polish origin.[12] Nonetheless, in his childhood and youth he grew up surrounded by German culture in Saxony, and signed his name as Johann Heinrich Dąbrowski.[7] He fought in the War of the Bavarian Succession (1778–1779), during which time his father died.[7] Shortly afterwards in 1780 he married Gustawa Rackel.[7] He lived in Dresden, and steadily progressed through the ranks, becoming a Rittmeister in 1789.[7] He served as Adjutant general of King Frederick Augustus I of Saxony, from 1788 to 1791.[18]

Career Edit

Following the appeal of the Polish Four-Year Sejm to all Poles serving abroad to join the Polish army, and not seeing much opportunity to advance in his military career in the now-peaceful Saxony, on 28 June 1792, Dąbrowski joined the Army of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth with a rank of podpułkownik and on 14 July he was promoted to the rank of vice-brigadier.[7] Joining in the final weeks of the Polish–Russian War of 1792, he did not see combat in it.[7] Unfamiliar with the intricacies of Polish politics, like many of Poniatowski's supporters, he joined the Targowica Confederation in late 1792.[7][19]

Dąbrowski was seen as a cavalry expert, and King Stanisław August Poniatowski was personally interested in obtaining Dąbrowski's services.[7] As a cavalryman educated in a Dresden military school under Count Maurice Bellegarde, a reformer of the Saxon army's cavalry, Dąbrowski was asked to help modernize the Polish cavalry, serving in the ranks of the 1st Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade (1 Wielkpolska Brygada Kawalerii Narodowej).[7] In January 1793, stationed around Gniezno with two units of cavalry, about 200 strong, he briefly engaged the Prussian forces entering Poland in the aftermath of the Second Partition of Poland, and afterwards became a known activist, advocating the continuation of military struggle against the occupiers.[7][20]

The Grodno Sejm, held in the fall of 1793, nominated him for a membership in a military commission; this caused him to be viewed with suspicion by the majority of the dissatisfied military, and he was not included in the preparations for the upcoming uprising.[21] Thus he was taken by surprise when the Kościuszko Insurrection erupted, and his own brigade mutinied.[21] He declared his support for the insurgents after the liberation of Warsaw, and from then on took an active part in the uprising, defending Warsaw and leading an army corps in support of an uprising in Greater Poland.[17][21] His courage was commended by Tadeusz Kościuszko himself, the Supreme Commander of the National Armed Forces, who promoted him to the rank of general.[21]

In the Napoleonic service Edit

 
Jan Henryk Dąbrowski and the Polish Legions.

After the failure of the uprising he remained in partitioned Poland for a while, attempting to convince the Prussian authorities that they needed Poland as an ally against Austria and Russia.[17] He was unsuccessful, and with the Third Partition of Poland between Russia, Prussia and Austria, Poland disappeared from the map of Europe. Dąbrowski's next solution was to convince the French Republic that it should support a Polish cause, and create a Polish military formation.[17] This proved to be more successful, and indeed Dąbrowski is remembered in the history of Poland as the organiser of Polish Legions in Italy during the Napoleonic Wars. (These Legions are also often known as the "Dąbrowski's Legions".)[17][22] This event gave hope to contemporary Poles, and is still remembered in the Polish national anthem, named after Dąbrowski.[10] He began his work in 1796, when he came to Paris and soon afterwards met Napoleon Bonaparte in Milan.[23] On 7 January 1797 he was authorized by the Cisalpine Republic to create Polish legions, which would be part of the army of the newly created Republic of Lombardy.[17][23]

In April, Dąbrowski lobbied for a plan to push through to the Polish territories in Galicia, but that was blocked by Napoleon who instead decided to use those troops on the Italian front.[24] Dąbrowski's Polish soldiers fought at Napoleon's side from May 1797 until the beginning of 1803. As a commander of his legion he played an important part in the war in Italy, entered Rome in May 1798, and distinguished himself greatly at the Battle of Trebia on 19 June 1799, where he was wounded, as well as in other battles and combats of 1799–1801.[23] From the time the Legions garrisoned Rome, Dąbrowski obtained a number of trophies from a Roman representative, namely the ones that the Polish king, Jan III Sobieski, had sent there after his victory over the Ottoman Empire at the siege of Vienna in 1683; amongst these was an Ottoman standard which subsequently became part of the Legions' colors, accompanying them from then on.[25][26] However, the legions were never able to reach Poland and did not liberate the country, as Dąbrowski had dreamed. Napoleon did, however, notice the growing dissatisfaction of his soldiers and their commanders. They were particularly disappointed by a peace treaty between France and Russia signed in Lunéville on 9 February 1801, which dashed Polish hopes of Bonaparte freeing Poland.[22][23] Shortly afterwards, in March, Dąbrowski reorganized both Legions at Milan into two 6,000-strong units.[27] Disillusioned with Napoleon after the Lunéville treaty, many legionnaires resigned afterwards; of the others, thousands perished when the Legions were sent to suppress the Haitian Revolution in 1803; by that time Dąbrowski was no longer in command of the Legions.[23]

Dąbrowski, meanwhile, spent the first few years of the new century as a general in the service of the Italian republic.[23] In 1804 he received the Officer cross of Legion of Honour, and the next year, the Italian Order of the Iron Crown.[28] Together with Józef Wybicki he was summoned again by Napoleon in fall of 1806 and tasked with recreating the Polish formation, which Napoleon wanted to use to recapture Greater Poland from Prussia.[29] The ensuing conflict was known as the Greater Poland Uprising, and Dabrowski was the chief leader of Polish insurgent forces in it.[17] In February 1807, the remaining infantry and cavalry regiments who had continued in French service in Italy were reorganized in Silesia, in the cities of Wrocław, Prudnik, Nysa, Korfantów and Brzeg, into a Polish-Italian Legion (PolaccoItalienne).[30] Dąbrowski distinguished himself at siege of Tczew, siege of Gdańsk and at Battle of Friedland.[29]

 
Dąbrowski's order of 1806, introducing a new Order of Battle for the Polish voivodeships

In 1807, the Duchy of Warsaw was established in the recaptured territories, essentially as a satellite of Bonaparte's France. Dąbrowski became disappointed with Napoleon, who offered him monetary rewards, but no serious military or government position.[29] He was also awarded the Virtuti Militari medal that year.[1] In 1809, he set out to defend Poland against an Austrian invasion under the command of Prince Józef Poniatowski.[29] Joining the Army of the Duchy of Warsaw shortly after the Battle of Raszyn, he took part in the first stages of the offensive on Galicia, and then organized the defense of Greater Poland.[29] In June 1812, Dąbrowski commanded the 17th (Polish) Infantry Division in the V Corps of the Grande Armée, during Napoleon's invasion of Russia.[17][29] However, by October the Franco-Russian war was over and the French forces, decimated by a severe winter, had to retreat. At the disastrous Battle of Berezina in late November that year, Dąbrowski was wounded, and his leadership and tactics in it were criticized.[2][29] After the March reorganization of the Grande Armée, he commanded the 27th (Polish) Infantry Division in the VIII Corps.[31] He commanded it at the Battle of Leipzig (1813), and subsequently on 28 October he became the commander in chief of the all remaining Polish forces in Napoleon's service, succeeding Antoni Paweł Sułkowski.[2]

Final years Edit

Dąbrowski always associated independent Poland with a Polish Army, and offered his services to the new power, which promised to organize such a formation: Russia.[2] He was one of the generals entrusted by the Tsar Alexander of Russia with the reorganization of the Duchy's army into the Army of Congress Poland.[17] In 1815 he received the titles of general of cavalry and senator-voivode of the new Congress Kingdom.[10] He was also awarded the Order of the White Eagle on 9 December that year.[2] Soon afterward he withdrew from active politics.[17] He retired in the following year to his estates in Winna Góra in the Grand Duchy of Posen, Kingdom of Prussia, where he died on 6 June 1818, from a combination of pneumonia and gangrene.[2] He was buried in the church in Winna Góra.[2]

Over the years, Dąbrowski wrote several military treatises, primarily about the Legions, in German, French and Polish.[2]

Remembrance Edit

Dąbrowski was often criticized by his contemporaries, and by the early Polish historiography, but his image improved with time.[9][32][33] He has been often compared to the two other military heroes of the time of Partitions and the Legions, Tadeusz Kościuszko and Józef Poniatowski,[9] and to the father of the Second Polish Republic, Józef Piłsudski.[34] In particular, his mention in the Polish national anthem, also known as "Dąbrowski's Mazurek", contributed to his fame in Poland.[10][34] It is not uncommon for modern works of Polish history to describe him as a "(national) hero".[9]

Dąbrowski is also remembered outside of Poland for his historical contributions. His name, in the French version "Dombrowsky", is inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.[35]

Awards and decorations Edit

 
     
     

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c His date of birth is usually reported as 29 August 1755,[12][13] following his own autobiographical account, through some sources give the date of 2 August, as reported in church documents.[7]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Gąsowski, Tomasz (1998). Wybitni Polacy XIX wieku: leksykon biograficzny (in Polish). Wydawn. Literackie. p. 96. ISBN 978-83-08-02839-1.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Skałkowski, 1946, p. 5
  3. ^ a b Capefigue, Baptiste H. R. (1842). L'Europe pendant le consulat et l'empire de Napoléon (in French). Wouters, Raspoet et Co. p. 241.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Jeziorowski, Tadeusz (2018). The Napoleonic Orders: Orders of Polish Generals in the Napoleonic Era (in Polish). Karabela. pp. 29, 147. ISBN 9788361229070.
  5. ^ a b Biographie des hommes vivants (in French). Paris. 1817. p. 409.
  6. ^ Rüegg, Walter (2004). Geschichte der Universität in Europa (in German). C.H. Beck. p. 230. ISBN 3-406-36954-5.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Skałkowski, 1946, p. 1
  8. ^ Connelly, Owen (2006). Blundering to Glory. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 172. ISBN 9780842027809.
    Pivka, Otto (20 March 2012). Napoleon's Polish troops. Osprey. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-85045-198-6.
    Leggiere, Michael V. (2002). Napoleon and Berlin, The Franco-Prussian war in North Germany 1813. University of Oklahoma. p. 374. ISBN 0-8061-3399-6.
  9. ^ a b c d Rezler, Marek (1982). Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, 1755–1818. Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza. p. 3. Generał Jan Henryk Dąbrowski należy do bohaterów narodowych otoczonych w polskim społeczeństwie szczególnym kultem.
  10. ^ a b c d e Sokol, Stanley S.; Mrotek Kissane, Sharon F.; Abramowicz, Alfred L. (1992). The Polish biographical dictionary: profiles of nearly 900 Poles who have made lasting contributions to world civilization. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. p. 89. ISBN 9780865162457. Retrieved 2009-10-29.
  11. ^ (in German)Der Spiegel, Die Gesellschaft auf -ki
  12. ^ a b Rezler, Marek (1982). Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, 1755-1818. Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza. p. 4. 29 sierpnia 1755 roku w Pierzchowcu (d. powiat bocheński) urodził się chłopiec, któremu zgodnie z tradycją rodzinną nadano podwójne imię: Jan Henryk
  13. ^ Zych, 1964, p. 55: "Tam to, 29 sierpnia 1755 r., przyszedł na świat Jan Henryk"
  14. ^ Zeitgenossen: ein biographisches Magazin für d. Geschichte unserer Zeit. Brockhaus. 1830. pp. 5–.
  15. ^ Conversations-Lexikon der neuesten Zeit und Literatur (in German). F. A. Brockhaus. 1832. p. 704.
  16. ^ Bronikowski, Alexander (1827). Die Geschichte Polens (in German). Dresden: Hilscher. p. 135.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lerski, Jerzy Jan (1996). Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 102–103. ISBN 978-0-313-26007-0.
  18. ^ Allgemeines deutsches Conversations-Lexikon für die Gebildeten eines jeden Standes (in German). Leipzig: Gebr. Reichenbach. 1840. p. 537.
  19. ^ Zych, 1964, p. 55.
  20. ^ Zych, 1964, p. 59
  21. ^ a b c d Skałkowski, 1946, p. 2.
  22. ^ a b Lerski, Jerzy Jan (1996). Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966–1945. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-313-26007-0. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Skałkowski, 1946, p. 3
  24. ^ Otto Von Pivka; Michael Roffe (15 June 1974). Napoleon's Polish Troops. Osprey Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-85045-198-6. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  25. ^ Kołaczkowski, Klemens (1901). Henryk Dąbrowski twórca legionów polskich we Włoszech, 1755–1818: wspomnienie historyczne (in Polish). Spółka Wydawnicza Polska. pp. 35–36. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  26. ^ Fletcher, James (1833). The history of Poland: from the earliest period to the present time. J. & J. Harper. p. 285. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  27. ^ Otto Von Pivka; Michael Roffe (15 June 1974). Napoleon's Polish Troops. Osprey Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-85045-198-6. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  28. ^ Mickiewicza, 1970, p. 27.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Skałkowski, 1946, p. 4.
  30. ^ Dobiecki, Wojciech (1862). Wspomnienia wojskowe Wojciecha Dobieckiego (in Polish).
  31. ^ Pachoński, Jan (1987). Generał Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, 1755–1818. Wydawn. Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej. p. 463. ISBN 9788311072527.
  32. ^ Zych, 1964, p. 10
  33. ^ Pachoński, Jan (1987). Generał Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, 1755–1818. Wydawn. Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej. p. 7. ISBN 9788311072527.
  34. ^ a b Poznaniu, Muzeum Narodowe w (2005). Marsz, marsz Dąbrowski--: w 250. rocznicę urodzin Jana Henryka Dąbrowskiego. Muzeum Narodowe w Poznaniu. p. 37. ISBN 9788389053442. Jego pozycję w narodowym panteonie niewątpliwie ugruntowała Pieśń Legionów z nieśmiertelnym referenem "Marsz, marsz Dąbrowski...", która w odrodzonej Ojczyźnie uznano za hymn państwowy.
  35. ^ Antemurale (in French). Institutum. 1972. p. 17.
  36. ^ Puchalski, Zbigniew; Wojciechowski, Ireneusz J. (1987). Polish Orders and Decorations and their Knights (in Polish). Warsaw: KAW. p. 57. ISBN 8303021435.

Bibliography Edit

  • Adam Skałkowski (1939–1946). Jan Henryk Dąbrowski. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Generał Jan Henryk Dąbrowski (1755–1818): Materiały z międzyuczelnianej sesji naukowej UAM iWAP odbytej w Poznaniu 28 III 1969. Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza. 1970.
  • Zych, Gabriel (1964). Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, 1755–1818 (in Polish). Wydawn. Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dombrowski, Jan Henryk" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links Edit

henryk, dąbrowski, polish, pronunciation, ˈjan, ˈxɛnrɨɡ, dɔmˈbrɔfskʲi, also, known, johann, heinrich, dąbrowski, dombrowski, german, jean, henri, dombrowski, french, august, 1755, june, 1818, polish, general, statesman, widely, respected, after, death, patriot. Jan Henryk Dabrowski Polish pronunciation ˈjan ˈxɛnrɨɡ dɔmˈbrɔfskʲi also known as Johann Heinrich Dabrowski Dombrowski 6 in German 7 and Jean Henri Dombrowski in French 8 2 August 1755 a 6 June 1818 was a Polish general and statesman widely respected after his death for his patriotic attitude and described as a national hero who spent his whole life restoring the legacy of Poland 9 Jan Henryk DabrowskiPortrait in the Polish Army Museum Coat of arms DabrowskiBorn 1755 08 02 2 August 1755 a Pierzchow PolandDied6 June 1818 1818 06 06 aged 62 Winna Gora Posen PrussiaAllegianceElectorate of Saxony 1770 1791 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1791 1794 Cisalpine Republic 1796 1803 Italian Republic Duchy of Warsaw 1807 1816 Service wbr branchCavalryYears of service1770 1816RankGeneral of CavalryBattles warsKosciuszko UprisingWar of the Second CoalitionBattle of TrebbiaBattle of FriedlandRussian CampaignBattle of LeipzigAwardsOrder of Virtuti Militari 1 Order of the White Eagle 2 Officer of the Legion of Honour 3 4 Order of the Iron Crown 3 Order of St Vladimir 5 Order of St Anna 5 Other workSenator of Congress PolandSignatureDabrowski initially served in the Saxon Army and joined the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Army in 1792 shortly before the Second Partition of Poland He was promoted to the rank of general in the Kosciuszko Uprising of 1794 After the final Third Partition of Poland which ended the existence of Poland as an independent country he became actively involved in promoting the cause of Polish independence abroad He was the founder of the Polish Legions in Italy serving under Napoleon from 1795 and as a general in Italian and French service he contributed to the brief restoration of the Polish state during the Greater Poland Uprising of 1806 He participated in the Napoleonic Wars taking part in the Polish Austrian war and the French invasion of Russia until 1813 After Napoleon s defeat he accepted a senatorial position in the Russian backed Congress Poland and was one of the organizers of the Army of Congress Poland The Polish national anthem Poland Is Not Yet Lost written and first sung by the Polish legionnaires mentions Dabrowski by name and is also known as Dabrowski s Mazurek 10 Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 In Saxony and Poland 2 Career 2 1 In the Napoleonic service 2 2 Final years 2 3 Remembrance 3 Awards and decorations 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life and education EditIn Saxony and Poland Edit Dabrowski was born to Jan Michal Dabrowski and Zofia Maria Dabrowska nee Sophie von Lettow 11 in Pierzchow Crown of the Kingdom of Poland 10 on 29 August 1755 a He grew up in Hoyerswerda Electorate of Saxony where his father served as a colonel in the Saxon Army 14 He joined the Royal Saxon Horse Guards in 1770 15 16 or 1771 7 17 His family was of Polish origin 12 Nonetheless in his childhood and youth he grew up surrounded by German culture in Saxony and signed his name as Johann Heinrich Dabrowski 7 He fought in the War of the Bavarian Succession 1778 1779 during which time his father died 7 Shortly afterwards in 1780 he married Gustawa Rackel 7 He lived in Dresden and steadily progressed through the ranks becoming a Rittmeister in 1789 7 He served as Adjutant general of King Frederick Augustus I of Saxony from 1788 to 1791 18 Career EditFollowing the appeal of the Polish Four Year Sejm to all Poles serving abroad to join the Polish army and not seeing much opportunity to advance in his military career in the now peaceful Saxony on 28 June 1792 Dabrowski joined the Army of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth with a rank of podpulkownik and on 14 July he was promoted to the rank of vice brigadier 7 Joining in the final weeks of the Polish Russian War of 1792 he did not see combat in it 7 Unfamiliar with the intricacies of Polish politics like many of Poniatowski s supporters he joined the Targowica Confederation in late 1792 7 19 Dabrowski was seen as a cavalry expert and King Stanislaw August Poniatowski was personally interested in obtaining Dabrowski s services 7 As a cavalryman educated in a Dresden military school under Count Maurice Bellegarde a reformer of the Saxon army s cavalry Dabrowski was asked to help modernize the Polish cavalry serving in the ranks of the 1st Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade 1 Wielkpolska Brygada Kawalerii Narodowej 7 In January 1793 stationed around Gniezno with two units of cavalry about 200 strong he briefly engaged the Prussian forces entering Poland in the aftermath of the Second Partition of Poland and afterwards became a known activist advocating the continuation of military struggle against the occupiers 7 20 The Grodno Sejm held in the fall of 1793 nominated him for a membership in a military commission this caused him to be viewed with suspicion by the majority of the dissatisfied military and he was not included in the preparations for the upcoming uprising 21 Thus he was taken by surprise when the Kosciuszko Insurrection erupted and his own brigade mutinied 21 He declared his support for the insurgents after the liberation of Warsaw and from then on took an active part in the uprising defending Warsaw and leading an army corps in support of an uprising in Greater Poland 17 21 His courage was commended by Tadeusz Kosciuszko himself the Supreme Commander of the National Armed Forces who promoted him to the rank of general 21 In the Napoleonic service Edit nbsp Jan Henryk Dabrowski and the Polish Legions After the failure of the uprising he remained in partitioned Poland for a while attempting to convince the Prussian authorities that they needed Poland as an ally against Austria and Russia 17 He was unsuccessful and with the Third Partition of Poland between Russia Prussia and Austria Poland disappeared from the map of Europe Dabrowski s next solution was to convince the French Republic that it should support a Polish cause and create a Polish military formation 17 This proved to be more successful and indeed Dabrowski is remembered in the history of Poland as the organiser of Polish Legions in Italy during the Napoleonic Wars These Legions are also often known as the Dabrowski s Legions 17 22 This event gave hope to contemporary Poles and is still remembered in the Polish national anthem named after Dabrowski 10 He began his work in 1796 when he came to Paris and soon afterwards met Napoleon Bonaparte in Milan 23 On 7 January 1797 he was authorized by the Cisalpine Republic to create Polish legions which would be part of the army of the newly created Republic of Lombardy 17 23 In April Dabrowski lobbied for a plan to push through to the Polish territories in Galicia but that was blocked by Napoleon who instead decided to use those troops on the Italian front 24 Dabrowski s Polish soldiers fought at Napoleon s side from May 1797 until the beginning of 1803 As a commander of his legion he played an important part in the war in Italy entered Rome in May 1798 and distinguished himself greatly at the Battle of Trebia on 19 June 1799 where he was wounded as well as in other battles and combats of 1799 1801 23 From the time the Legions garrisoned Rome Dabrowski obtained a number of trophies from a Roman representative namely the ones that the Polish king Jan III Sobieski had sent there after his victory over the Ottoman Empire at the siege of Vienna in 1683 amongst these was an Ottoman standard which subsequently became part of the Legions colors accompanying them from then on 25 26 However the legions were never able to reach Poland and did not liberate the country as Dabrowski had dreamed Napoleon did however notice the growing dissatisfaction of his soldiers and their commanders They were particularly disappointed by a peace treaty between France and Russia signed in Luneville on 9 February 1801 which dashed Polish hopes of Bonaparte freeing Poland 22 23 Shortly afterwards in March Dabrowski reorganized both Legions at Milan into two 6 000 strong units 27 Disillusioned with Napoleon after the Luneville treaty many legionnaires resigned afterwards of the others thousands perished when the Legions were sent to suppress the Haitian Revolution in 1803 by that time Dabrowski was no longer in command of the Legions 23 Dabrowski meanwhile spent the first few years of the new century as a general in the service of the Italian republic 23 In 1804 he received the Officer cross of Legion of Honour and the next year the Italian Order of the Iron Crown 28 Together with Jozef Wybicki he was summoned again by Napoleon in fall of 1806 and tasked with recreating the Polish formation which Napoleon wanted to use to recapture Greater Poland from Prussia 29 The ensuing conflict was known as the Greater Poland Uprising and Dabrowski was the chief leader of Polish insurgent forces in it 17 In February 1807 the remaining infantry and cavalry regiments who had continued in French service in Italy were reorganized in Silesia in the cities of Wroclaw Prudnik Nysa Korfantow and Brzeg into a Polish Italian Legion PolaccoItalienne 30 Dabrowski distinguished himself at siege of Tczew siege of Gdansk and at Battle of Friedland 29 nbsp Dabrowski s order of 1806 introducing a new Order of Battle for the Polish voivodeshipsIn 1807 the Duchy of Warsaw was established in the recaptured territories essentially as a satellite of Bonaparte s France Dabrowski became disappointed with Napoleon who offered him monetary rewards but no serious military or government position 29 He was also awarded the Virtuti Militari medal that year 1 In 1809 he set out to defend Poland against an Austrian invasion under the command of Prince Jozef Poniatowski 29 Joining the Army of the Duchy of Warsaw shortly after the Battle of Raszyn he took part in the first stages of the offensive on Galicia and then organized the defense of Greater Poland 29 In June 1812 Dabrowski commanded the 17th Polish Infantry Division in the V Corps of the Grande Armee during Napoleon s invasion of Russia 17 29 However by October the Franco Russian war was over and the French forces decimated by a severe winter had to retreat At the disastrous Battle of Berezina in late November that year Dabrowski was wounded and his leadership and tactics in it were criticized 2 29 After the March reorganization of the Grande Armee he commanded the 27th Polish Infantry Division in the VIII Corps 31 He commanded it at the Battle of Leipzig 1813 and subsequently on 28 October he became the commander in chief of the all remaining Polish forces in Napoleon s service succeeding Antoni Pawel Sulkowski 2 Final years Edit Dabrowski always associated independent Poland with a Polish Army and offered his services to the new power which promised to organize such a formation Russia 2 He was one of the generals entrusted by the Tsar Alexander of Russia with the reorganization of the Duchy s army into the Army of Congress Poland 17 In 1815 he received the titles of general of cavalry and senator voivode of the new Congress Kingdom 10 He was also awarded the Order of the White Eagle on 9 December that year 2 Soon afterward he withdrew from active politics 17 He retired in the following year to his estates in Winna Gora in the Grand Duchy of Posen Kingdom of Prussia where he died on 6 June 1818 from a combination of pneumonia and gangrene 2 He was buried in the church in Winna Gora 2 Over the years Dabrowski wrote several military treatises primarily about the Legions in German French and Polish 2 Remembrance Edit Dabrowski was often criticized by his contemporaries and by the early Polish historiography but his image improved with time 9 32 33 He has been often compared to the two other military heroes of the time of Partitions and the Legions Tadeusz Kosciuszko and Jozef Poniatowski 9 and to the father of the Second Polish Republic Jozef Pilsudski 34 In particular his mention in the Polish national anthem also known as Dabrowski s Mazurek contributed to his fame in Poland 10 34 It is not uncommon for modern works of Polish history to describe him as a national hero 9 Dabrowski is also remembered outside of Poland for his historical contributions His name in the French version Dombrowsky is inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris 35 Awards and decorations Edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Order of the White Eagle 36 Commander s Cross of the Military Medal of the Duchy of Warsaw 4 Officer of the Legion of Honour First French Empire 4 Saint Helena Medal posthumous Second French Empire 4 Knight of the Order of the Iron Crown Kingdom of Italy First French Empire 4 Order of Saint Vladimir Russian Empire 4 Order of Saint Anna Russian Empire 4 See also Edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Poland portalHistory of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1764 95 History of Poland 1795 1918 Notes Edit a b c His date of birth is usually reported as 29 August 1755 12 13 following his own autobiographical account through some sources give the date of 2 August as reported in church documents 7 References Edit a b Gasowski Tomasz 1998 Wybitni Polacy XIX wieku leksykon biograficzny in Polish Wydawn Literackie p 96 ISBN 978 83 08 02839 1 a b c d e f g h Skalkowski 1946 p 5 a b Capefigue Baptiste H R 1842 L Europe pendant le consulat et l empire de Napoleon in French Wouters Raspoet et Co p 241 a b c d e f g Jeziorowski Tadeusz 2018 The Napoleonic Orders Orders of Polish Generals in the Napoleonic Era in Polish Karabela pp 29 147 ISBN 9788361229070 a b Biographie des hommes vivants in French Paris 1817 p 409 Ruegg Walter 2004 Geschichte der Universitat in Europa in German C H Beck p 230 ISBN 3 406 36954 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Skalkowski 1946 p 1 Connelly Owen 2006 Blundering to Glory Rowman amp Littlefield p 172 ISBN 9780842027809 Pivka Otto 20 March 2012 Napoleon s Polish troops Osprey p 3 ISBN 978 0 85045 198 6 Leggiere Michael V 2002 Napoleon and Berlin The Franco Prussian war in North Germany 1813 University of Oklahoma p 374 ISBN 0 8061 3399 6 a b c d Rezler Marek 1982 Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza p 3 General Jan Henryk Dabrowski nalezy do bohaterow narodowych otoczonych w polskim spoleczenstwie szczegolnym kultem a b c d e Sokol Stanley S Mrotek Kissane Sharon F Abramowicz Alfred L 1992 The Polish biographical dictionary profiles of nearly 900 Poles who have made lasting contributions to world civilization Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 89 ISBN 9780865162457 Retrieved 2009 10 29 in German Der Spiegel Die Gesellschaft auf ki a b Rezler Marek 1982 Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza p 4 29 sierpnia 1755 roku w Pierzchowcu d powiat bochenski urodzil sie chlopiec ktoremu zgodnie z tradycja rodzinna nadano podwojne imie Jan Henryk Zych 1964 p 55 Tam to 29 sierpnia 1755 r przyszedl na swiat Jan Henryk Zeitgenossen ein biographisches Magazin fur d Geschichte unserer Zeit Brockhaus 1830 pp 5 Conversations Lexikon der neuesten Zeit und Literatur in German F A Brockhaus 1832 p 704 Bronikowski Alexander 1827 Die Geschichte Polens in German Dresden Hilscher p 135 a b c d e f g h i j Lerski Jerzy Jan 1996 Historical Dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Greenwood Publishing Group pp 102 103 ISBN 978 0 313 26007 0 Allgemeines deutsches Conversations Lexikon fur die Gebildeten eines jeden Standes in German Leipzig Gebr Reichenbach 1840 p 537 Zych 1964 p 55 Zych 1964 p 59 a b c d Skalkowski 1946 p 2 a b Lerski Jerzy Jan 1996 Historical Dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Greenwood Publishing Group p 104 ISBN 978 0 313 26007 0 Retrieved 9 May 2012 a b c d e f Skalkowski 1946 p 3 Otto Von Pivka Michael Roffe 15 June 1974 Napoleon s Polish Troops Osprey Publishing p 4 ISBN 978 0 85045 198 6 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Kolaczkowski Klemens 1901 Henryk Dabrowski tworca legionow polskich we Wloszech 1755 1818 wspomnienie historyczne in Polish Spolka Wydawnicza Polska pp 35 36 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Fletcher James 1833 The history of Poland from the earliest period to the present time J amp J Harper p 285 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Otto Von Pivka Michael Roffe 15 June 1974 Napoleon s Polish Troops Osprey Publishing p 7 ISBN 978 0 85045 198 6 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Mickiewicza 1970 p 27 a b c d e f g Skalkowski 1946 p 4 Dobiecki Wojciech 1862 Wspomnienia wojskowe Wojciecha Dobieckiego in Polish Pachonski Jan 1987 General Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 Wydawn Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej p 463 ISBN 9788311072527 Zych 1964 p 10 Pachonski Jan 1987 General Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 Wydawn Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej p 7 ISBN 9788311072527 a b Poznaniu Muzeum Narodowe w 2005 Marsz marsz Dabrowski w 250 rocznice urodzin Jana Henryka Dabrowskiego Muzeum Narodowe w Poznaniu p 37 ISBN 9788389053442 Jego pozycje w narodowym panteonie niewatpliwie ugruntowala Piesn Legionow z niesmiertelnym referenem Marsz marsz Dabrowski ktora w odrodzonej Ojczyznie uznano za hymn panstwowy Antemurale in French Institutum 1972 p 17 Puchalski Zbigniew Wojciechowski Ireneusz J 1987 Polish Orders and Decorations and their Knights in Polish Warsaw KAW p 57 ISBN 8303021435 Bibliography EditAdam Skalkowski 1939 1946 Jan Henryk Dabrowski a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help General Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 Materialy z miedzyuczelnianej sesji naukowej UAM iWAP odbytej w Poznaniu 28 III 1969 Uniwersytet im Adama Mickiewicza 1970 Zych Gabriel 1964 Jan Henryk Dabrowski 1755 1818 in Polish Wydawn Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Dombrowski Jan Henryk Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links Edit nbsp Media related to Jan Henryk Dabrowski at Wikimedia Commons Mazurek Dabrowskiego Dabrowski s Mazurka the national anthem of Poland with lyrics written by JoZEF RUFIN WYBICKI herbu coat of arms Rogala in Reggio Emilia Cisalpine Republic Northern Italy between 16 and 19 July 1797 The music is an unattributed composer unknown mazurka Retrieved from https en 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